Observing a company that claims that product safety is a “top priority” while selling 10,000 new clothing designs every day is almost ridiculous. Shein is in this predicament, and it is getting harder to ignore the discrepancy between its public claims and what independent researchers are actually discovering in its apparel.
According to data released by Greenpeace Germany in November 2025, 18 out of 56 tested Shein clothing items had hazardous chemical levels higher than those allowed by the European Union. Not just a little bit. Extreme margins, in certain instances. Phthalates, plasticizers associated with reproductive disorders, and PFAS, the so-called “forever chemicals” linked to cancer and immune suppression, were among the substances found. Among the impacted items were children’s clothes. In response, Shein stated that adhering to EU regulations was essential to its goals and that it had eliminated the products that had been flagged. If Greenpeace hadn’t followed up to make sure, that response might have been persuasive.
Investigators ordered 31 products from Shein’s German platform about four weeks later; these products were the same or almost the same as those that had been reported earlier. The outcomes were striking. Of those 31 products, 25 (or 81%) still tested positive for dangerous chemicals that exceeded EU legal limits. The identical product, retailer, and listing were still for sale in at least four instances. The same non-compliant insole was still offered for sale in nine different strap colors for a pair of sandals that had failed testing. The only color eliminated was the particular color that had been tested. Calling that a compliance effort is difficult.
This is especially concerning because of the legal framework Shein has constructed around the chemicals, not just the chemicals themselves. According to EU chemical regulations, individual customers are considered importers since the company ships directly from China to them. This implies that Shein is not legally liable for compliant products. It belongs to the individual who selected “add to cart.” In essence, Shein has created a system in which it has no official responsibility for what comes to your door. This is not an unintentional gray area. It’s a feature of the business model.

Shein seems to have been acting with a calculated assurance that law enforcement wouldn’t be able to match its scope. The company relies on individual oversight failures adding up in its favor at the volume it moves, driven by AI-driven trend monitoring, hyper-speed production, and a social media engine designed to keep young shoppers buying constantly. Products that did not comply were flagged by French customs. The Stiftung Warentest in Germany followed suit. Now, Greenpeace has done it twice. It is not a pattern of isolated occurrences. The line is a throughline.
Customers in Europe who browse their phones at midnight aren’t always the most vulnerable. Workers in nations that produce goods are directly and regularly exposed to these substances. Long after a single fast fashion cycle is over, the contaminants continue to seep into rivers and soil when contaminated clothing is washed or eventually thrown away. The reason PFAS are referred to as “forever chemicals” is that they do not degrade. They build up.
It’s not just Shein’s carelessness that sticks out when you watch this play out. It’s the extent to which the business has tried regulators’ tolerance and managed to get away with it. Shein is legally required to stop the sale of hazardous products because it is a designated Very Large Online Platform under the EU’s Digital Services Act. Courts may eventually have to address the question of whether those obligations are truly being enforced. The fact that Shein is being sued in different jurisdictions and forms seems less like a one-time event and more like the unavoidable result of years of prioritizing profit over responsibility.
The clothing is still being sold as of right now. Chemicals are still being found. Additionally, ten thousand new designs are most likely already in line for tomorrow somewhere in a warehouse outside of Guangzhou.

