The honest numbers
What the comparison actually looks like in practice.
A typical generic plastic hot wheels garage — the kind available in any toy shop — costs between forty and eighty euros. Under active daily use by a child aged five to eight, the surface degrades visibly within twelve to eighteen months. By year two, the structural integrity of cheaper pieces is often compromised. Most parents replace or discard within two years. Cost-per-year: thirty to forty euros, conservatively.
A personalized 91-slot wooden garage from our workshop is used actively for a minimum of two to three years in most households, and remains in the room — in some role — for four to six years. The cost-per-year calculation, run honestly, makes the wooden piece cheaper in almost every scenario where the child has a real and sustained interest in the collection.
The one scenario where the generic piece wins on cost-per-year is the phase that ends quickly — the child who is briefly interested in toy cars, acquires a dozen, and moves on within six months. For that child, the cheap generic solution is correct and the personalized wooden piece is overkill. The question to ask before ordering is: is this a phase or is this an identity? The answer is usually visible in the room.
Thirty cars arranged in a specific order on a windowsill is an identity. Three cars rolling around in a backpack is a phase. Buy for what you can see, not for what you hope will develop. If the collection is already real, the personalized piece is already the cheaper option.


