Picture the Bikini Bottom neighborhood exactly as it appears on screen, then shrink it down to sit on a shelf. That is essentially what Lego has pulled off with its newly revealed SpongeBob Squarepants: Bikini Bottom set, and the accuracy to the source material is genuinely hard to argue with.
The set carries a $219.99 price tag and is built from 1,794 pieces, placing it firmly in the premium collector tier alongside Lego's other large-scale display builds. Pre-orders are live now, with both this set and a companion release hitting retail on September 1, 2026.

Get 1-month GTA+ subscription with pre-order.
Pre-Order GTA 6 Now
What 1,794 pieces actually gets you
The main attraction is a side-by-side recreation of SpongeBob, Patrick, and Squidward's houses, built with the kind of proportional fidelity that makes the cartoon's architecture immediately recognizable. The facades are designed to rotate, revealing detailed interiors packed with references to specific episodes. Squidward's clarinet is in there. So is a portrait of Gary the Snail. Lego describes these as "nods to iconic storylines," and a quick look at the official images confirms the team did their homework.
The minifigure lineup includes SpongeBob, Patrick, and Squidward, plus brick-built figures for Gary and DoodleBob. Here's the thing: the character shapes are where this set quietly impresses the most. Patrick is noticeably round, Squidward has a custom head sculpt rather than the standard cylinder torso, and SpongeBob is built as a proper square with limbs. Getting distinctive silhouettes out of minifigure scale is not trivial, and Lego has nailed it.
Smaller builds rounding out the set include Patrick's boat and a recreation of Jellyfish Fields, adding context to the neighborhood rather than just presenting three isolated buildings.
How it compares to the last Bikini Bottom kit
Lego last released a Bikini Bottom set back in 2012. That kit was cheaper and worked with a lower piece count, which naturally limited how close the designers could get to the show's aesthetic. The 2026 version has no such constraints. The tinted windows, the building dimensions, the interior detail level, all of it reads as a genuine upgrade rather than a simple refresh.
The closest recent parallel is the Lego Krusty Burger set, which similarly committed to getting the feel of its source show right down to the small touches. Bikini Bottom follows that same approach, treating the IP as something worth getting exactly right rather than just slapping recognizable characters on a generic build structure. If you want to see how Lego handles licensed properties at this level, check out our LEGO Batman Legacy guides for a sense of how deep the detail goes across Lego's pop culture range.
The $12.99 option for everyone else
Not everyone wants to drop $220 on a shelf piece, and Lego has that covered. A BrickHeadz SpongeBob Squarepants Figure set releases on the same September 1 date for $12.99, coming with SpongeBob and his jellyfish fishing net as an accessory. It is a much smaller commitment, and a reasonable entry point for fans who want something from the line without the premium price.
The gap between the two sets is significant, but the $220 kit justifies the cost with sheer content volume. Rotating facades, five characters, multiple mini-builds, and episode-specific interior details add up to something that functions as a display piece rather than just a build-and-box-away kit.
Both sets are available to pre-order directly from Lego now. For more on what Lego is doing across its gaming and pop culture crossovers, including how to earn LEGO Fortnite Ninjago Twitch Drops and other limited rewards, our gaming guides hub has the full rundown.








