The French government has confirmed it will challenge a ruling by the Paris Judicial Court that dismissed its request to temporarily block or maintain restrictions on Shein. 

The appeal follows legal action launched by the State over what it has described as “serious breaches” by the platform.  

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Proceedings were initiated through a summons filed on 10 November, in which the government sought either the temporary suspension of Shein’s platform or the continuation of limits already imposed on its marketplace and associated control measures. 

A hearing took place on 5 December, with the court issuing its decision on 19 December.  

While the State’s requests were rejected, the government said it accepts the ruling. 

Despite this, the court ordered Shein to introduce age-verification mechanisms for the sale of pornographic products.  

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Non-compliance would trigger a provisional fine of €10,000 ($11,732) per infringement, applicable for up to 12 months. The order takes immediate effect. 

In its reasoning, the court acknowledged the “obvious damage to public order, to the protection of minors, or to the health and safety of potential buyers”.  

However, it did not impose measures to prevent the sale of items such as child pornography dolls, category A weapons or medicines. 

Referring to what it considers the systemic risks linked to Shein’s operating model, and acting at the request of the Prime Minister, the government said it will lodge an appeal in the coming days.  

It added that state authorities will continue to closely monitor online platforms. 

The government also said its efforts are ongoing at EU level.  

France has secured changes to the customs duty exemption for parcels valued below €150, which are set to come into force in 2026 as part of strengthened oversight of online marketplaces. 

In parallel, France has reached agreement with other EU member states to introduce a flat customs charge of €3 per item category on parcels under €150 entering the bloc.  

This measure is expected to apply no later than 1 July 2026. 

France said it will continue working with European partners to encourage the European Commission to take further steps aimed at protecting minors, consumers and traders.