Cafe Corner #10182
The bellwether. $3,500 raw → $11,500 AFA 90 average. The single highest-margin sealed LEGO grading candidate.
The full Mint-tier sold-comp tracker. Cafe Corner $9,000–$14,000; original Millennium Falcon UCS $14,000–$22,000; ICONS Titanic $1,400–$1,800. Updated quarterly against Heritage, Goldin, BrickEconomy, and eBay sold filters.
AFA 90 LEGO prices in 2026 represent the Mint-tier sold-comp range for sealed LEGO sets that have achieved AFA 90 grading. Cafe Corner #10182 leads at $9,000–$14,000; original Millennium Falcon UCS #10179 follows at $14,000–$22,000; Imperial Star Destroyer #10030 at $8,500–$12,500. ICONS flagships sit at $900–$1,800; SDCC exclusives at $3,200–$4,500. Premiums over raw average 80–300% depending on theme and set scarcity. AFA 90 inventory is rare — under 5% of sealed examples retain Mint condition — and the Mint tier crosses into institutional-buyer territory where Heritage, Goldin, and corporate vault funds price differently.
Rolling 90-day sold-comp data. Use as the canonical reference for AFA 90 expected resale. The price ranges reflect condition variance even within the Mint tier (a low-90 vs a high-90 differ by 15–25%).
| Set | Theme | Raw sealed | AFA 90 sold range |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cafe Corner #10182 | Modular | $3,000 – $4,500 | $9,000 – $14,000 |
| Green Grocer #10185 | Modular | $1,800 – $2,400 | $5,500 – $7,500 |
| Market Street #10190 | Modular | $1,400 – $2,000 | $4,500 – $6,500 |
| Fire Brigade #10197 | Modular | $900 – $1,200 | $2,400 – $3,200 |
| Grand Emporium #10211 | Modular | $600 – $850 | $1,600 – $2,200 |
| Millennium Falcon UCS #10179 (2007) | Star Wars UCS | $5,500 – $7,500 | $14,000 – $22,000 |
| Millennium Falcon UCS #75192 (2017) | Star Wars UCS | $900 – $1,200 | $2,200 – $2,900 |
| Super Star Destroyer #10221 | Star Wars UCS | $1,200 – $1,500 | $2,800 – $3,800 |
| Imperial Star Destroyer #10030 | Star Wars UCS | $2,800 – $3,800 | $8,500 – $12,500 |
| Titanic #10307 | ICONS | $750 – $900 | $1,400 – $1,800 |
| Eiffel Tower #10307 | ICONS | $450 – $600 | $900 – $1,250 |
| Taj Mahal #10256 | ICONS | $700 – $900 | $1,400 – $1,800 |
| SDCC Holiday Train #SDCC2017 | SDCC | $1,400 – $1,800 | $3,200 – $4,500 |
| LEGO Ideas Saturn V #21309 | Ideas | $300 – $400 | $650 – $900 |
The bellwether. $3,500 raw → $11,500 AFA 90 average. The single highest-margin sealed LEGO grading candidate.
$6,500 raw → $18,000 AFA 90. The original 2007 UCS Falcon — vintage premium compounds with Mint scarcity.
$3,300 raw → $10,500 AFA 90. Pre-UCS Star Wars vintage with very limited surviving sealed inventory.
$2,100 raw → $6,500 AFA 90. Second Modular; carries Modular-line premium with smaller-than-Cafe-Corner inventory.
$1,600 raw → $3,850 AFA 90. SDCC exclusive scarcity drives premium independent of set complexity.
BrickGauge predicts your specific box's AFA 90 likelihood with ≥85% confidence threshold. Two scans free, no credit card.
AFA 90 prices only materialize if your box actually grades AFA 90. The pre-grade confidence threshold for SEND at the Mint tier is 85+. Below that, target AFA 85 instead — the premium is still strong, but the verdict risk is much lower.
AFA 90 Cafe Corner #10182 sells for $9,000–$14,000 in 2026 — the highest single-set AFA 90 comp range in sealed LEGO. Raw sealed range is $3,000–$4,500, making the AFA 90 premium 150–300%. AFA 95 Mint+ jumps further to $15,000–$22,000.
Original #10179 (2007): $14,000–$22,000 at AFA 90 — comparable to AFA 90 Cafe Corner. Current #75192 (2017): $2,200–$2,900 at AFA 90. Both versions consistently command 80–200% premiums over raw at the AFA 90 tier.
LEGO Ideas Saturn V #21309 commonly hits AFA 90 with $650–$900 sold comps vs $300–$400 raw — a 60–125% premium that still clears the $50–$80 round-trip cost. Modern Ideas sets are the entry point for AFA 90 grading at lower capital tie-up.
Modulars and original UCS Star Wars: up 8–15% year-over-year through 2026. ICONS flagships: roughly flat. Modern Ideas / SDCC: up 4–8%. The AFA 90 premium over raw widens as sealed-inventory pools deplete; the absolute price trends with broader collectibles market sentiment.
Three reasons. (1) AFA 90 is the Mint cutoff where institutional buyers (vault funds, auction houses) enter the market — different buyer pool, different ceiling. (2) Liquidity premium: AFA 90 sets list at Heritage and Goldin auctions; raw sets don't. (3) AFA 90 inventory is rare — under 5% of sealed examples retain Mint condition.
Heritage Auctions (ha.com), Goldin (goldin.co), BrickEconomy (brickeconomy.com), eBay sold listings filtered to graded results, and BrickGauge's quarterly comp report (sent to free-tier users). Cross-reference at least two sources for any AFA 90 transaction.
Marginally — AFA 95 commands 50–100% premium over AFA 90 on flagship Modulars and original UCS but the supply of AFA 95-qualifying boxes is extremely small. For most submissions, targeting AFA 90 is the right strategy; AFA 95 is a happy upside outcome rather than a primary goal.
BrickGauge confidence ≥85 on the Mint axis. Sub-1mm corners on all four, sub-2% edge whitening, no print drift, pristine seal. If confidence is 65–84, target AFA 85 instead — the premium is still strong ($5,500–$7,500 on Cafe Corner) and the verdict risk is lower.