In one of the most dramatic market shifts in e-commerce history, Chinese shopping platform Temu has matched Amazon’s share of cross-border online sales, capturing 24% of the international market by 2025. This is a stunning achievement for a company that held just 1% market share three years earlier.
The revelation comes from the International Post Corporation’s Cross-Border E-Commerce Shopper Survey, which polled nearly 31,000 consumers across 37 countries in September 2025. Together, Temu and Amazon now account for nearly half of all cross-border purchases, fundamentally reshaping the global e-commerce landscape.
From Zero to Global Giant
Temu’s trajectory represents perhaps the fastest global marketplace rollout in modern e-commerce history. Launched in the United States in September 2022 by China-based PDD Holdings, the platform expanded to Europe in spring 2023 after establishing its headquarters in Dublin. Within months, Temu had rolled out operations to dozens of countries worldwide.
The company’s international online sales surged from representing just 1% of the market in 2022 to 24% by 2025, a growth rate that has caught established players off guard and forced industry analysts to recalibrate their predictions about the future of cross-border commerce.
The Competitive Fallout
While Temu and Amazon captured the commanding heights of cross-border e-commerce, legacy platforms suffered dramatic losses. Between 2018 and 2025, Wish lost 95% of its market share, eBay declined by 68%, and AliExpress dropped 33%. Even Shein, despite explosive growth between 2020 and 2023, has seen its market share plateau at 9% over the past two years.
The competitive reshuffling signals represent a fundamental shift in how cross-border commerce operates, with speed, price, and logistics efficiency becoming the critical differentiators.
The Secret Sauce: Business Model Innovation
Temu’s success stems from its fully managed model, which offers sellers a comprehensive one-stop solution including logistics, overseas warehousing, and after-sales service. This approach removes traditional barriers that kept smaller sellers from reaching international customers, while giving consumers access to an enormous catalogue of heavily discounted goods shipped directly from China.
The platform’s aggressive pricing strategy, powered by direct manufacturer relationships and efficient supply chains concentrated in China’s southeastern coastal industrial clusters, enabled it to undercut competitors while maintaining volume. The company’s expansion was further accelerated through massive advertising investments, making it one of the most downloaded shopping apps globally.
The Delivery Revolution
One often-overlooked factor in Temu’s success is its contribution to improving cross-border delivery speed. The survey revealed that the proportion of international parcels taking 15 days or more to arrive has plummeted from 29% in 2020 to just 7% in 2025, with faster logistics becoming table stakes for competing in the market.
Interestingly, consumer delivery preferences are also evolving. While doorstep delivery remained most popular at 44%, parcel locker usage surged to 13% in 2025, suggesting growing consumer comfort with alternative delivery methods that offer flexibility and security.
An Uncertain Future
Whether Temu can maintain its momentum remains an open question. Industry experts warn that 2026 may prove to be the platform’s toughest year yet, not because of competition, but due to tariffs and trade regulations that strike at the heart of its business model.
Beyond regulatory challenges, Temu faces scrutiny over data privacy concerns, allegations of product quality and safety issues, and ongoing legal disputes with competitors such as Shein. The European Commission launched an investigation in October 2024 over concerns about illegal products, banned sellers, and potentially addictive design features.
Despite these headwinds, Temu’s achievement in matching Amazon’s cross-border market share within three years stands as a remarkable testament to how quickly the e-commerce landscape can be disrupted. For logistics providers, traditional retailers, and consumers alike, the rise of Temu signals that the next chapter of global commerce will be defined not by those with the longest history, but by those who can adapt fastest to changing regulations, consumer expectations, and technological possibilities.









