LEGO has produced 228 unique solid colors in 77 years. More than half are now discontinued. This is every one of them ·when it appeared, how long it lasted, and when it disappeared.
When LEGO launched the "Automatic Binding Brick" in 1949, 6 colors entered the palette that are still produced today ·Red, Blue, Green, Yellow, White, and Bright Green. Other early shades came and went, but these six became the foundation.
Light Gray arrives in 1954 and becomes a cornerstone ·it will appear in 25,163 sets across 53 years. Black joins in 1957. The Modulex line briefly adds 30+ architectural colors in 1963, all discontinued the same year.
Growth is slow and deliberate. Brown arrives in 1974. Tan in 1982. By 1990 the palette is still just 20 mainstream colors. Even by 1996 it's only 30. Constraint was the philosophy ·every color had to earn its place.
Licensed themes arrive ·Star Wars, Harry Potter, Bionicle. Suddenly LEGO needs specific shades. The palette nearly triples from 30 to 85 active colors in 7 years. Orange, Lime, Dark Turquoise, Sand Green, Dark Red ·the modern palette is born.
LEGO nearly went bankrupt in 2003. The turnaround plan was brutal ·59 colors discontinued. Light Gray, the 53-year veteran, was replaced by Light Bluish Gray. Brown became Reddish Brown. Purple, Medium Green, Light Blue ·all gone.
Post-purge, LEGO stabilizes around ~53 active colors. Each new addition is deliberate ·Dark Azure, Medium Azure, Lavender, Olive Green. Coral arrives in 2019. Quality over quantity becomes the rule.
Today's 56 active colors have to do everything ·from Creator 3-in-1 to Architecture to Botanicals. 2024 brings Reddish Orange, Sienna Brown, Umber Brown. The 2026 newcomers: Blue Violet and Warm Pink. The palette is still evolving.
Of 228 solid colors ever produced, 172 are discontinued ·that's 75%. Some lasted a single year. Light Gray lasted 53. Every gray brick below is a color that once existed in a LEGO set, somewhere in the world.