Labubu is a quirky little creature from Hong Kong artist Kasing Lung’s The Monsters series. The figures took off when POP MART began selling them in blind boxes sealed packs, where you only find out which character you got after opening it. The surprise, the odd-cute design, and limited drops turned Labubu into a collector favorite.
Labubu comes in different sizes as vinyl figures and plushies, but the blind-box minis are the stars. They’ve crossed into fashion too, with young adults clipping them to bags or belt loops, and they’ve been spotted with pop stars like Dua Lipa, Rihanna, and BLACKPINK’s Lisa.
The craze is global. Resale markets are busy, thefts have even made the news, and social media keeps demand high. When this article was written, TikTok had more than 1 million #labubu video posts. In 2024 Pop Mart’s “The Monsters” line (which includes Labubu) brought in about $418 Million.
Before they were collectibles, Labubus were book characters. Hong Kong–born artist Kasing Lung moved to the Netherlands as a child and fell in love with Nordic fairy tales, especially stories about elves. In 2015, he launched The Monsters, where Labubus are a playful tribe of female elves. On the page, they’re kind-hearted helpers who sometimes cause a little chaos. There are roughly a hundred of them, each with quirks and backstories, one thread even pairs a teasing, big-hearted Labubu with a shy skeleton named Tycoco.
In 2019, Lung partnered with POP MART to bring his creations into collectible form. As the line expanded—eventually including tiny plush key-rings—the characters jumped from storybooks to street style, turning Labubu from a cult favorite into a daily sight on jackets and backpacks.
In the U.S., a Labubu surprise box sells for about $27.99, but the hunt for rare characters pushes resale prices way up (a “secret” Chestnut Cocoa can list well over $149). That demand has spawned two things at once: a lively market for doll clothes and accessories, and a flood of counterfeits (sometimes nicknamed “Lafufu”).
When a toy is hot, fake shops and knockoffs follow. The Better Business Bureau has logged reports from buyers who thought they were getting the real thing but received poor-quality counterfeits or nothing at all.
The tricks to watch for:
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Related: Facebook Marketplace scams you should avoid
Falling for a Labubu scam usually ends the same way: your money’s gone, the toy never shows up, and the damage can continue. Scammers may harvest your personal details, try to hijack your Marketplace or messaging accounts (by tricking you into sharing a verification code), or test your card for more fraud later. Take a minute to check the seller, and you’ll avoid most of these traps.
Use this when you’re shopping for Labubu (or any trendy toy) to avoid most of these traps.
Bitdefender Scamio, free scam detector
Got a “Labubu sale” message, a sketchy ad, or a too-new shop? Paste the text or link into Bitdefender Scamio. It analyzes messages, emails, social posts, links, even QR codes, and explains, in plain English, what looks risky and why.
Bitdefender Link Checker — “Is this site safe?”
Before you enter your card details, drop the seller’s URL into Bitdefender Link Checker. It checks for phishing, malware, and other shady behavior so you can avoid counterfeit or fraudulent sites.
Two minutes of checking can save you weeks of headaches.
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Cristina is a freelance writer and a mother of two living in Denmark. Her 15 years experience in communication includes developing content for tv, online, mobile apps, and a chatbot.
View all postsMay 16, 2025