The Burrow, Collectors' Edition
The wonkiest house the Weasleys ever had, now bigger and packed with figs.
Set 76437 · 2024
Affiliate link. We may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.
If you love the Weasleys or you're after a display piece with real character, this one's easy to recommend.
It's the biggest, most detailed Burrow LEGO has ever made, and the ten minifigures alone make it a tempting pickup for Harry Potter fans. Just know you're paying a Collectors' Edition premium, so if you mostly want value-per-brick, the older 75980 gives you pause. For the right fan though, it's a genuinely lovely thing to build and own.
Best for: Harry Potter fans who want the whole Weasley family on a shelf
What it is
So The Burrow is finally back, and this time it's the full Collectors' Edition treatment. This is the crooked, teetering family home of the Weasleys, the sort of house that looks like it should have fallen over years ago and only stays up because it's magic. LEGO® set 76437 is the biggest and most detailed version they've ever made of it, standing about 46cm tall, and honestly it nails the vibe. From the outside it's all mismatched chimneys, wonky angles, and that lovely lived-in ramshackle look. Open it up and you get a properly cluttered downstairs with the kitchen and living room, the twins' cramped attic, and a stack of bedrooms climbing up through the house. It's warm, it's busy, and it feels like people actually live there, which is exactly what you want from a Weasley set.
The catch
Now the honest bit. This is a Collectors' Edition, and the price reflects that. At £219.99 or $259.99 you're paying a fair chunk, and the comparison a lot of fans reach for is 2020's 75980 Attack on the Burrow, which packed a load of value into a smaller box. The per-piece maths here isn't as generous, so if you're chasing raw brick value this one won't top your list. There are a couple of niggles inside too. The bedrooms are lovely but genuinely fiddly to access once the house is together, and a few more lift-off roof sections would have gone a long way. There's also a surprising amount of stickers for an 18+ set, which feels slightly at odds with the premium billing. None of it ruins the set, but it's worth knowing going in.
Who it's for
So who should grab it? If you're a Harry Potter fan, and especially if the Weasleys are your favourite corner of that world, this is an easy yes. Getting the whole family in one box, plus Harry, plus first-ever Bill and Charlie figures, is a real pull. It also sits beautifully next to the other Collectors' Edition builds like Gringotts if you're building a shelf. Who should skip it? If you already own an older Burrow and just want a bigger one, or if value-per-brick is your main measure, you might wait for a discount. But for the target fan, this is a charming, characterful set that's a joy to have on display. The 4.4 out of 5 community rating tells you most builders came away happy.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
The build is a steady, satisfying climb from the ground up. You start with the cluttered downstairs, the kitchen and living room, and this is where a lot of the personality lives. The kitchen walls get plastered with cabinets and odds and ends, including the Weasley family clock that you can actually turn with a gear round the back to point at where everyone is. Then you head up into the twins' cramped attic and on through Arthur and Molly's room, which has a bed tilted to match the house's leaning shape and a carved W with two little weasels. Because the whole thing is built at a deliberate wonky angle, you're constantly working with offsets and slightly skewed geometry, which keeps the build interesting rather than repetitive across its 2,403 pieces.
On parts, the headline is really the minifigures. Ten of them, the full Weasley clan (Arthur, Molly, Bill, Charlie, Percy, Fred, George, Ron and Ginny) plus Harry, with Bill and Charlie showing up in LEGO form for the very first time and Percy barely seen before. You also get Errol the owl and two little pigs to round out the household. Beyond the figs, the value is more in the character than in a big haul of rare recolours, so this is a set you buy for the display and the roster rather than to strip for exotic elements. The printed and stickered details do a lot of the heavy lifting on atmosphere.
Fun facts
- 01This is the biggest LEGO version of The Burrow ever made, standing around 46cm tall, 25cm wide and 23cm deep.
- 02Bill and Charlie Weasley appear as minifigures here for the very first time, and Percy had only shown up once before.
- 03The kitchen includes a working Weasley family clock you turn with a hidden gear, plus self-cleaning pots and a Floo Network fireplace nod to the films.
- 04It's part of the same 18+ Collectors' Edition line as 76417 Gringotts Wizarding Bank, built to sit together on a shelf.
What other builders say
This write-up is grounded in real reviews and builder discussion, not just one opinion. A few worth reading:
More reviews
All reviews

World Map
The biggest LEGO set ever made, and yes, it's basically a giant mosaic.


Eiffel Tower
The tallest LEGO set ever, and it makes you earn every centimetre.


Titanic
The longest LEGO set ever made, and one of the most rewarding builds going.