TikTok Shop Expands Seller Logistics With Shipping and Pickup
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Temu has taken a decisive and globally significant step in Turkey by blocking international sellers and moving to an exclusively local-seller marketplace. The move marks the first time Temu has fully shut off cross-border selling in a national market, signalling a strategic pivot that could change how the platform operates across Europe and beyond.
At first glance, the decision appears counterintuitive. Temu built its global buyer base on a simple proposition: ultra-low prices, fuelled largely by direct-from-China supply chains and aggressive customer acquisition spending. Yet in Turkey, that model has now been deliberately dismantled.
Under the new structure, Turkish shoppers will only see products listed and fulfilled by domestic sellers. International merchants—particularly Chinese sellers that historically dominated Temu’s assortment—have been removed entirely from the Turkish storefront.
While Temu has not publicly announced a regulatory enforcement action, the timing is notable. The change follows a recent inspection of Temu’s local offices by the Turkish Competition Authority.
This aligns with a broader global reality: cross-border eCommerce is becoming structurally more expensive and more regulated, not less.
Turkey is scheduled to implement a major customs change on 1 February 2026, eliminating its simplified customs clearance process for goods valued under €30. This low-value import threshold has long been critical to Temu’s ability to deliver cheap international goods directly to consumers with minimal friction.
Once removed, every imported item—regardless of price—will face standard customs procedures, raising costs, delivery times, and compliance complexity. For a platform built on speed and price advantage, the economics of low-value cross-border shipping become far less attractive.
Seen through this lens, Temu’s Turkey decision looks less like a defensive retreat and more like a pre-emptive structural realignment.
For Chinese sellers reliant on direct-to-consumer exports, the change is unequivocally negative. Access to Turkish buyers via Temu’s low-cost logistics funnel has effectively been shut down.
But the same move creates an immediate opportunity for domestic Turkish sellers. By importing goods in bulk, managing inventory locally, and listing through Temu’s marketplace, local merchants can now fill the price and assortment gaps left behind—without competing directly against factory-to-consumer pricing.
This transition also benefits sellers with stronger operational maturity: warehousing, compliance readiness, and local fulfilment capabilities become competitive advantages rather than cost burdens.
Notably, some Chinese sellers are unlikely to exit entirely. Many already operate—or will rapidly establish—local entities, warehouses, or partnerships inside Turkey, effectively re-entering the marketplace as “domestic” sellers.
Temu Turkey’s localization strategy is unlikely to remain an isolated experiment. Across the UK and EU, policymakers are actively debating or implementing de minimis reforms, tightening customs rules, and increasing scrutiny of ultra-low-value imports.
Turkey may simply be the first domino.
If similar measures roll out across European markets, Temu—and marketplaces like it—will be forced to rebalance away from pure cross-border arbitrage toward localized supply chains, domestic seller enablement, and regional inventory hubs.
Temu’s Turkey pivot highlights a fundamental shift underway in global marketplaces:
For Turkish sellers, the message is clear: speed wins. Those who move early, secure supply, and optimize local operations stand to gain disproportionate visibility and volume.
For Temu, Turkey is no longer just a growth market—it’s a live test case for what the next phase of marketplace expansion may look like across Europe.
Source: https://channelx.world/2026/01/temu-turkey-goes-local-with-no-more-low-cost-imports/
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