Scrolling through Shein at midnight and adding $7 tops and $4 earrings to your cart while a government office somewhere in the nation is preparing a lawsuit against the same platform creates a unique kind of cognitive dissonance. In recent months, that tension has only increased. From American state attorneys general to the European Union itself, Shein, the Chinese-founded fast-fashion behemoth that generated over $38 billion in global sales in 2024, is currently the target of an increasing number of formal investigations and lawsuits. It didn’t happen overnight. Seldom do these things.
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed a lawsuit against Shein US Services LLC and its affiliates, focusing on two main issues: the company’s purportedly toxic product sales and the disclosure of private information belonging to American customers to the Chinese Communist Party. The lawsuit, which is based on the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act, seeks damages of up to $10,000 for each infraction and up to $250,000 for violations involving senior consumers. The filing was not an isolated action. In four days, Paxton had announced five lawsuits against Chinese-affiliated businesses, including ones against Temu, TP Link, and other companies. The substance of the Shein complaint is difficult to completely discount, regardless of whether that larger campaign is motivated by real consumer protection concerns or political optics.
The main accusations are startling. The lawsuit claims that independent testing has consistently discovered harmful chemicals in Shein clothing, which is made for school-age children, pregnant women, and newborns. The complaint alleges that dangerous heavy metals were present in Shein toys. These are not outlandish charges. Shein in particular has come under fire from consumer organizations across several nations due to long-standing concerns about the safety of chemicals in ultra-cheap fast fashion. The picture of a soft onesie in a polybag containing substances that shouldn’t be in contact with a child’s skin is unsettling.
An additional level of concern is added by the data privacy dimension. The lawsuit contends that since Shein is at least partially based in China, Chinese authorities may access customer information gathered on its platform at any time in accordance with Chinese law. A number of Chinese tech companies have been accused of this, and it is still very difficult for regular consumers to confirm or deny. It does, however, bring up an issue that most consumers overlook during the checkout process: who else is aware of this transaction?

In the meantime, Shein was the subject of a formal investigation by the European Commission in early 2025 under the Digital Services Act, a law that imposes more stringent requirements on major online platforms regarding user protection, algorithmic transparency, and illegal content. The “addictive” design of Shein’s app, the opacity of its recommendation algorithms, and the sale of items that might be considered child sexual abuse material, such as sex dolls with childlike appearances that were allegedly sold on the platform, were all issues that the EU was concerned about at the same time. Shein claimed to have banned the sellers in question, removed the offending goods right away, and since then, removed all sex dolls from its global website.
Practically speaking, the EU investigation is important. A formal DSA proceeding may result in fines of up to 6% of a company’s worldwide sales, which could amount to billions of dollars when applied to Shein’s reported revenue. Shein had complied with previous requests for information, according to the European Commission. However, compliance during a formal investigation and cooperation during a preliminary phase are two completely different things.
All of this leads to more than just a straightforward villain narrative. It’s a more complicated picture of a business that expanded incredibly quickly, possibly more quickly than its internal compliance systems could handle, and is now dealing with regulators in several jurisdictions who are raising issues that would have been simpler to avoid when the brand was younger and less well-known. Shein has made it clear that it is committed to both regulatory compliance and platform safety. For the next few years, courts and regulators will have to decide whether that commitment results in significant change or stays mostly in the language of press releases.
Naturally, the customers are still scrolling. It’s still difficult to dispute the prices. However, it’s becoming more difficult to overlook potential hidden costs.

