Temu: I bought 23 items from the Chinese-owned online retailer for less than $200. Here’s what I got

Harry Wallop
Daily Mail
Temu is becoming one of the most popular online retailers in the world. But what are we signing up for?
Temu is becoming one of the most popular online retailers in the world. But what are we signing up for? Credit: The Nightly

With summer finally approaching, I was keen to buy a cheap desk fan to keep me cool.

If you pop into John Lewis, the cheapest one you can find is £15; on Amazon you can get one for £12.99.

Surely that must be the best bargain — because isn’t Amazon nearly always the cheapest out there? Well, no.

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There is a rival website selling desk fans for less than half the price at £6.22.

It is also selling men’s running trainers for just £7.97, about a tenth of what I normally pay and less than half the price of even the very cheapest version in Sports Direct.

Phone cases, jackets, garden furniture, kayaks, fishing tackle, kitchen appliances, household cleaning gizmos, a dizzying array of products — all are being sold for a fraction of what you could find in most shops or online.

The website is called Temu and if you haven’t heard of it yet, the Chinese website is fast becoming one of the biggest retailers in the world.

According to data from Similarweb, which tracks internet traffic, Temu attracted 12.6 million monthly active users in the UK last month.

That’s not as big as Amazon, which had 20.4 million British customers, but it dwarfs the shopper numbers on John Lewis’s website (3.6 million) or Argos (3.8 million) — and it only arrived in the UK in April last year.

How has Temu become so big, so quickly? And, more pressing, are its products any good?

To find out more I downloaded the Temu app to see what I could buy for £100.

Temu promises users they can ‘shop like billionaires’ - then smashes them with sensory overloads and hard sells.
Temu promises users they can ‘shop like billionaires’ - then smashes them with sensory overloads and hard sells. Credit: Adobe Stock

I can “shop like a billionaire” it promises, with “free delivery everywhere!”.

And the hard sell doesn’t stop, with “lightning deals” and “mystery offers” on every page, often accompanied by a flashing countdown timer — lest I miss out.

In the space of a fortnight, I received 56 in-app messages from Temu, 59 emails, 12 text messages and 33 WhatsApp messages.

Despite, or maybe because of, the sensory overload, I was soon sucked into buying clothes, kitchen sponges, a lamp and some knockoff perfume.

In all, I bought 23 items for £98.64.

Though some of the prices were absurdly cheap (a claw hammer for 69p, anyone? Or a gift set of 24 felt-tip pens for £2.39?), some were more expensive than I expected.

They can sell direct from factories; they are able to cut out all the middlemen — the distributors, the retailers.

For instance, a natty pair of moccasins were going for £7.68, but once I clicked on them, the colour I wanted was £24.88.

Only last month, the European Consumer Organisation (BEUC) lodged a complaint about Temu, saying the “marketplace is rife with manipulative techniques that are designed to push consumers to spend more on the platform” — an accusation Temu denies, insisting its “goal is to create an engaging and enjoyable shopping experience”.

The website is a security concern, say some experts, alarmed by the personal data Western shoppers are handing over to the Chinese company.

An American investment company, Grizzly Research, went as far as to suggest: “We strongly suspect that Temu is already illegally selling stolen data, or intends to.”

Alicia Kearns, the Conservative chair of the Foreign Affairs Select Committee, reiterates to me bluntly: “Temu is essentially stealing your data.”

A Temu spokesman insists it collects “the minimum information necessary to provide our service and improve the shopping experience”.

Ms Kearns points out that a sister brand to Temu was found to have incorporated malware — malicious software — into its app, giving the company access to customers’ private messages and photographs on their phone.

Temu — pronounced ‘tee-moo’ — is owned by a Chinese company called Pinduoduo (PDD), which roughly translates as “together, more savings”.

PDD was set up by Colin Huang, 44, a former Google employee.

PDD’s Chinese site originally allowed shoppers, such as friends or neighbours, to gang together to buy in bulk directly from factories in order to bag bargains and it became a huge hit.

The parent company, listed on the Chinese stock market, is now worth $US205 billion (£161 billion) and last month announced its first quarter revenue shot up by 133 pc.

Temu, aimed at Westerners, was launched in the US in 2022 before coming over to Europe last year.

It does not allow consumers to group-buy, but it does allow them to buy directly from factories.

Indeed, Temu is not really a retailer at all, but rather a marketplace — connecting shoppers around the world with some 80,000 manufacturers, most of which are based in China.

Shaun Rein, of China Market Research Group, in Shanghai, explains this is one of the reasons the products are cheap.

“They can sell direct from factories; they are able to cut out all the middlemen — the distributors, the retailers.”

Amazon runs 30 warehouses and “fulfilment centres” in the UK and employs more than 75,000 workers here — a significant cost for a company when the minimum wage for over-21s is £11.44 an hour.

Neil Saunders, at research company GlobalData, says: “Running a logistics and warehouse operation is extremely expensive.

“Amazon alone spent $US89 billion (£70 billion) on worldwide shipping last year and this doesn’t include all of its warehouse overheads.

“By cutting out warehouses, Temu is undoubtedly saving money.”

However, because it has no warehouses in this country, nor in America or Europe, all the goods have to come from China, which takes time.

My products arrived on the eighth day after ordering. Though this is much slower than Amazon or Argos, it is faster than a boat can arrive from Asia — that’s because Temu air freights its products.

This is more expensive than making bulk shipments to UK warehouses, but because Temu sends products directly to consumers it exploits a tax loophole.

Any goods worth less than £135 can arrive in the UK tax-free, a rule designed to make it easier for friends and family to send gifts to each other.

You have a choice of buying cheap and profiting off blood labour, because that is essentially what you are doing.

Because nearly all Temu purchases are well under £135, the company (and the shopper) aren’t charged the duty.

In contrast, an importer, such as John Lewis buying T-shirts from Asia has to pay import duties of 12 pc on top of the VAT it then passes to customers.

As Ines Durand, at Similarweb, says: “Yes, it is expensive to ship by plane, but they don’t pay tariffs, they don’t have warehouses, they don’t have to pay workers minimum wages.”

So, if Temu is not making any of these products itself, where are they made?

Many experts are concerned they come from factories in Xinjiang province — home to the Muslim Uighur minority group, an estimated one million of whom have been detained in prison and work camps, according to Amnesty International.

“I don’t think anyone can dispute there is a genocide taking place in the Xinjiang region,” says Ms Kearns.

“In fact, Parliament voted that there is one taking place. Temu has no accountability in its supply chain and has a reliance on Uighur forced labour” — something she attributes to its low prices.

Her views were echoed by a US Senate committee, which last year concluded: “American consumers should know that there is an extremely high risk that Temu’s supply chains are contaminated with forced labour.”

The US bans imports from Xinjiang, but the Senate report said Temu “conducts no audits and reports no compliance system to affirmatively examine” whether its suppliers are observing US forced labour law.

Temu insists these allegations are “completely ungrounded”.

When my goods arrived, each one came with an address label on the back.

The perfume came from Shandong Oumanya Biotechnology in Shandong province, China; the plastic bricks toy from Haonanhai Toys Factory in the Shengzhou industrial zone; the felt-tip pens from Dongguan Tersen Electronics in Guangdong province.

None from Xinjiang, or so it appears.

A package from Temu.
A package from Temu. Credit: Michaela Bechinie/Mickis Fotowelt - stock.adobe.com

Ms Kearns says: “There is a lot of evidence of white-washing of labels, whereby products are sent from other parts of China.”

Were my trainers or phone case made in Xinjiang or using forced labour? It’s impossible to say.

But that’s the point — reputable retailers spend time and money hiring specialist companies to audit their supply chains.

Temu has not allowed any third-party auditors to inspect suppliers’ factories.

On day eight, my goods finally arrived, messily bundled in plastic wrapping.

A couple of the boxes were bashed. I expected the goods inside to be just as shonky.

Earlier this year, the consumer group Which? tested various electric heaters.

All three bought from Temu sellers were found to be electrically unsafe and could not be sold legally in the UK.

Last month, a Channel 4 Dispatches documentary discovered that a £2.17 silver necklace contained ten times the quantity of lead that UK regulations permitted.

Worse, VDE, an electrical product tester and certifier, told the documentary that two pliers being sold by a Temu supplier carrying its name had not been certified by the institute.

“It was illegal,” the institute’s Hendrick Schafer said.

If the certificate was incorrect, he explained, “the insulation of these handheld tools is maybe not properly done and the result could be an electric shock and, in the worst case, electric shock could lead to death.”

Temu promised to take action against the manufacturer.

Previously, Which? had found listings for batons and folding knives on the site that resembled items banned under UK law.

Rocio Concha, Which? director of policy and advocacy, said these products raised “serious question marks over the checks and monitoring [Temu] is doing on these products and the third-party sellers behind them.

“Due to shortcomings in current regulations for online marketplaces, companies like Temu can jump to the top of the app charts, with hundreds of millions of downloads, yet they are unlikely to face legal consequences when unsafe products infiltrate their platforms and put consumers at risk.”

Much to my surprise, most of the items I had bought were fine.

Yes, the T-shirt, which I expected to be cotton, was 100 per cent polyester, and the digital spoon scale gives readings of dubious accuracy.

The plastic toy-bricks model of the Titanic (£6.48) would disappoint Lego fans.

But many of the products were not just of adequate quality, but decent — notably a well-made, stylish LED table lamp costing £19.47 and the desk fan, which was powerful and quiet.

For her part, my wife thinks the ‘Cooc eau de parfum’ — a blatant copycat of Coco Mademoiselle by Chanel — is good enough to wear and, at £5.48, 15 times cheaper than the real thing.

True, a ‘vintage’ men’s pleated scarf (£3.48) was clearly made last month, but a friend spotted me wearing it at a party and asked if it was Missoni.

But though I felt pleasantly satisfied at bagging a few eye-catching bargains, I had a nagging sense that, in return, I have handed over address and bank details to a Chinese company with a dire reputation for data privacy.

Worse, I could have been complicit in the forced labour of Uighurs.

The Temu spokesman insisted the company was “committed to full compliance with the laws and regulations of the markets where we operate. We aim not just to meet the minimum legal requirements, but to exceed them by adhering to the highest best practice standards”.

In a cost-of-living crisis, many will be seduced by the bargains on the Temu app. But, as Ms Kearns says: “You have a choice of buying cheap and profiting off blood labour, because that is essentially what you are doing.”

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