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When waiting becomes old-fashioned

Stocked warehouses, integrated logistics, same-day promises, and efficiency from the East rewrite Europe’s delivery clock

By CHEN YUEHUA and XING YI in London????|????China Daily????|???? Updated: 2026-04-06 09:25

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A Joybuy delivery vehicle passes by the Eiffel Tower in France in 2026. [Photo provided to CHINA DAILY]

Online shoppers in Europe have become accustomed to waiting — often for many days — for deliveries that arrive within broad time windows. But that patience is now being tested. Joybuy, the European retail arm of Chinese e-commerce company JD.com, has launched operations in six European countries, offering a promise more familiar to consumers in China than in Europe: same-day delivery as a standard service rather than a premium option.

Debuting in March across Belgium, France, Germany, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom, Joybuy is not just another online marketplace. It is an attempt to export China's logistics-centered retail model, setting itself apart from e-commerce rivals including Temu, Shein, and Amazon. With more than 60 warehouses and delivery hubs across Europe, consumers in more than 30 major cities can now place orders before 11 am and receive them the same day. Joybuy's initial rollout offers over 100,000 products across electronics, home appliances, beauty, groceries and household essentials. Orders above 29 pounds ($37) or 29 euro ($31) qualify for free delivery.

Industry observers say the launch is notable for operational ambition rather than novelty. Earlier Chinese platforms entering Europe include AliExpress from Alibaba Group, which pioneered cross-border marketplaces connecting European buyers with overseas sellers; Singapore-headquartered Shein, which expanded via rapid design-to-production cycles driven by data analytics; and Temu, which scaled through ultra-low prices and frequent promotions targeting mass-market consumers.

Joybuy's subscription program, JoyPlus, is priced 3.99 pounds or 3.99 euros per month, compared with Amazon Prime at 8.99 pounds per month in the UK and 8.99 euros in Europe, where the US e-commerce giant has long dominated the market and set the benchmark for fulfillment and subscription services.

The newcomer has been betting on its approach, which centers on stocked inventory, integrated logistics and predictable delivery timelines — practices that gave JD.com a strong foothold in China's intensely competitive domestic retail environment. British retail publication The Grocer noted that faster fulfillment could signal "days of sluggish delivery are numbered", while CNBC described the launch as a test of how delivery speed itself is valued in Western markets.

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