I’m trying to figure out Temu’s three models for 2026 – full‑managed, semi‑managed, and Y2 (the direct‑from‑China upgrade). Which one actually gets traffic these days?
I’m a complete beginner. I don’t even understand how pricing works yet. For Y2, I see the formula: product cost + first‑mile shipping + profit + last‑mile shipping. But how do you calculate last‑mile? And is there commission? I saw somewhere there’s no commission, just a “service fee,” but it didn’t sound cheap.
Also – how do you tell which model a listing is using on the customer side? I can’t tell them apart.
Appreciate any advice from people who’ve actually been selling.
Answers (4)
I’m in a weird category – human hair wigs (non‑standard, high variation). I keep failing price negotiation on Y2. They compare my price to mass‑produced synthetic wigs and ask me to match. How do you even get through price review on non‑standard products?
Anyone figured this out? We tried swapping images but they still use AI to compare across listings.
I’m in a similar boat (custom decor). What worked for me: I stopped trying to compete on price and leaned into the uniqueness. In the negotiation notes, I explicitly pointed out the differences – material, craftsmanship, customization options. It took a few tries, but I eventually got it through at a price that made sense.
Also, make sure your listing copy and images clearly show why it’s different. If it looks like a commodity, they’ll treat it like one.
I’ll break down the three models based on what I’m seeing in 2026:
Full‑managed
Traffic & outlook: EU and UK tax exemptions ending did shrink traffic for a bit, but US side has bounced back with lower tariffs. Repeat purchase rate is about 2x higher than Y2. Search volume for products over $30 is up 50%. Customers seem to trust the fulfillment speed and variety.
Newbie‑friendly? Yes, this is the easiest starting point. Minimal upfront cost. You just supply the goods – platform handles ops, logistics, customs. You don’t set prices; the platform does. Your job is just making sure your cost basis leaves a little margin. If you want to get competitive, look at what’s already selling well in your category. Use low‑cost small items as “loss leaders” to get volume, and bundle them with slightly higher‑margin products to make it work.
Semi‑managed
Traffic & outlook: US and EU are pushing local fulfillment hard, and Temu is giving semi‑managed a clear traffic boost. Faster shipping matters to a lot of buyers. But selection is narrower, and you have to commit to larger batches upfront. If a product doesn’t sell, getting inventory back or writing it off is expensive.
Newbie‑friendly? Not really. You need inventory in US/EU warehouses. That’s a big capital commitment, plus warehousing, shipping, and tariff costs. You have more pricing freedom, but you also have to factor in all those costs – and compete against others who’ve already figured out their numbers. If you don’t know the category, it’s easy to price too high and get no sales, or price too low and lose money.
Y2 model (local direct / upgrade of semi‑managed)
Traffic & outlook: Temu gave Y2 a lot of traffic early on to fill gaps when full‑managed had inventory issues. But delivery is slow – around 14 days for US, up to 21 for EU. Customer experience isn’t great, and long‑term, the scattered costs make cash flow tricky. Most people treat it as a testing ground.
Newbie‑friendly? Decent for testing products with small capital. You don’t need to hold stock. A few thousand dollars can get you started testing a few items. You ship from China, so inventory risk is lower. For pricing, you need to account for tariffs, deposit requirements, and last‑mile fees. Look at similar listings, price a little lower to get initial sales, and adjust once you have data.
One important catch: if you sell to EU, you’ll need a VAT number and an EU Responsible Person. US side requires handling customs paperwork. It’s not zero‑effort.
If you’re a beginner, start with full‑managed. Learn how the platform works, get comfortable with sourcing, then think about semi‑managed later once you have some cash flow and know your category better.
One thing nobody mentioned: price negotiation on Y2 can be a pain. They’ll compare your price against every platform – including AliExpress listings you have zero control over. Even if your cost is higher, they’ll say “match this or we throttle.” Happened to me twice.
If you go Y2, keep your initial batches small. Test, see if you can hold margin, then scale.
How to tell the models apart on the front end
Not always perfectly labeled, but delivery time is the biggest clue.