Here’s what I found about Temu fines, based on recent reports:
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In the United States, Temu (operated by Whaleco Inc.) agreed to a $2 million civil penalty in a settlement with the Department of Justice and the FTC over alleged violations of the INFORM Consumers Act. The settlement includes injunctive provisions to improve reporting channels and information disclosure for third-party sellers. This action underscores regulatory scrutiny in the U.S. marketplace space, particularly around seller transparency and consumer reporting options.[4]
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In the European Union, Temu was fined 200 million euros (about $232 million) under the EU’s Digital Services Act for failing to adequately protect consumers from illegal or dangerous products on its platform. Regulators cited risks from items like certain toys and electronics and gave Temu a deadline to submit a comprehensive compliance action plan; the fine reflects the EU’s stricter enforcement of platform responsibility for product safety.[3][5][7][9]
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Additional contemporaneous coverage notes that EU regulators are evaluating ongoing compliance, and Temu has stated they have since strengthened risk assessment, governance, and user-protection measures in response to the findings. However, authorities may continue to monitor and potentially impose further penalties if non-compliance persists.[5][7][3]
Key takeaways
- Temu faced a $2 million civil penalty in the U.S. for INFORM Act violations, with court-approved injunctive measures to improve consumer reporting and seller disclosure.[4]
- Temu received a sizable EU fine (200 million euros) under the Digital Services Act for product safety and compliance gaps, with a mandate to submit an action plan by late August and possible ongoing penalties for non-compliance.[9][3][5]
- The company states it has taken steps to strengthen governance and risk controls since the investigations began, though regulators will continue to assess compliance.[7][3]
If you’d like, I can pull the exact regulatory filings or draft a quick side-by-side summary table of the U.S. vs EU actions with dates, penalties, and required remedial steps. I can also provide brief explainer notes on what the INFORM Consumers Act and the Digital Services Act entail.
Sources
The penalty marks the culmination of a probe into the company that began in October 2024, and the second time the commission has issued a fine under the Digital Services Act, a European law governing online content. Officials handed Elon Musk's X platform a roughly $140 million penalty late last year under the law, which compels large online platforms like Temu to prevent illegal or dangerous products being sold in the EU. Companies can receive fines of up to 6% of their annual worldwide...
www.morningstar.comWhaleco, Inc., which operates the online marketplace Temu, will pay $2 million to resolve allegations that it violated the INFORM Consumers Act of 2023, by failing to provide consumers with require
www.ftc.govEuropean Union regulators have fined Chinese online retailer Temu for failing to protect consumers from illegal products. The 27-nation bloc's investigation found that Temu exposed consumers to high-risk items like baby toys and small electronics that didn't comply with EU safety rules. The penalty was issued under the Digital Services Act, which requires online platforms to keep users safe from harmful content or goods. Temu, owned by PDD Holdings, has 92 million users in the EU. The European...
www.ajc.comThe Justice Department, together with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), announced today that a federal court has entered a stipulated order resolving a case against Whaleco Inc., doing business as “Temu.” Under the order, Temu will pay $2 million in civil penalties as part of a settlement to resolve allegations that it violated the INFORM Consumers Act in connection with its
www.justice.govLatest news on Temu, a Chinese-owned digital marketplace that offers a variety of products for low prices
www.newsnow.co.ukLONDON (AP) — Temu was hit with a 200 million euro ($232 million) fine Thursday after a European Union investigation found the Chinese online retailer failed to protect consumers from
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