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Lego SPIKE Essential vs Lego WeDo 2.0 — which set for my kid?

A direct comparison of the two most popular Lego Education sets. What we buy for our classroom, what we recommend to parents who want a set for home, and how to avoid spending 30,000 RSD on the wrong choice.

TL;DR — the shortest possible answer

But if you want a more detailed look — read on.

What these sets actually are

Lego WeDo 2.0

Launched 2016 · Lego Education
  • ~280 elements in the set
  • 1 small motor + 1 sensor (motion/tilt)
  • Bluetooth "Smarthub" for wireless connection
  • Visual programming language via tablet or PC
  • Ideal age: 7–10 years
  • Price: ~16–22,000 RSD

Lego SPIKE Essential

Launched 2021 · Lego Education
  • ~449 elements (significantly more)
  • 2 motors + color sensor + distance sensor
  • Bluetooth "Hub" with a 5×5 light display
  • Visual language (Word Blocks) or Python
  • Ideal age: 6–11 years
  • Price: ~28–35,000 RSD

Differences table — straight up

CriterionWeDo 2.0SPIKE Essential
Price~16–22,000 RSD~28–35,000 RSD
Number of elements~280~449
Motors1 small2 motors
Sensors1 (motion + tilt)2 (color + distance)
Hub displayNone (just an LED)5×5 LED matrix
Programming languageWeDo blocksWord Blocks or Python
Battery life~3 hours~6 hours
Lego SPIKE Prime compatibilityNoYes (parts are the same)
Ideal age7–106–11
Project difficultyLighter, fasterRicher, more complex

What a kid can realistically build

With WeDo 2.0

Typical WeDo project: 30-45 minutes building + 15 minutes programming. Fits in 1 lesson.

With SPIKE Essential

Typical SPIKE Essential project: 60-90 minutes building + 30-45 of programming. Often continues into the next lesson.

Visual programming — a difference that's not obvious

WeDo 2.0 has its own programming interface that is simpler. Fewer options, bigger blocks, fewer mistakes. Good for a 7-year-old.

SPIKE Essential uses "Word Blocks" — Lego's enhanced version of Scratch with the same block-stacking model. This language is closer to "real" Scratch and is considered a stepping stone to text-based programming (Python).

Practically: a kid who gets into SPIKE Essential at 9 will move into Python at 11 relatively easily. The leap from WeDo 2.0 to Python is bigger.

What we use at DigiKids

For our age groups:

You see the pattern: WeDo 2.0 is for the intro, SPIKE Essential is for a more advanced level, SPIKE Prime / Mindstorms is for the oldest group.

Buy for home or not?

Buy if:

Don't buy if:

The most common scenario we see: a parent buys SPIKE Essential for 32,000 RSD with no context. The kid is into it for 2 weeks, then stops. The parent asks us "can we use it in class?". We can, but then the set comes back home — and stops again. If you were considering 30,000 RSD for an expensive set, consider 30,000 RSD for one DigiKids semester cycle — probably a better investment.

Another option — smaller sets

If you want a Lego robot toy that's realistic for a home setting:


DigiKids Vračar uses all three sets at different belt levels. Before you buy for home — give us a call, we'll advise honestly. A free trial is probably the smarter first investment.

Before you buy — talk to us for 5 minutes.

Honest advice on what would bring the most value to your kid. It doesn't have to be our program.

📞 Call 064 078 9373

Book a free trial →