Nintendo LEGO sets retiring soon: what’s on the list

A batch of Nintendo LEGO sets are retiring soon, spanning the Super Mario, Mario Kart, and Animal Crossing lines. LEGO has listed the affected Nintendo LEGO sets on its official “last chance to buy” page, following news that the first Legend of Zelda set is also being discontinued.

LEGO’s “last chance to buy” page signals that listed sets are in their final availability window, and the designation is final. Inventory sells down rather than being replenished, and sets listed there do not return to the standard catalog once they clear.

Which Nintendo LEGO sets are retiring

Five sets from the Super Mario line are on the list: Adventures with Interactive LEGO Mario, Party at Toad’s House, Captain Toad’s Camp, Prince Florian & Castle Bowser, and Piranha Plant. The Piranha Plant is specifically listed as retiring in the UK; its status in other regions may differ.

Eight Mario Kart sets are also included: the Standard Kart, Yoshi Bike, Baby Mario vs. Baby Luigi, Piranha Plant Power-Up Pursuit, Bowser’s Castle, Wario & King Boo, Toad’s Garage, and the Baby Peach & Grand Prix Set.

Two Animal Crossing sets complete the list: Leif’s Caravan & Garden Shop and Creative Houses: Seasons of Fun.

That brings the total retiring Nintendo LEGO sets to 15 across three franchises, though individual availability varies by region. LEGO’s retiring page is the most reliable source for checking your specific market.

What LEGO retirement means for buyers

When LEGO marks a set as retiring, it stops placing new production orders. Remaining stock sells through official channels until it runs out, after which the set is gone from LEGO’s own store. Third-party retailers such as Amazon and specialist toy shops may carry stock for a time afterward, but prices typically climb once LEGO’s own inventory is depleted.

The Nintendo and LEGO collaboration launched in 2020, when the original interactive Super Mario sets arrived alongside an app-controlled Mario figure. The range has since grown to cover Mario Kart, Donkey Kong, Animal Crossing, and The Legend of Zelda. Retiring 15 sets from the lineup at once is a larger-than-usual drawdown, though licensed ranges commonly thin out as a collaboration matures.

How to check which sets are still available

Because availability varies by region, not every set is retiring everywhere at once. LEGO’s official “last chance to buy” page, filtered to your region, is the best way to confirm current stock levels where you are.

Retiring Nintendo LEGO sets can sell out within days once discontinuation news circulates, particularly for popular characters and larger builds. LEGO’s last chance page shows real-time stock by region. If specific sets are on your list, the time to buy at standard retail prices is now.