Martin Jungfer
Background information

Chaos or order: how do you tidy up Lego «properly»?

Martin Jungfer
17/2/2025
Translation: Elicia Payne

Lego primarily sells sets. But what happens after you’re done building? Are they untouchable? Or can the bricks be chucked into a massive box?

My daughter recently dug out her Lego treasures again. The sets and bricks are stored in various boxes and cartons. Some of them are already assembled street sweepers, houses and camping trailers from the City series. Others are building bricks of various origins thrown randomly into a box – bricks my wife and I gifted her when she was a child. Many black, white and grey bricks come from the Japanese castle of a Lego imitator, which I built for test purposes once.

When we’re playing, but even more so when tidying up afterwards, we’ve asked ourselves how people actually «store» Lego. My wife and I have very different approaches here.

My approach: put everything in a big box!

That’s how I was raised. As children, my siblings and I had a big plastic box that contained all our Lego bricks. We’d take it out of the cupboard and tip the contents onto the carpet. Or we’d rummage through it in search of the perfect brick for our next building project. It was always a hell of a racket that must’ve driven my parents crazy. My apologies, folks!

Let him be the first to cast a brick that did not store theirs in an old detergent box.
Let him be the first to cast a brick that did not store theirs in an old detergent box.
Source: X-User @CG70297229

My wife’s approach: leave the sets together

When our daughter builds a town these days, it consists of different sets, each built strictly according to instructions. I hardly manage to remember which parts belong to which set. At a skate park there’s a figure on a skateboard, at a residential building there’s one on a bicycle. If one goes to visit the other, they have to be back at «their» set in time for tidying. So my wife says. Because only then will the thingsshe believes belongs together stay together.

I’d rather shove everything in a box after playing. Irrespective of losing any pieces. If it were up to me, accessories from the individual sets and everything that’s not firmly connected would get mixed up into a chaos of bricks. But I respect my wife’s love of order. We have a number of fabric bags for smaller Lego sets and still have the original boxes for other sets. Road pieces, trees and traffic signs are placed in their own box. After all, vehicles that form a stable unit are allowed to be put in one box together with others.

Not the Lego storage in the Jungfer household, but impressive, isn’t it?
Not the Lego storage in the Jungfer household, but impressive, isn’t it?
Source: Reddit

Tidying systems require investments

The cloth bags are still the cheapest way to keep things tidy. You’ll generate more sales for Lego – and for Galaxus – if you rely on more sophisticated solutions.

The Lego press office wrote back to me in great detail about the products available for storing Lego bricks and sets. Actually, I wanted to know whether the manufacturer has any findings from market research on how the majority of the playing public tidies up their little pieces. But it didn’t. Instead, it offers a range of products that everyone should be happy with according to their individual love of order.

The easiest case is with minifigures. If you don’t want to play with them, but rather just collect them, you’ll find separate display cases.

Room Copenhagen Minifigure Display Case
Toy storage
EUR47,34

Room Copenhagen Minifigure Display Case

LEGO Minifigure Display Case 8 - Blue
Toy storage
EUR25,91

LEGO Minifigure Display Case 8 - Blue

Room Copenhagen Minifigure Display Case
Toy storage
EUR43,14

Room Copenhagen Minifigure Display Case

Room Copenhagen Minifigure Display Case
EUR47,34

Room Copenhagen Minifigure Display Case

LEGO Minifigure Display Case 8 - Blue
EUR25,91

LEGO Minifigure Display Case 8 - Blue

Room Copenhagen Minifigure Display Case
EUR43,14

Room Copenhagen Minifigure Display Case

Assembled sets, on the other hand, need larger compartments. Drawer boxes are ideal for these. They’re of course available from Lego (for a relatively high price) or from other manufacturers, some of them even on wheels. Or you can opt for a system from Rotho, for example. That way, you can store pieces of various sizes. If need be, fill a whole shelf with the storage boxes.

Really Useful Box Shelf unit (30 x 42 x 92.5 cm, 7 l)
Storage boxes

Really Useful Box Shelf unit

30 x 42 x 92.5 cm, 7 l

Lego purists will probably shake their heads and insist that Lego should only be stored in Lego boxes. Of course, the Storage Bricks look good, but they offer less space than you might think. The fact that they’re not transparent and always have to be stacked back and forth could also drive you crazy. On the other hand, what’s nicer than stacking Lego bricks for your Lego bricks?

Room Copenhagen Storage Brick
Toy storage
−21%
EUR19,98 was EUR25,19

Room Copenhagen Storage Brick

Room Copenhagen Lego Drawer Brick 8
Toy storage
EUR45,96

Room Copenhagen Lego Drawer Brick 8

Room Copenhagen Storage Brick
−21%
EUR19,98 was EUR25,19

Room Copenhagen Storage Brick

Room Copenhagen Lego Drawer Brick 8
EUR45,96

Room Copenhagen Lego Drawer Brick 8

Lego and the question of storage

How do you store Lego bricks and sets?

Entry conditions
Header image: Martin Jungfer

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