INVESTING

Should You Invest in the LEGO Star Wars AT-TE Walker (75337)?

BUY · 8/10
Should You Invest in the LEGO Star Wars AT-TE Walker (75337)?

The 75337 AT-TE Walker is that rare thing in LEGO investing: a set you can still buy at retail that’s about to retire, wearing a nameplate with a genuinely exceptional resale history. If you’ve been waiting for a clear buy signal, this is close to one.

What you’re getting

A 1,082-piece Episode III walker released in August 2022 at $139.99, with nine minifigures: Commander Cody, a 212th Clone Gunner, three 212th Clone Troopers, three Battle Droids, and a buildable Dwarf Spider Droid. Three of those figures are exclusive to this set, and one of them does most of the heavy lifting.

The build itself is well-regarded, the most screen-accurate AT-TE LEGO has done, with a detachable cockpit and two detailed cabins. But you’re here for the money, so let’s talk money.

The timing is the whole story

As of mid-2026, the AT-TE is still available at retail and actually selling slightly below MSRP on the secondary market, around $131. BrickEconomy puts its retirement probability by the end of 2026 at over 90%. That combination, still buyable at or under retail, with retirement imminent, is exactly the setup resellers wait for.

Here’s why retirement matters so much for this specific model. Look at the AT-TE lineage:

  • 4482 AT-TE (2003): $69.99 retail, now around $799. Up roughly 1,040%.
  • 7675 AT-TE Walker (2008): $89.99 retail, now around $700. Up roughly 680%.
  • 75019 AT-TE (2013): $89.99 retail, now around $272. Up roughly 200%.
  • 75157 Captain Rex’s AT-TE (2016): $119.99 retail, now around $350. Up roughly 190%.

Every version of this vehicle has climbed hard after retiring. That’s not a coincidence; it’s a fan-favorite chassis that LEGO revisits rarely.

The Reseller’s Take

The exclusive Commander Cody figure alone carries about $28 of value, and the full minifigure lineup is worth close to $80, more than half the box. That gives the set a hard floor even if you eventually part it out.

BrickEconomy’s projection: an immediate pop of around 18% at retirement, then roughly 9% to 10% annual growth, landing near $183 a year after it retires and $223 to $247 within five years. On a set you can buy today at $131, those aren’t hype numbers, they’re a credible double over five years.

My call: BUY, and buy sealed before it’s gone. Pick it up at retail or below (watch for a double-VIP weekend), keep it factory-sealed, and sit on it. The AT-TE has proven itself across four generations of the same design, and you rarely get to buy one on the way out the door at a discount.

The one caution: it’s a $130+ commitment per copy and a large box to store, so size your buy to your space and your patience. This rewards holding, not flipping.

Invest score: 8.0/10. Strong track record, imminent retirement, sub-retail entry, meaningful minifig floor. About as clean a Star Wars investing case as you’ll find at this price.

Bottom line

If you buy one Star Wars set to hold in 2026, the AT-TE Walker is near the top of the list. Buy it sealed while it’s still on shelves and under retail, then let time and retirement do the work.

Prices and resale figures from public sources (LEGO, BrickEconomy) as of mid-2026. Projections are estimates based on historical trends, not guarantees.

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