Market intelligence

Vinted: Pre-loved marketplace v26.24.0 hit with child trafficking claims, ratings drop in June 2026

Vinted version 26.24.0, released June 22, 2026, became the focus of intense user backlash after viral social media posts exposed listings appearing to advertise children. The app's iOS rating fell from 3.98 to 2.27 stars amid accusations of facilitating human trafficking.

3 min read
Users discovered listings on the app that appear to be disguised advertisements for selling children, leading to widespread outrage and accusations of human trafficking.
Vinted: Pre-loved marketplace
On this page
  1. Update Coincides with Crisis
  2. A Routine Update
  3. User Reception
  4. Official Investigations
  5. Financial Context
  6. Expert Verdict

Key takeaways

  1. 01Vinted's app rating dropped by 1.71 stars after version 26.24.0's release coincided with viral claims of child trafficking on the platform.
  2. 02The backlash was not caused by a feature change; the update contained only minor bug fixes.
  3. 03Users review-bombed the app with 1-star ratings, citing suspicious listings for items like plush toys with human-like attributes and high prices.
  4. 04Vinted denies any credible evidence of child trafficking, stating some listings were faked to create controversy, and is cooperating with authorities.
  5. 05Police in France and Germany have opened investigations into the suspicious advertisements.
  6. 06The crisis follows a period of financial strength, with Vinted reaching an €8 billion valuation in April 2026.

Update Coincides with CrisisLead

Vinted Limited's app update 26.24.0, released on June 22, 2026, coincided with a severe public backlash after users discovered listings that appeared to be disguised advertisements for selling children, triggering accusations of human trafficking.

A Routine UpdateRelease Summary

The official release notes for version 26.24.0 did not contain the source of the user outrage. According to the App Store, the update stated, "We've improved performance and fixed bugs to make selling and scoring second-hand easier than ever." This indicates the rating collapse was not a response to a deliberate product change but to a viral event concerning content moderation on the platform.

The timing of the routine update inadvertently associated it with the discovery and spread of the suspicious listings, which reached critical mass on social media platforms like TikTok around the same date.

User ReceptionUser Reception

After the update, user sentiment shifted dramatically. The average rating1]Play — a primary ranking signal and one of the biggest conversion drivers on your product page. of 445 new reviews dropped to 2.27 stars, a 1.71-star fall from the pre-update average. New reviews focused almost exclusively on the trafficking allegations. "People are selling children on this app," reads one typical 1-star review on version 26.24.0. "This is part of a child trafficking ring and the company is doing absolutely nothing about it."

Another user on the same version detailed the pattern: "there are items like teddy bears and Rubik’s cubes being listed for thousands of dollars with height and weight, descriptions and being sold. These are children being listed on this app and sold on this app." The response was swift, with many users stating they were deleting the app immediately.

Official InvestigationsRoot Cause

The allegations prompted official action. French authorities launched a preliminary investigation after the matter was referred to the courts.[3] German police in Frankfurt also started an inquiry, though they noted "strong indications" that the posts could be fake. In response, Vinted stated it had "thoroughly investigated the listings currently being shared online and found no credible cases linking them to child trafficking activity."

The company added that it is working with authorities and removing listings that are "deliberately faked to fuel this conversation." Fact-checking organizations have also urged caution, with a Snopes report noting one suspicious ad was traced to a teenager who claimed he was attempting to bait predators.
[2]

Financial ContextStrategic Context

The user trust crisis interrupts a period of strong financial performance for Vinted, which serves a large audience with over 2.1 million U.S. iOS downloads in the last 30 days alone. In April 2026, the company's valuation hit €8 billion after an €880 million secondary share sale. That transaction was designed to provide liquidity for early investors and employees, not to raise new capital, which points to a profitable position before the scandal.

The current reputational damage poses a significant threat to this momentum, potentially affecting user retention and investor confidence, despite the company's denials and the possibility of the listings being hoaxes.

Expert VerdictExpert Verdict

This event highlights a critical vulnerability for online marketplaces. The rapid, algorithm-fueled spread of alarming content—whether genuine or fabricated—can inflict immediate and severe damage on a brand's reputation. Vinted's response of denying the claims while cooperating with law enforcement is a standard crisis management procedure. However, the emotional weight of the accusations means that restoring user trust will likely be a difficult, long-term effort.

The outcome of police investigations will be pivotal. Regardless of their findings, the incident suggests Vinted's content moderation protocols may need a substantial review to better detect and handle such abuse of its platform, and to prevent similar viral misinformation campaigns in the future.

Citations

  1. [1]

    The app's rating on the U.S. iOS App Store fell by 1.71 stars, from a pre-update average of 3.98 to 2.27 after the release of version 26.24.0.

    "Following the release of version 26.24.0 on June 22, 2026, Vinted's U.S. iOS app rating plummeted from 3.98 to 2.27 stars. This dramatic -1.71 star drop was triggered by a viral social media storm."
  2. [2]

    Vinted's official response states that an internal investigation found no credible evidence linking the suspicious listings to child trafficking.

    "A communications manager told The Tab, "We have thoroughly investigated the listings currently being shared online and found no credible cases linking them to child trafficking activity, a conclusion also reached by an independent fact-check of similar claims.""
  3. [3]

    Authorities in France have initiated a preliminary investigation into the matter after a referral from the country's High Commissioner for Childhood.

    "French authorities have opened a preliminary investigation into the suspicious ads after the matter was referred to the courts by the France High Commissioner for Childhood, Sarah El Haïry."

Sources

12 references

Maxime Doussin, CTO at MWM

Maxime Doussin

CTO

Maxime Doussin is the CTO of MWM, where he leads engineering, data infrastructure, and the mobile-app market-intelligence platform. He writes MWM's weekly app trend analysis, drawing on proprietary ranking data covering millions of iOS and Android apps across 150+ countries.

This article is an independent editorial analysis. App names, trademarks, and brands mentioned are the property of their respective owners. Market data and rankings referenced are based on MWM's proprietary estimates.

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