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LEGO Jango Fett Minifigures: Every Variant, Set List, and How to Tell Them Apart

“How many LEGO Jango Fett minifigures are there?” “What’s the difference between the original #7153 version and the UCS #75409 version?” “Which Jango is in the 2025 #75433?”
If you collect LEGO Star Wars, you’ve probably run into these questions. Here’s everything organized in one place.

Figrou
Figrou

Hello there! Figrou, I am — your guide, hmm. Figbase, a reference site it is, where which sets the LEGO minifigures come in, and how to tell the variants apart, across the board mapped out they are. Wherever your curiosity leads, begin there you should.

This article lays out how to tell every LEGO Jango Fett minifigure variant apart, along with the main sets each one appears in, all in a single reference table.

The short version: there are six or more Jango Fett variants between 2002 and 2025. The newest are the 2025 #75409 (UCS) and #75433, and the rarest are the original balaclava-head version (sw0053) exclusive to the 2002 #7153, and Santa Jango (sw0506), exclusive to Day 24 of the 2013 #75023 advent calendar.

Who Is Jango Fett?

Jango Fett is the legendary bounty hunter who appears in Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones (2002). Clad in heavy Mandalorian-derived armor, he travels the galaxy aboard his Firespray-class patrol and attack craft, Slave I. He served as the genetic template for the clone army and is also known as the father of Boba Fett.

In LEGO form, he debuted in 2002’s #7153 Jango Fett’s Slave I. He’s a long-running character whose sculpt has gone through several variants over more than 20 years since.

Multiple Jango Fett Minifigures: Variant List

In the Brickset and BrickLink catalogs, at least six Jango Fett variants can be confirmed from 2002 to 2025. The main clues for telling the generations apart are “the bare face revealed when the helmet comes off,” “the armor’s coloring,” and “the print detail on the arms and helmet.” On BrickLink, each variant is managed under a serial ID in the form “sw00XX,” “sw0XXX,” or “sw1XXX,” which is handy as a reference for identification.

Variant IDCommon NameFirst YearHow to Tell It ApartRarity
sw0053Balaclava-head version (2002 original)2002Removing the helmet reveals a black balaclava-style bare-face head. Metallic-painted armor with simple torso printing. Exclusive to #7153High (commands a premium)
sw0468Smiling-face version (2013 update)2013Bright nougat-colored head with a smiling print, newly designed armor printing. Appears in #75015Medium
sw0506Santa Jango (2013 exclusive)2013All-red Santa-style torso + silver, black, and blue helmet, with holly and a small present printed on. Exclusive to Day 24 of the #75023 advent calendarHigh (seasonal exclusive)
sw0845Angry-face version (2017)2017Nougat head with an angry-face print, refined torso printing. Exclusive to #75191Medium
sw1406Printed-arms version (2025 UCS)2025New flat-silver helmet (with rangefinder), pearl-titanium torso, sand-blue printed arms and printed legs. Exclusive to #75409New release
unknown2025 standard version2025Based on the new 2025 sculpt. May share some specs with the #75409 version. Appears in #75433New release

“Balaclava head” is the nickname for the spec where removing the helmet reveals a black balaclava-style head rather than a bare face; it exists only on sw0053 in the original #7153. From 2013 onward this was replaced by a bare-face print (a nougat-colored head with an expression print), so you can tell the generation at a glance by how it looks with the helmet off. Separately from these six variants, the #75107 Jango Fett released in 2015 is not a standard minifigure but rather a large, roughly 24 cm buildable, posable battle figure, placed in its own category.

Every LEGO Star Wars Set That Includes Jango Fett

Below are the LEGO Star Wars sets that include a Jango Fett minifigure or related figure, ordered from oldest release year to newest. It covers the main sets from the original 2002 Slave I, through the May 2025 UCS version and the helmet collection, to the mid-size starship released that August.

Set No.Set NameYearVariantAppears InNotes
#7153Jango Fett’s Slave I2002sw0053 (balaclava)EP IIAbout 360-369 pieces, launch MSRP $49.99. Debut set. Secondary-market prices have climbed
#75015Corporate Alliance Tank Droid2013sw0468 (smiling)EP II271 pieces, launch MSRP $19.99. Pairs with a Phase 1 clone and a battle droid
#75023Star Wars Advent Calendar 20132013sw0506 (Santa Jango / Day 24)Day 24 seasonal-exclusive variant
#75107Jango Fett (battle figure)2015Large battle figure (not standard minifigure scale)EP II85 pieces, about 24 cm, launch MSRP $19.99. Posable buildable figure
#75191Jedi Starfighter with Hyperdrive2017sw0845 (angry)EP II825-832 pieces, launch MSRP $99.99. Pairs with Obi-Wan, Young Boba, and R4-P17
#75408Jango Fett Helmet2025No minifigure (display helmet)616 pieces, launch MSRP $69.99. Part of the helmet collection series
#75409Jango Fett’s Firespray-Class Starship2025sw1406 (printed arms / UCS version)EP II2,970 pieces, launch MSRP $299.99. 18+. Includes Young Boba Fett
#75433Jango Fett’s Starship20252025 standard versionEP II707 pieces, launch MSRP $69.99. Released in August. Jango + Young Boba + Lama Su (Lama Su’s first minifigure)
Figrou
Figrou

On recreating scenes from Episode II: Attack of the Clones, centered on his “Slave I / Firespray-class starship,” concentrate Jango’s sets do, hmm. Meanwhile, the 2013 advent calendar (#75023) and the standalone 2025 helmet (#75408), toward display and novelty lean they do. Alongside each other as different kinds of spin-offs run they do, so into “the lead starship line” and “the special slots,” easier to sort the collection Figrou finds it.

Debut, Newest, Rarest, Cheapest: Buying a Jango Fett Minifigure

Here are the four “benchmark” sets for collecting Jango Fett minifigures: the contrast between the debut and the newest, the high-rarity exclusive, and the most accessible recent package. Once you understand how they relate, it’s easier to plan your collection.

Debut: #7153 Jango Fett’s Slave I (2002)

The origin point of the LEGO Jango Fett minifigure is #7153 Jango Fett’s Slave I, released in 2002. The distinctive spec where removing the helmet reveals a black balaclava-style bare-face head (sw0053) is exclusive to this set, and the metallic-painted helmet and torso are also unique to that era. The included Young Boba Fett is also a first-appearance minifigure in #7153, making this the “original source” of the father-and-son set.

Newest (UCS): #75409 Jango Fett’s Firespray-Class Starship (2025)

Released in May 2025, #75409 is a UCS (Ultimate Collector Series)-class large display model at 2,970 pieces and a launch MSRP of $299.99. The Jango minifigure (sw1406) is a completely new sculpt with a flat-silver new helmet (with rangefinder), a pearl-titanium torso, and sand-blue printed arms and printed legs. With higher print density than any previous variant, it can fairly be called the “definitive” version.

Rarest: Santa Jango (sw0506) from the #75023 Advent Calendar 2013

Santa Jango (sw0506) is exclusive to Day 24 of the #75023 Advent Calendar 2013, a seasonal-exclusive minifigure not included in any other set. With its all-red Santa-style torso, a silver, black, and blue Christmas-colored helmet, and prints of a small present and holly, it’s a special spec. Since it isn’t sold regularly, missing the advent calendar itself sends the difficulty of obtaining it sharply up. Alongside sw0053 from the original #7153, it’s one of the variants collectors pay the most attention to.

Cheapest (in practice): #75433 Jango Fett’s Starship (August 2025)

Looking at new copies as of 2025, #75433 Jango Fett’s Starship (707 pieces / launch MSRP $69.99) is the most affordable “Jango + starship” set. Beyond Jango and Young Boba, the fact that Lama Su is rendered as a minifigure for the first time in LEGO history is a draw unique to #75433, making it an option for anyone who finds the UCS #75409 to be overkill. Extending to the secondary market, the standalone Jango minifigures from #75015 and #75191 also tend to fall into a relatively accessible range.

Related Minifigures to Collect Alongside Jango Fett

If you’re collecting Jango Fett minifigures, rounding out the co-star characters bundled in the same sets lets you recreate Episode II’s key scenes in full. Here’s a rundown of the most notable co-star minifigures.

Figrou
Figrou

The co-star you cannot skip with Jango, his son Young Boba Fett it is, of course. That “miniature copy in matching gear” feeling, when father and son you line up, genuinely satisfying in LEGO terms it is. In the 2025 #75433, as a minifigure for the first time ever rendered Lama Su was, so the clone-order scene on Kamino recreate if you wish, worth checking too that is.

  • Young Boba Fett: Jango’s son, and the “regular set companion,” appearing alongside Jango in four sets: #7153 / #75191 / #75409 / #75433
  • Obi-Wan Kenobi: included in #75191 Jedi Starfighter with Hyperdrive as the opponent recreating the Kamino chase scene
  • Lama Su: rendered as a minifigure for the first time in LEGO history in #75433. He stands alongside Jango as the one who commissions the clone army on Kamino
  • Phase 1 clone trooper: included in #75015 and others. You can enjoy the link to the canon premise that Jango is the genetic template for the clone army
  • Boba Fett (adult version): planned as a separate article. Collecting him alongside his father Jango completes a father-and-son display theme
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Frequently Asked Questions: Jango Fett Minifigure FAQ

How many LEGO Jango Fett minifigures are there in total?

As standard retail minifigures, six can be confirmed: #7153 (2002 / sw0053), #75015 (2013 / sw0468), the #75023 Santa (2013 / sw0506), #75191 (2017 / sw0845), #75409 (2025 / sw1406), and #75433 (2025 / 2025 standard version). On top of that, the 2015 #75107 Jango Fett is treated separately as a large battle figure rather than a standard-scale minifigure.

Which Jango Fett is the easiest to get?

Among new copies as of 2025, the $69.99 #75433 Jango Fett’s Starship (707 pieces) and #75408 Jango Fett Helmet (616 pieces, no minifigure) are the most accessible price range. Extending to the secondary market, the standalone Jango minifigures from #75015 and #75191 also tend to be relatively easy to find.

Why is the original #7153 Jango Fett so expensive?

Beyond being the 2002 debut, the “sw0053” spec, where removing the helmet reveals a black balaclava-style bare-face head, is exclusive to #7153, and the metallic-painted helmet and torso printing are also unique to that era. With limited circulation and the fact that it was a tie-in released right after Episode II’s premiere, collector demand is high and it commands a premium on the secondary market.

UCS #75409 or the smaller #75433 – which should you buy?

#75409 (2,970 pieces / 18+) suits those who prioritize display and enjoy large builds, while #75433 (707 pieces / 9+) suits those who want play features at an affordable price. Even though both are “Jango’s starship,” #75409 is geared toward UCS-level detail reproduction, while #75433 leans toward a three-minifigure lineup including Lama Su and a rotating-wing gimmick. Pick based on your goal.

What’s the difference between Jango Fett and Boba Fett?

Jango Fett is the father who appears in Episode II, with gear based on blue tones. Boba Fett is the adult son who appears in Episodes IV-VI and modern works (The Mandalorian, The Book of Boba Fett), with gear based on green-and-red tones. In the LEGO world, from #7153 onward, many Jango sets include a Young Boba Fett (with the short-leg sculpt), so you can recreate them together as a father-and-son set.

Sources and References