Meesho’s best-selling item in 2025 was “Flip These or Stay Broke Forever, Hustlers.”

Welcome to Meesho’s 2025 best-seller rodeo, where broke Gen Z kids trade ethnic blouses and LED lights for rent money faster than you can say “inflation.” I’m your crazy guide, and I’m drinking espresso straight from the cup while my laundry makes fun of me from the corner. Meesho, India’s discount retail giant that is growing in the US, making 2025 a terrific year for vendors. Prices like Shein, speed like Amazon, and no excuses. But here’s the truth: not every thing you find in your garage is worth keeping. Based on what I observed on their dashboards and what I saw late at night, these groups made billions. If you don’t do this, you’ll still be that guy selling fidget spinners in 2026. Would you be willing to give up going to Starbucks to chat to suppliers over the phone? Let’s look at the victors who made hustlers stop working from home. No fluff, just fire. 

Fashion Fails: Kurtas, Dupes, and How to Make Your TikTok Look Better Not a lot of people agree: Meesho’s sales will be 45% fashion in 2025. Who needs to be unique when copies are the best? 

Women liked to wear kurtas, sarees, and lehengas the most. People in the U.S. and the Desi diaspora who wish to dress like BTS are buying “BTS-inspired” outfits. Kurtas sold like crazy for $10 to $20 each, while Anarkali fashions were up 300% because of viral Reels.

Italics: Have you ever tried to get something from Surat? It’s like dating apps: you swipe right on the real thing and avoid the fakes. 

Why make your own t-shirts when “festive fusion” tops (a blend of crop kurtas and Coachella vibes) made stores five times as much money? 

For reports on trends, see [Meesho Seller Guides]. Pastel colors will be better than vibrant colors in 2025. 

Bullets that scroll: 

Over 2 million kurtas and kurtis. It costs less than $15 and comes with jhumkas. Cargo pants with Indian designs and a Western twist. Gold on TikTok. 

Layered necklaces for $5 are perfect for people who like to buy things on a whim. Tip: Ship from Jaipur and charge 200% more. Want to take a vacation from working from home? While you pack, be silent. 

Glow-Ups That Bring in More Money Than Your Ex’s OnlyFans: Beauty and Sparkle Sales of beauty products plummeted by 60% in 2025. Meesho is like Ulta, but it’s not as picky and costs less. 

You can acquire “glass skin” without seeing a doctor by applying herbal hair oils, facial mists, and lip tints. U.S. Gen Z sends out more than 1.5 million packages a month for “K-beauty dupes” and Ayurvedic scrubs. 

Are you sick of how much Sephora costs? Meesho’s kumkumadi oils ran out faster than PS5s, which cost $8 instead of $40. 

Are sellers lying when they declare their goods are “organic”? You can either eat the returns like poor sushi or try the test batches. 

Lists help it keep going: 

Niacinamide serums and jade rollers are two great things for your skin. The price of a bundle is $12. 

20 different matte lip kits are wild for cosmetics. #MeeshoHaul is getting a lot of attention. “Onion oils help hair grow.””Before and after” pictures are like rocket fuel for sales. To avoid the chemical soup disasters, look for supplier vets in [Meesho Seller Guides]. Fill Your Apartment and Your Wallet with Home Hustle and Gadget Trash Tools and gadgets for the kitchen? Truth bomb: sales are up 30% because grownups have air fryers and feel bad about it. 

The home category in 2025 was mostly a result of the epidemic. It has everything from Bluetooth headphones to masala boxes. People in the U.S. who worked from home bought “cute organizers” and LED strip lights to make their apartments appear better. Rhetorical rage: Why sleep when you can make $3 for every 500,000 fairy lights that turn your studio into a TikTok set? 

Italics truth: I earned $1,000 in my first week? Selling flower-shaped phone stands. The dumbest. 

Breaking out the best sellers: 

The kitchen gets filthy with silicone molds and spice racks. Lists of “viral recipes” don’t work anymore. 

Bluetooth speakers for less than $10 are tech toys. Pair with cases to earn more money. Pots and wall paintings are two examples of décor dreams. Boho-style flips are easy to do. On the category dashboards in [Meesho Seller Guides], you can sort by speed instead of vibrations.

Shoes, toys, and “Why Does This Sell?” are all wild cards. Strange people What about unique groups like fidget gadgets and juttis? Underdogs who get 20% bigger punches. 

Quick hit: Juttis (expensive flats) and kids’ toys went crazy—parents looking for “educational” things that youngsters don’t care about. Shoes that aren’t real? Up 250% with adjustments that are good for the environment. 

It’s time for questions: Are you putting your garage on the line for board games? Meesho’s “STEM kits” sold better than they expected they would during the back-to-school rush. Chaotic note: Toys all over the place around the holidays? Ship like Santa on steroids, or you’ll receive too many returns. 

Send the last list: 

A lot of people are buying shoes right now, including Kolhapuris for $12. Customers come back when they like how they look and feel. 

Sensory toys are the new TikTok moms’ toys. 

Yoga mats with mandalas on them are some of the finest things. The winner of the wellness wave. 

More [Meesho Seller Guides] when sales are high, like desi Halloween costumes? That’s a good idea. 

The Other Side: Don’t just follow these dazzling things without thinking. One last roast: Not every best-selling book is right for you. Too much? You must change or die. 

Fashion is popular, but bad quality undermines ratings. Learn from smart sources and try it out on a small scale.



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