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Labubu Restock: When Does Pop Mart Restock?

Colin Moran
Colin Moran
July 11, 2026
8 min read
Labubu Restock: When Does Pop Mart Restock?

Short Answer

  • Pop Mart does not publish a Labubu restock schedule. Online restocks happen in waves — often teased on Pop Mart's socials, sometimes completely unannounced.
  • The Pop Mart app and popmart.com are separate inventories, and in-store shelves plus Robo Shop vending machines restock on their own cadence.
  • Restocks sell out in minutes. Monitoring the exact popmart.com product page beats chasing rumors — an alert the second it flips is the whole game.

Done refreshing the Labubu page?

BotBro watches the exact popmart.com product page and texts you the second it's back in stock — before the resale flippers clean it out.

If you're hunting a Labubu — a Monsters blind box, a Big Into Energy pendant, the one specific colorway your kid (or, be honest, you) wants — you already know the routine: the page says sold out, someone on TikTok says "restock tonight," and by the time you check, it's gone again. Here's the honest version of when Pop Mart actually restocks Labubu, and how to catch the next wave without living on the refresh button.

One thing up front: Pop Mart does not publish a restock schedule. Any site or TikTok account claiming to know "the exact day and time" is guessing or reposting rumors. What you can do is understand how the drops actually work — and put a monitor on the exact product page so the flip to in-stock texts you first.

When Does Pop Mart Restock Labubu Online?

Pop Mart restocks Labubu online in waves, not on a calendar. A sold-out series will sit dead for days or weeks, then a batch of inventory goes live on popmart.com — sometimes region by region — and sells through in minutes. Then it's dead again until the next wave.

Some of these drops are announced: Pop Mart's Instagram, TikTok, and Discord will flag a date, occasionally an exact hour, especially for big launches and re-releases of hyped series. Plenty of others are silent restocks — inventory quietly flips to available with no post at all, at hours that make no sense for US shoppers, and the only people who catch it are the ones watching the page.

Why do they vanish so fast? The demand side is brutal. Labubu is the biggest collectible craze going, resellers run checkout bots and buy in multiples to flip at two to five times retail, and blind box collectors buy whole cases chasing the secret figure. When a restock hits an audience of millions of followers, the actual window for a normal person to buy one at retail is often just a few minutes for popular figures — sometimes under two.

The practical takeaway: don't try to memorize a pattern that doesn't exist. Follow Pop Mart's socials for the announced drops, and let a page monitor catch the silent ones.

Pop Mart App vs Website vs Stores

This trips up a lot of people: Pop Mart runs separate inventories across its channels. The Pop Mart app (with its Pop Now blind box pulls) can have stock when popmart.com shows sold out, and vice versa. Physical Pop Mart stores and the Robo Shop vending machines get their own shipments on their own cadence, unconnected to what the website shows.

An honest caveat about monitoring: BotBro watches web pages. It can monitor any product page on popmart.com, but it cannot see inside the Pop Mart mobile app — app inventory simply isn't visible from the web. Same story for Robo Shops: there's no public web page showing what's inside the machine at your mall, so no online tool can track them. If a tool claims to monitor the app or vending machines, be skeptical.

A sensible split: put an automatic monitor on the popmart.com product page, and treat the app as the thing you open manually when an announced drop goes live (announced drops often hit both channels around the same window).

And a word on the other places Labubu shows up. Amazon listings are almost always third-party sellers at a heavy markup, and eBay is resale territory where popular figures run well above retail. Neither is a "restock" — it's paying someone who beat you to the restock. Unless a figure is genuinely retired, waiting for the next Pop Mart wave is almost always the better deal.

Labubu Restock Series: Blind Boxes, Big Into Energy, and New Drops

Not every Labubu restocks the same way, so it helps to know what you're waiting for:

  • Core blind box series. The Monsters blind box lines are Pop Mart's bread and butter, and a Labubu blind box restock is the most common kind — these get replenished in recurring waves as production catches up. If a core series shows sold out, it will very likely return; the question is only when, and whether you'll see it in time.
  • Big Into Energy. The vinyl plush pendant series that turned Labubu into a bag-charm phenomenon is chronically sold out, and every Big Into Energy restock evaporates fast because the buyers aren't just collectors — it's everyone who saw one on a celebrity's bag. Expect multiple waves, expect every one of them to be a bloodbath.
  • Limited editions and collabs. Seasonal exclusives, anniversary figures, and brand collaborations often get one production run. Some never restock at all — which is exactly what resellers count on. If it's marked limited, treat any restock rumor with extra suspicion.
  • Brand-new drops. New series launches are announced ahead of time and sell out at launch, then typically see follow-up restock waves in the following weeks. The second wave is often your realistic shot at retail price.

Whatever the series, the mechanics are the same: a specific product page on popmart.com flips from sold out to in stock, and the clock starts. That page is the thing to watch.

Beat the flippers to the next wave

BotBro checks the Labubu product page every couple of minutes and texts you the instant it flips to in-stock — no rumor-chasing, no 2 AM refreshing.

Get a Text the Second Labubu Is Back

Everything above points to one strategy: stop guessing, watch the page. BotBro is a desktop app that monitors the exact popmart.com product page in a real browser on your computer. Paste the URL, pick how often to check — anywhere from every minute to every hour; for Labubu drops that sell out in minutes, set it to every 1–2 minutes — and the moment the page flips to in-stock you get an SMS plus a desktop notification.

Setup is plain English. Here's a prompt you can paste straight in:

Prompt — Labubu restock monitor

Watch this Pop Mart page: [paste URL]. The instant it's in stock, text me. Check every 2 minutes.

You can run a monitor per product — one for the blind box case, one for the Big Into Energy pendant — each on its own schedule, and the alert only fires when the item actually flips from sold out to available, so you're not spammed while it sits in stock.

If even a two-minute head start isn't enough for the drop you're chasing, there's an optional auto-buy mode: you pre-authorize the exact item, a quantity, and a hard maximum total price, and when the restock hits, BotBro attempts checkout for you and texts you the result. The price cap matters in this hobby — with resale running multiples of retail, the cap guarantees you never accidentally pay flipper prices. Your card details stay encrypted on your own machine and are masked from the AI; nothing sensitive touches BotBro's servers.

One honest note: BotBro runs on your computer, so checks happen while the app is open. Leave it running during the day and it does the refreshing for you. Because it drives a real browser from your home connection, a check looks to Pop Mart like a normal shopper opening the page — because it basically is one. See restock alerts for more examples, or pricing to get started.

FAQ: Labubu Restocks

Related Guides

Let BotBro watch the drop for you

Paste a popmart.com Labubu URL, set a check every 1–2 minutes, and get a text the instant it's back — or pre-authorize auto-buy with a hard price cap and let it check out for you.

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Colin Moran

Written by Colin Moran

Colin is the founder of BotBro. He built the product from scratch — the desktop app, the backend, and the AI automation engine. He writes about browser automation, web scraping, and the tools people actually use to get work done online.