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Wish: Shop And Save
Wish Inc.
Rating 4.7star icon
Editor's summary
Editor rating
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4.2

One-line summary Wish is easy to recommend if you love bargain hunting and can tolerate long shipping times, but it’s a harder sell if you want predictable quality and straightforward pricing.

  • Installs

    500M+

  • Developer

    Wish Inc.

  • Category

    Shopping

  • Content Rating

    Teen

  • Latest version

    23.3.2

  • Package

    com.contextlogic.wish

Screenshots
In-depth review
After spending real time with Wish: Shop And Save, the app feels less like a traditional online store and more like a digital bargain bazaar. That is both its biggest strength and its biggest warning label. Open it up, start scrolling, and it immediately leans into discovery: cheap gadgets, home items, decor, fashion, hobby tools, odd little impulse buys, and the kind of products you did not wake up planning to search for. In day-to-day use, that endless-scroll format is genuinely effective. It is fast, easy to browse, and very good at making you say, “Well, that’s interesting,” followed by, “At that price, maybe I’ll try it.” The first thing Wish gets right is accessibility. The app is simple to navigate, product pages are easy to reach, and browsing by category works well enough when you know roughly what you want. We found the overall shopping flow approachable even for casual users: open the app, get drawn into the feed, tap into an item, compare a few listings, and check out with minimal friction. It does not feel intimidating. In fact, that ease of use is part of why the app can become a little addictive. Wish has a talent for surfacing low-cost items that feel fun rather than essential, and that can make a quick browse turn into a much longer session than expected. The second thing it does well is price appeal. There are absolutely real deals here, especially on small accessories, novelty items, home odds and ends, and non-urgent purchases where you are not chasing premium quality. When we approached the app with the right mindset, it delivered. If you treat Wish like a place to find affordable extras rather than mission-critical purchases, it can be surprisingly satisfying. There is a certain thrill in finding something useful or entertaining at a price that feels low enough to take a chance on. A third strength is that the app does a decent job of making shopping feel low-risk in practice. Order tracking and support visibility help, and the general buying experience gives the impression that if something goes wrong, there is at least a process in place. That matters on a marketplace-style app where quality and seller consistency can vary from item to item. We never got the sense that Wish was pretending every listing was premium retail; the smarter way to use it is to read carefully, inspect images closely, and buy with realistic expectations. That realistic-expectations part is important, because Wish’s biggest weakness is consistency. The app can deliver exactly what it promises, but it can also reward careless shopping with disappointment. Product listings often require closer attention than they should. Sometimes the headline deal looks better than the actual specifics once you dig into size, variant, or description details. In our time using the app, that meant slowing down and double-checking what was actually being sold rather than trusting the first image or price shown. If you are the type of shopper who wants every listing to be crystal clear at a glance, this can become tiring. Shipping is the second major pain point. Even when product prices are low, the total can climb once shipping is added item by item. That changes the psychology of the bargain very quickly. An item that looks incredibly cheap upfront may end up merely decent once delivery costs are included. Worse, shipping can feel fragmented in a way that makes cart-building less satisfying than it should be. If you are ordering multiple things, you may find yourself doing mental math more often than you want, trying to decide whether the final total still feels like a deal. Delivery speed is also not for impatient shoppers. Some orders arrive sooner than expected, but Wish is still at its best when you can afford to wait. The third weakness is search and filtering precision. The app is great at encouraging browsing, but it is less impressive when you want to drill down efficiently. Searching for a specific item can bring a mix of relevant and loosely related results, which fits the app’s treasure-hunt personality but not necessarily a focused shopping mission. For casual discovery, that is fine. For targeted buying, it can be annoying. Using Wish well requires a particular approach. The best experience comes when you browse carefully, study photos, check descriptions, compare options, and stay patient on shipping. Do that, and the app can be fun, useful, and genuinely economical. Rush through it, and it becomes easier to end up with something that is not quite what you thought you were ordering, or a basket whose shipping costs quietly eroded the savings. So who is Wish for? It is for bargain hunters, patient shoppers, hobby tinkerers, gift drawer stockpilers, and anyone who enjoys browsing weird, useful, or disposable low-cost items without needing them tomorrow. It is also good for people who understand that value and premium quality are not the same thing, and who are comfortable trading speed and consistency for low prices. Who is it not for? Anyone who needs fast delivery, premium reliability, or complete confidence that every listing is straightforward and every item will match polished retail expectations. It is also not ideal for shoppers who dislike surprise shipping totals or who want strong filters and precise search results. In the end, Wish works best when you treat it like a bargain adventure rather than a dependable one-stop store. Used that way, it is enjoyable, easy to browse, and often impressively cheap. Used carelessly, it can be frustrating. That tension defines the app: fun and affordable, but only for shoppers willing to pay close attention and wait for the payoff.
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