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Analysis · Practical

LEGO storage and sorting: how I do it and what I recommend to others

How you store LEGO depends on how much you have and what you do with it. My own sorting system, the products I actually use, and why sorting by colour works better for most people than they expect.

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Organized workbench with sorting drawers, transparent cups, parts trays, build mat and partly built display models
IKEA Trofast for bulk, Akro-Mils for fine sorting. After years of trying, this is my combination.

LEGO storage is something everyone thinks about differently until the collection outgrows one bin. Then the real thinking starts. After years of trying, I have a system that works for me, but it’s not the system that works for everyone. This article explains the options, including my own choices and why I made them.

My practical decision rule

Start small enough that you will keep using the system. With LEGO, a method only works if you still use it after three months: sorting, alerts, second-hand checks or saving Insider points. Choose the approach that makes your routine easier, not the one that looks most complete on paper.

If you have little time If you want control
Choose one fixed place or one fixed alert per set Track price, stock and condition separately
Accept that 80% good is good enough Decide in advance when you buy or skip

First: how much do you have?

The right system starts with scale. A collection of 3,000 bricks needs a different approach than 30,000.

Scale Approach
0-1,000 bricks One bin, no sorting needed
1,000-5,000 bricks 5-10 bins per colour
5,000-15,000 bricks Colour as first level, specials separate
15,000-50,000 bricks Hybrid: category first, colour within
50,000+ bricks By part number (Bricklink category)

Most hobbyists with 10-20 large sets sit in the 5,000-15,000 range. Colour sorting works fine as a first step there.

Sorting by colour or by shape: my choice

There’s an ideological debate in the LEGO community: colour vs. shape. I sort by colour as the first level, with two exceptions.

Colour works for most people because:

  • You search visually. If you need a red 2x4 brick, you look in the red bin, not the “2x4 brick” bin.
  • Colour is easier to learn than part nomenclature.
  • New bricks can be put away quickly without knowing set categories.

Shape works better if:

  • You build MOCs professionally and need specific parts in large quantities.
  • Your collection goes above 20,000 bricks: at that point “all red bricks in one bin” becomes too overwhelming.

My compromise: large bulk colours (white, light grey, dark grey, black) sorted by shape. Colourful bricks (red, blue, green, yellow) sorted purely by colour. That gives me the speed of colour sorting for the most-used bricks and the precision of shape sorting for the basics.

Products I actually use

IKEA Trofast is my main system. The 42-litre bin is ideal for large colour categories (all white bricks, all grey bricks). The smaller 9-litre bins handle less-used colours. The KALLAX frame alongside the Trofast rails offers extra display space.

Akro-Mils 10144 (44 small compartments) is what I use for specials: technic pins, clip parts, minifig accessories, 1x1 rounds in all colours. This American sorting cabinet can be ordered online in the Netherlands for around 30-40 euros. It hangs on the wall above my build surface.

Transparent stackable bins of 2-5 litres (own brand from Blokker or Action) for mid-categories that don’t fit Trofast but are too much for an Akro-Mils compartment.

What I don’t use: apothecary drawer units. They look great on YouTube, but the drawers are too small for bulk and too large for fine sorting. After a few months they’re full of a mix you can no longer find your way through.

Instructions: paper or app?

The LEGO Builder app has instructions for nearly all recent sets, free of charge. For those not attached to paper: throw the instructions away and use the app. It works offline once you’ve downloaded the instructions.

I keep paper for sets older than 2015 (not always in the app) and for large sets I regularly rebuild. Storage strategy: A4 binders per theme line, with the set number written on the spine. Larger instruction booklets (Technic, large Icons sets) stored upright in a separate folder.

Boxes: keep or discard?

Three positions, three situations:

Discard: most space-efficient. Acceptable if you’ll never sell the set and value isn’t in the box.

Flattened storage: retains some resale value but visibly used. Good for those who expect to eventually sell but have no space.

Upright in original condition: maximum value preservation. Requires substantial volume: a large set like 75192 has a box of 65x50x35 cm. For anyone viewing LEGO as an investment, this is the only option.

My own choice: I keep boxes for all sets I view as investments or that have retired. The rest goes flat or gets discarded.

Display vs. storage

Sets on a shelf are not storage: that’s display. Strategy per type:

Modular Buildings stay upright on the shelf. Don’t move them unless necessary; connections loosen with repeated handling.

Build figures (Orange Cat, Pua, Iron Man Mark 3) are more sensitive to dust. An IKEA Detolf glass vitrine (around 80 euros) is the standard solution: dust out, visible from three sides.

Star Wars display sets belong somewhere without direct sunlight: UV measurably yellows white plastic over the years.

City and Friends play sets go into my loose-parts storage after 1-2 years. They’re not designed as permanent displays.

When do you actually start sorting?

Only when you have 2,000+ loose bricks. Earlier, sorting is more work than it’s worth. With your first set: sort per bag in the order of the instructions, build it to completion, put the result on a shelf. That’s enough.

Only at your second or third set, when you start mixing or sharing bricks across projects, does a sorting system become worthwhile.

Large build projects

Sets that need sorting

Large boxes where sorting, build space and part management matter before the first bag.

Quick picks

Best for each buyer type

Use these examples to choose storage by build type: display box, parts-heavy build or active play set.

Best gift · 42115
LEGO 42115 Lamborghini Sián FKP 37, 3,696 pieces

Lamborghini Sián FKP 37

Lamborghini Sián FKP 37 is the box-size reminder: a premium set needs dry, stable storage even before it is opened.

Pieces
3,696
RRP
€ 314.99
View set
Best alert · 76473
LEGO 76473 Hogwarts Castle: East Wing, 2,164 pieces

Hogwarts Castle: East Wing

Track Hogwarts Castle: East Wing if storage space is tight; buying later is smarter than stacking boxes you cannot protect.

Pieces
2,164
RRP
€ 249.99
View set
Sorting strategy

Which system fits your collection?

From first set to 50,000 bricks: four phases that determine when to sort, what to buy, and what to hold off on for now.

  1. Under 2,000 bricks

    Don't sort yet

    With your first or second set: sort per bag in build order, finish the set, put it on a shelf: buying a system now is a waste of money and energy.

  2. 2,000-15,000 bricks

    Colour as first level

    Buy five to ten bins and sort by main colour: this is the moment for IKEA Trofast or transparent stackable bins, not an apothecary cabinet.

  3. 15,000-50,000 bricks

    Hybrid: category first, colour within

    Bulk colours (white, grey, black) sorted by shape; colourful bricks stay by colour: this is the system most serious hobbyists eventually settle on.

  4. Apothecary cabinet trap

    Don't buy before you need it

    The most beautiful sorting cabinet on YouTube does not work for you if you have fewer than 10,000 bricks; after three months it is full of a mix you still can't find your way through.

Frequently asked questions

Is it better to sort LEGO by colour or by shape?
For most hobbyists with fewer than 15,000 bricks: sorting by colour works better. You search visually, not analytically. For MOC builders who need specific parts quickly: sorting by shape (1x2 plate, 2x4 brick, etc.) is more efficient. My own approach is a hybrid: large colour categories first, within grey and black sorted by shape.
Which bins work best for LEGO?
IKEA Trofast (9-42 litres per bin) for large main categories and bulk colours. Akro-Mils sorting cabinet (model 10144, 44 compartments) for small parts, specials and minifig accessories. Transparent stackable bins of 1-5 litres for mid-categories. Tackle boxes for minifigs and rare parts.
How much space do I need for my LEGO collection?
Per 10,000 bricks count on 30-50 litres of storage volume. A collector with 20 large sets (average 1,500 pieces per set = 30,000 pieces) typically needs 100-150 litres. Displays on shelves add to that: allow 30 cm depth per row of Modular Buildings.
How do you store LEGO instructions so you can find them again?
Digitally via the free LEGO Builder app is the simplest solution for recent sets. For paper: A4 binders per theme line (one binder for Star Wars, one for City, etc.) with plastic sleeves. Label the spine with set numbers. Store larger instruction booklets upright in a separate folder.
Is an IKEA Detolf vitrine good for LEGO displays?
Yes, the IKEA Detolf (around 80 euros) is the standard in the AFOL community for a reason: it fits three shelves wide, has glass doors against dust, and the shelves can be adjusted. Downside: the standard placement makes the top shelf hard to reach. Many people place it on a KALLAX unit as a base.
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