Robyn Vinter 

‘Too good to be true’: parents warned to check before they buy amid flood of counterfeit toys

Border Force warns knock-off Labubu dolls and similar items can be dangerous, and sales fund criminal networks
  
  

A lilac Labubu doll and a light green one next to opened boxes
The Home Office seized hundreds of thousands of fake Labubu toys at the border this year. Photograph: Home Office/PA

At this time of year, with the big day looming and the north pole elves straining to meet their manufacturing quotas, it may be tempting for Santa to try outsourcing toy production to international organised crime gangs.

But Father Christmas would do well to heed fresh warnings that counterfeit versions of one of this year’s most popular toys can be dangerous to children.

Parents have been advised to check before they buy and be wary of deals that “seem too good to be true” as demand for Labubus reaches a frenzy in the runup to Christmas.

Dangerous imitations of the Chinese doll – a furry, gremlin-esque character with a smug toothy grin – made up 90% of the 260,000 fake toys seized at the border this year, the Home Office said.

Of thenearly a quarter of a million fake Labubus seized by Border Force in 2025, 75% would not pass safety standards.

Border Force said the warning was not about “stopping fun at Christmas”, it was about sparing children from harm.

As well as fake Labubus, officers trained to spot fake goods also seized a range of other counterfeit toys and electricals, including Jellycats, PlayStation controllers, Disney merchandise and Pokémon figurines. The items, which were destroyed, contained banned chemicals linked to cancer, choking hazards and unsafe wiring.

Police and Trading Standards have also ramped up raids of counterfeit goods shops and warehouses in recent months, closing down multiple retailers selling fake designer clothing, bags and toys, in person and online. In many cases, there have also been arrests on modern slavery charges.

It is not a crime to buy counterfeit goods, but selling them is punishable by up to 10 years in prison and an unlimited fine.

The market for counterfeit Labubus has boomed in recent years, mirroring the popularity of the highly collectible toy. Rare figures can sell for thousands of pounds.

Profits at the toymaker Pop Mart have tripled thanks to the craze, which has high profile fans including Rihanna, Dua Lipa and Kim Kardashian, and has been parodied on South Park.

They make up part of a record-breaking year for Border Force, which included £1bn worth of cocaine seized this summer and weapons and firearms.

Adam Chatfield, Border Force’s assistant director said: “Preventing cheap knock-off toys entering Britain isn’t about stopping fun at Christmas.

“Serious organised criminals use profits from dangerous counterfeit goods to fund their evil activities – exploiting parents and families. Every product seized disrupts criminal networks threatening our border security, spares children from harm and protects legitimate British businesses.”

Helen Barnham, the Intellectual Property Office deputy director of enforcement policy said: “With counterfeit toys, what you see is rarely what you get. These illegal and dangerous goods have bypassed every safety check the law requires, behind the packaging can be hidden choking hazards, toxic chemicals and unsafe electrical wiring that put children in real danger.

“This Christmas, check before you buy. Be wary of unfamiliar sellers and deals that seem too good to be true. If something doesn’t feel right, it probably isn’t. Don’t let your child be the product tester.”

 

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