The App That’s Conquered America (and My Wallet)

Three months ago, I saw my third Temu commercial during the Super Bowl and finally caved. “Shop like a billionaire,” they said. “$1 phone cases,” they promised. I downloaded it skeptically, ordered a $3 phone stand, and suddenly I’d spent $200 within 90 days.

This isn’t a paid promotion—I’m writing this review with 47 Temu packages littering my apartment, some amazing finds, some absolute garbage. Let me give you the unfiltered truth about Temu: what works, what’s a scam, and whether you should download this wildly controversial shopping app.

What Is Temu? (The 30-Second Explanation)

Temu is a Chinese e-commerce app owned by PDD Holdings (same parent company as Pinduoduo). Launched in September 2022, it exploded to become the #1 most downloaded shopping app in the US by mid-2023.

The concept: Connect Western consumers directly to Chinese manufacturers, eliminating middlemen. The result? Insanely cheap prices—we’re talking $2 t-shirts, $5 headphones, $10 dresses.

The controversy: Privacy concerns, data collection accusations, product quality questions, and sustainability issues. More on this later.

Download & Setup (5 Minutes)

Step 1: Get the Official App

For iPhone:

  • App Store → Search “Temu”
  • Download “Temu: Shop Like a Billionaire” by Temu
  • Link: App Store
  • Size: ~64 MB

For Android:

  • Google Play Store → Search “Temu”
  • Verify it’s published by Temu
  • Link: Android
  • Size: ~46 MB

⚠️ Warning: Temu BOMBARDS you with sign-up bonuses like “Download now for $100 free!” These are misleading—you get $100 in coupons with absurdly restrictive conditions, not actual cash.

Step 2: Create Account

Options:

  • Email (what I recommend)
  • Google
  • Facebook
  • Apple ID

I used email because I didn’t want Temu accessing my Google contacts (more on privacy below).

Step 3: Enter the Coupon Maze

Immediately, you’re hit with:

  • 60% off first order
  • Free shipping over $20 (sometimes)
  • Spin-the-wheel for “prizes”
  • Referral bonuses

Reality check: These coupons have expiration dates (often 24-48 hours), minimum purchases ($30-50), and category restrictions. Don’t let FOMO rush you into buying junk.

My First 3 Months: What I Actually Bought

Month 1: The Honeymoon Phase

My first order: Phone stand ($2.99), USB cables ($1.50 each), kitchen organizer ($4.99).

Total: $14.47 with free shipping 

Delivery time: 18 days 

Quality: Surprisingly decent. Phone stand still works 3 months later.

Month 2: The Addiction Kicks In

Temu’s algorithm learned my preferences FAST. It started showing:

  • Home organization tools
  • Tech accessories
  • Workout clothes
  • Pet supplies

I ordered $87 worth of stuff including:

  • 3 t-shirts ($7 total)
  • Phone grip ($1.29)
  • Resistance bands ($5.99)
  • Kitchen gadgets ($12)

Delivery: 12-25 days (varies wildly) 

Quality: 60% good, 40% mediocre

Month 3: Reality Sets In

Spent $98 more on:

  • Clothing (hit-or-miss sizing)
  • Bluetooth earbuds ($8—broke in 2 weeks)
  • Home decor (actually looks great)

Total 3-month spend: $199.47 

Total items: 47 products 

Quality satisfaction: 65%

How Temu Actually Works (The Psychology)

  1. Gamification Addiction

Temu uses EVERY psychological trick:

  • Daily spin wheels (you “win” 5% off coupons)
  • Flash sales (timers creating urgency)
  • Limited stock indicators (“Only 3 left!”)
  • Referral rewards (invite friends for credits)

My experience: I found myself opening the app daily just to spin the wheel. It’s designed to create habit loops.

  1. The Pricing Illusion

Temu shows “original prices” that are fictional.

Example:

  • “Was $45.99 → Now $6.99!”
  • Reality: It was never $46. That’s a fabricated comparison.

Actual value: Most items are worth $10-15, sold for $3-8. Still cheap, but not the “90% off” they claim.

  1. Free Shipping (With Asterisks)

“Free shipping over $20” sounds great until:

  • Some items have $2.99 “handling fees”
  • Express shipping costs $8-12
  • Returns shipping is YOUR responsibility ($5-10)
  1. The Referral Pyramid

Temu AGGRESSIVELY pushes referrals:

  • “Get $50 for each friend!”
  • Reality: You get $5-10 in restrictive coupons

I invited 3 friends. Got $22 in credits with SO many conditions I used $8 total.

What’s Actually Good About Temu

Wins:

Cheap basics: Phone cases, cables, organizers, kitchen tools 

Home decor: Surprisingly stylish vases, frames, LED lights 

Trial purchases: Trying products you wouldn’t risk $30 on 

No-risk testing: Tried 5 types of phone grips for $7 total 

Occasional gems: My $6 wireless charger works perfectly

Best categories:

  • Tech accessories (60% success rate)
  • Home organization (75% success rate)
  • Decor items (70% success rate)

What’s Terrible About Temu

Failures:

Clothing sizing: WILDLY inconsistent. My “Large” t-shirts fit like Mediums or XLs 

Electronics quality: Cheap earbuds, speakers, chargers often break quickly 

Slow shipping: 10-30 days standard (compared to 2 days for Amazon Prime) 

Deceptive marketing: The “$100 free” promotions are basically scams 

Return hassle: You pay return shipping to China ($$$) 

Sustainability: Massive environmental impact from China shipping

Worst categories:

  • Clothing (40% success rate)
  • Electronics beyond basics (30% success rate)
  • Beauty products (never risk it)

The Privacy & Data Controversy

What Temu collects:

  • Location data
  • Device information
  • Browsing behavior
  • Contacts (if you allow it)
  • Payment info

The concerns:

  • Parent company PDD has faced scrutiny in China
  • US lawmakers have raised data security questions
  • App permissions are extensive

My approach:

  • Used a separate email
  • Denied location/contacts access
  • Used PayPal (not direct card)
  • Never saved payment info

For more on app security, check Apps400’s mobile app security guide.

Temu vs Competitors

Temu vs Amazon:

  • Temu: Cheaper, slower, lower quality
  • Amazon: Faster, pricier, more reliable

Temu vs Shein:

  • Temu: Broader categories
  • Shein: Better clothing sizing

Temu vs AliExpress:

  • Temu: Simpler interface, faster shipping
  • AliExpress: More seller variety, slightly cheaper

Temu vs Wish:

  • Temu: Better quality control
  • Wish: More scammy overall

The Sustainability Elephant in the Room

Let’s be honest: Temu is TERRIBLE for the environment.

  • Products ship individually from China (massive carbon footprint)
  • Plastic packaging overload
  • Fast-fashion waste mentality

If sustainability matters to you, Temu isn’t your app.

My Shopping Strategy (After 3 Months)

What I buy on Temu:

  • Phone accessories under $5
  • Home organization tools
  • Decor items with good reviews (200+ reviews)
  • Kitchen gadgets I want to “test”

What I NEVER buy on Temu:

  • Clothing (sizing nightmares)
  • Anything I need quickly (shipping is slow)
  • Electronics over $10 (quality risk)
  • Beauty/skincare products (safety concerns)

My Rules:

  1. Read ALL negative reviews first
  2. Never buy without 100+ reviews
  3. Check photos from real buyers
  4. Expect 2-3 week shipping minimum
  5. Only order what I’m okay losing $5-10 on

Should You Download Temu?

Download Temu if: 

✅ You’re okay with slow shipping (2-3 weeks) 

✅ You want cheap accessories/decor/gadgets 

✅ You’re comfortable with data privacy trade-offs 

✅ You can resist impulse buying tricks 

✅ You view it as “gambling” $5-10 per item

Skip Temu if: 

❌ You need fast shipping 

❌ You prioritize sustainability 

❌ You’re highly privacy-conscious 

❌ You’re prone to shopping addiction 

❌ You need consistent quality

My Rating: 3.2/5 Stars

Pros:

  • Ridiculously cheap prices
  • Huge product variety
  • Decent for accessories/decor
  • Fun to browse

Cons:

  • Deceptive marketing tactics
  • Inconsistent quality
  • Slow shipping
  • Privacy concerns
  • Sustainability nightmare
  • Addictive gamification

Bottom Line: 

Temu is the dollar store of the internet—sometimes you find amazing deals, sometimes you get what you paid for (garbage). After 3 months and $200 spent, I’m keeping 30 of 47 items. That’s a 64% success rate.

It’s perfect for cheap experiments and accessories. Terrible for anything important. Download it, but keep your credit card at arm’s length and your expectations realistic.