Hogsmeade ticked off another box for the LEGO Harry Potter Collectors’ Edition subtheme in 2025, so what’s left from the Wizarding World for 2026 and beyond?
Since 2018, the LEGO Harry Potter theme has ticked off most of the Wizarding World’s most iconic locations, vehicles and even animals under the 18+ Collectors’ Edition banner (which is to Harry Potter what the Ultimate Collector Series is to Star Wars): Hogwarts Castle, Gringotts Bank, Diagon Alley, the Hogwarts Express, Hedwig, The Burrow and now even Hogsmeade in
Where does that leave the theme in 2026 and beyond? We already know one new Collectors’ Edition set is on the way in the surprisingly functional
The Knight Bus

Starting with an obvious contender for a Collectors’ Edition set, not least because it was rumoured to be on the cards a couple of years ago, the Knight Bus could look pretty great scaled up to a larger size. It would open the door to functionality that allows it to change shape to squeeze down narrow streets, and just think of all the purple pieces we’d get.
That said, Arthur Weasley’s flying car would also have been a natural choice for a Collectors’ Edition set, and instead our first larger-than-life version of that Wizarding World mainstay is coming in at a middling 868 pieces in 2026’s 76470 Enchanted Flying Ford Anglia. A bigger Knight Bus could also aim for that scale, presumably with a similarly unsettling Stan Shunpike brick-built figure.
Hagrid’s Hut

We’ve had countless Hagrid’s Hut sets in the standard LEGO Harry Potter playset range, and while they do just keep getting better and better – the latest version is fully enclosed – we’re long overdue a larger Collectors’ Edition model that could really do justice to this setting.
Its detailed interior and ramshackle exterior both lend themselves nicely to an intricate build packed with references and Easter eggs, which is exactly the sort of thing the LEGO designers love to include. Our money’s honestly on this one next.
Malfoy Manor

It took the LEGO Group a long time to get round to a set based on Malfoy Manor, and when it did arrive in 2025 it was to a mixed reception. The interior is very nice and the exterior does the job, but it’s really just a façade. A Collectors’ Edition version of the Malfoys’ gothic home could go bigger and better, adding depth and detail that far outstrips 76453 Malfoy Manor. But with that set still fresh on shelves, we’re probably a little way off from this one yet.
The Quidditch Pitch

Quidditch was once such a staple of the LEGO Harry Potter theme, to the point that 75956 Quidditch Match was among the launch wave of sets when the line returned in 2018. But while it’s made fleeting appearances in polybags and 2023’s 76416 Quidditch Trunk, we’ve yet to see another proper set of pitch and stands since. Could it be because a Collectors’ Edition set is waiting in the wings?
A full Quidditch pitch with stands is something plenty of fans have tried their hand at over the years, and an official version has a lot of potential. It could be the most playable Collectors’ Edition set yet, for example, with long transparent bar elements used to simulate the players flying around on their brooms, firing mechanisms for the balls and so on. Even the adults could have fun with that. The build might not be that interesting, mind you…
The Shrieking Shack

The LEGO Group (eventually) followed up 75978 Diagon Alley with 76417 Gringotts Wizarding Bank Collectors’ Edition, so we wouldn’t be especially surprised to see 76457 Hogsmeade Village Collectors' Edition followed up by a giant Shrieking Shack at some stage. It’s another Wizarding World location that lends itself nicely to a LEGO adaptation, from its creaky interior to its dilapidated exterior. Something akin to the scale of
The Ministry of Magic

As with Malfoy Manor, it took the LEGO Group a little while to get round to the Ministry of Magic, so we’ve only had one version of it in any shape or form so far. But also like Malfoy Manor, the playset doesn’t quite do justice to the grand scope of the setting, which would be far better achieved by a Collectors’ Edition set.
A model that combines its appearances from Order of the Phoenix and the Deathly Hallows (with the minifigures to match) would make for one of the most eye-catching and colourful Collectors’ Edition sets so far.
12 Grimmauld Place

If you prize functionality above all else – and it’s clear that the LEGO Harry Potter designers enjoy it, with one eye on 76466 Philosopher’s Stone Collectors’ Edition’s surprise play features – then 12 Grimmauld Place must surely be at the top of your list for a Collectors’ Edition set.
The theme arguably already perfected the vanishing house in 2022’s 76408 12 Grimmauld Place, but imagine that same engineering on a much larger scale, with more room inside to properly flesh out the Order of the Phoenix’s safehouse. Sign us up.
Movie paraphernalia…

Finally, it’s worth mentioning that
If not, it’s likely they’ll be annual releases – we’re just speculating here – in which case we won’t get round to the finale until (checks notes) 2032 at the earliest. Hmm. Still, it’s easy to map them out: Chamber of Secrets’ build could be topped by a giant Basilisk, Fawkes or Aragog; Prisoner of Azkaban’s could have Buckbeak surrounded by pumpkins; Goblet of Fire's could pair the goblet and a gold dragon egg with the Hungarian Horntail… the list goes on.
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