New LEGO® Botanicals Sets for 2026

Eight new LEGO® Botanicals 2026 releases have already dropped or are actively on shelves across three separate waves, and the lineup covers everything from tiny desk companions to a wall-mounted floral trellis. If you collect Botanicals sets or you're just getting into the theme, 2026 is a genuinely great time to start.
Every botanical set here pairs beautifully with warm LED strips, so keep that in mind as you browse the roundup.
Wave 1: January 2026 Releases
Four new LEGO® Botanicals models launched on January 1, 2026, making the Botanicals theme one of the first LEGO lines to expand in the new year.

11501 Tulip Bouquet — $59.99 | 576 Pieces | Ages 18+
Tulip Bouquet is the flagship set of the January wave and a genuinely impressive build. It features 14 individual flowers across five tulip varieties, spanning green buds, closed purple blooms, and fully opened red, yellow, and pink tulips.
The stems are adjustable, so you can rearrange the bouquet to suit your space. Displayed in a clear vase (sold separately), the tallest tulip tops 14 inches. Two sets of instructions are included, which makes this a good shared project with a friend or partner.
New parts land here too: a reshaped tulip petal piece and a small single-leaf foliage part that's already drawing attention from MOC builders for its versatility.

11504 Peace Lily — $49.99 | 474 Pieces | Ages 18+
Peace Lily is the most sculptural build in this wave. It recreates the plant's natural life cycle across six flowers: two closed buds, two partially open flowers, and two in full bloom.
The set sits in a warm peach pot with a wood-effect base, which gives it a finished, self-contained look that a lot of Botanicals sets rely on you to complete yourself with a vase. Small part callouts make it worth a closer look: a recolored carrot piece forms the spadix on the half-open flower, and a popcorn piece sits at the tip of the fully bloomed spadix.
For fans of the LEGO® Botanicals Collection who want something calm and minimal on a shelf, Peace Lily sits closest to the Orchid (10311) in overall mood.

11508 Daisies — $14.99 | 133 Pieces | Ages 9+
Daisies set is the smallest in this roundup and an easy one to underestimate. At just $14.99, it gives you three large daisies, two stems of smaller flowers, and three sprigs of lavender, combining into a light and cheerful bouquet.
A printed ladybug piece hides among the stems, the kind of tiny detail that makes Botanicals builds worth looking at twice. It sits nicely on a desk, makes a good gift for younger builders, and adds a fresh note to any larger floral arrangement without crowding it.
If you're thinking about where it fits in your space, our guide to LEGO® for home decor covers exactly that, worth a look before you commit.

11509 Flowering Cactus — $34.99 | 482 Pieces | Ages 9+
Flowering Cactus does something none of the other January sets do – it goes fully desert. The set builds two cacti. A larger one, topped with a bright pink bloom, and a smaller one, covered in buds at different growth stages, were displayed together in a pastel blue pot.
It's one of the more playful entries in the Botanicals new releases lineup and suits anyone who wants something with a bit more personality. The piece count is solid for the price, and the cactus surface is built from stacked curved pieces that mimic spines closely enough to make the build feel as tactile as the finished result looks.
Wave 2: February 2026 Releases
Two very different sets arrived on February 1.

11503 Flower Wall — $89.99 | 879 Pieces | Ages 18+
Flower Wall is the biggest and most ambitious set in this year's LEGO® Botanicals new releases. It builds a fully modular trellis frame loaded with 10 different flower types: two big camellias, three small camellias, two clematis, three ranunculus, two dark red roses, one hydrangea, three cornflowers, two mimosa branches, two waxflower branches, and two large leaves.
Every bloom snaps onto the frame in any order you prefer, so the arrangement is entirely yours to decide. The completed wall can be hung vertically or horizontally, and additional frames connect side-by-side to scale the display up.
Adding a warm backlight behind the frame makes a considerable difference here. Check out our guide on designing light-up LEGO® flowers for ideas on how to do it without overcomplicating the install.

40957 Spring Wreath — $39.99 | 747 Pieces | Ages 12+
Spring Wreath is a seasonal set with two distinct display modes built in. One configuration dresses the wreath in spring flowers with a yellow bow at the top. Swap those out, and a brick-built bunny head with movable ears takes center stage alongside six Easter eggs.
The set ships with a hanger so it can go on a door or wall directly. At 747 pieces for $39.99, the piece-per-dollar ratio is strong for a seasonal set. It's a solid pick as a gift or as a fresh way to decorate for spring without buying real flowers.
Wave 3: March 2026 Releases
March brought two more new LEGO® Botanicals 2026 sets that push the bouquet format in opposite directions. One is bold and cheerful, the other refined and sparse.

11502 Sunflower Bouquet — $59.99 | 686 Pieces | Ages 18+
Sunflower Bouquet builds six sunflowers, each with petals that open to different widths, so the finished arrangement doesn't look uniform. You can also swap any of the flowers out for four plain green stems with leaves if you want a more naturalistic mix.
The petals are formed primarily by a large number of yellow 2×1 leaf plates, which create a mesmerizing radiating texture when fully assembled. The brown circular centers use round plates with exposed studs to suggest seeds, a simple technique that reads exactly right from any distance.
At 686 pieces for $59.99, this is the best piece count per dollar of all the adult Botanicals sets this year. A bold, warm-toned centerpiece that responds beautifully to a spotlight LED kit placed nearby.

11510 Magnolia Branches — $49.99 | 435 Pieces | Ages 18+
Magnolia Branches is the standout of 2026 for serious collectors. Magnolias have never appeared in any official LEGO set before.
The part everyone is talking about is a new leaf piece with a pink-to-pink gradient produced by color co-injection molding. That kind of pigment blending is rare across the entire LEGO catalog, and it gives the blooms a soft, almost painterly quality that photographs beautifully. The curved tube part from Hibiscus (10372) reappears here in a new color to form the branching stems.
The finished model is deliberately open and architectural – no dense clusters, no crowded stems. Displayed in a tall vase, the stems arc in a way that the other bouquet sets don't match, creating negative space that reads almost like a drawing. It's the quietest build of the year, and one of the most original in the entire LEGO® Botanicals Collection.
If you're planning a gift around these releases, Magnolia Branches and Tulip Bouquet together make a strong pairing. We have a dedicated guide on LEGO® sets for Women's Day that covers more ideas along those lines.
The Botanicals Theme Just Got a Lot Harder to Ignore
For anyone buying into the LEGO® Botanicals Collection for the first time, the 2026 lineup is the most accessible the theme has been. Two sets include their own pots and need no extra accessories. The $14.99 Daisies is a low-commitment way to find out if botanical building is for you before spending $50+. And the range now covers genuinely different aesthetic directions – desert plants, wall art, sculptural branching, compact bouquets, rather than just offering more variations on the same vase-and-flowers idea.
For long-time collectors, the more interesting shift is what 2026 signals about where the theme is heading. Flower Wall is the first Botanicals set designed explicitly to cover surfaces and fill a room rather than sit on a shelf. Magnolia Branches uses production techniques that haven't appeared in mainstream LEGO sets in well over a decade. Both suggest that the designers are pushing the theme in directions that have more in common with interior design than with traditional LEGO product lines.
If you want to make any of these builds look their best after the box is built, the Game of Bricks range of Light Kits for LEGO® Botanical Collection is a good next step. A well-placed warm LED can turn a good botanical build into something that stops people in their tracks.
FAQ
How many new LEGO® Botanicals sets were released in 2026?
LEGO® Botanicals released eight sets over a period of three months. That's a more concentrated release schedule than previous years, where new Botanicals sets typically spread across four or five waves throughout the calendar.
Which 2026 Botanicals set has the most pieces?
Flower Wall (11503) at 879 pieces. On price-per-piece, Spring Wreath leads the full lineup at $39.99 for 747 pieces. Among adult 18+ sets, Sunflower Bouquet is the best value at roughly $0.087 per piece, Peace Lily and Magnolia Branches both sit closer to $0.11.
What is the cheapest new LEGO® Botanicals set for 2026?
Daisies (11508) at $14.99. Worth noting: every set under $40 is rated 9+ or 12+. The adult 18+ tier starts at $49.99 with Peace Lily, so that's the real entry point for adult builders.
Are any of the 2026 Botanicals sets good gifts for women?
Peace Lily and Tulip Bouquet launched January 1, well ahead of Women's Day (March 8). Sunflower Bouquet and Magnolia Branches arrived March 1, tight for Women's Day, but comfortable before Mother's Day in May.
Can I add LED lighting to LEGO® Botanicals sets?
Yes. Pot-based sets like Peace Lily and Flowering Cactus respond best to a side or overhead light source. Vase-based bouquet sets work better with backlighting, where the glass diffuses the LEDs through the stems. Game of Bricks stocks compatible light kits for LEGO®.
Is Magnolia Branches the first LEGO set to feature magnolias?
Yes. The gradient leaf piece is also a rare production call, color co-injection molding, where two pigments blend during molding, was last widely used in Bionicle sets in the 2000s. It hasn't appeared on a System-line plant piece before.
Does the Flower Wall (11503) come with a mounting system?
It's self-standing, no wall mounting needed. One set covers a single panel displayed horizontally or vertically. A second frame (sold separately, same $89.99 price) extends the display, but one unit alone gives a complete-looking result.
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