Apps Games Articles
H&M
H&M
Rating 4.8star icon
Editor's summary
Editor rating
star icon star icon star icon star icon
half star icon
4.5

One-line summary H&M is one of the better fashion retail apps for fast browsing, strong filters, and easy wardrobe shopping, but inconsistent sizing and a clunky return experience can still take the shine off the checkout.

  • Installs

    50M+

  • Developer

    H&M

  • Category

    Shopping

  • Content Rating

    Everyone

  • Latest version

    25.38.1

  • Package

    com.hm.goe

In-depth review
After spending real time with H&M on Android, my overall impression is that this is a polished, highly usable shopping app that understands the basic truth of mobile fashion retail: most people are not here for an immersive brand experience, they are here to find a specific item, check whether it comes in their size, save a few maybes, and get out without friction. On that core mission, H&M performs very well. The first thing that stands out is how easy the app is to move through. Navigation feels clean, the menus are readable, and product discovery is faster than it is on many retail apps that bury everything under oversized lifestyle imagery. H&M still leans into visual merchandising, of course, but it generally keeps the shopping flow practical. Browsing categories, narrowing down items, and jumping between sections feels natural enough that I rarely had to stop and think about where something was. That matters more than it sounds. In a fashion app, every extra tap is an opportunity to lose a purchase. Filtering is one of the app’s strongest qualities. When I wanted to browse broadly, the feed-style layout was pleasant enough. But when I wanted to shop with intent, the app became much more useful. The filters make it easier to zero in on styles, categories, and wardrobe basics without wading through endless unrelated products. That sounds simple, but a lot of shopping apps get filtering wrong, either by making it too shallow or too fiddly. Here, it mostly helps rather than hinders. The app also does a good job encouraging longer-term shopping habits through favorites. If you tend to buy repeat basics like tees, trousers, jeans, or kidswear, saving items and coming back later works well. That repeat-shopping angle is where the H&M app really earns its place on a phone. It feels built for people who already know the brand and dip in regularly, not just for occasional one-off orders. If you buy staples from H&M throughout the year, the app becomes convenient in a very practical way. Browsing is quick, ordering missing sizes online is straightforward, and keeping track of saved pieces is much easier than trying to remember items on a desktop site or hunt through store racks. There are also a couple of features that make the app more useful than a plain storefront. The ability to scan in-store items to check availability is genuinely helpful when a branch does not have your size on hand, and visual search is a smart addition when you want to find something similar from a photo or screenshot. I would not call either feature reason enough on its own to install the app, but both support the sense that H&M is trying to solve ordinary shopping problems rather than simply display inventory. Performance, in my use, was mostly solid. Pages loaded quickly, images were clear, and the app generally stayed out of the way. That said, it is not flawless. I did run into moments where the experience felt less dependable than the clean interface suggests. The biggest issue is that some functions can feel inconsistent rather than outright broken. Cart behavior, for example, can be frustrating when it fails to feel fully stable, and certain parts of the shopping flow still carry that annoying retail-app trait where you only notice friction once you are ready to buy. The larger weakness, though, is not technical. It is sizing. H&M sells a lot of basics and everyday wear, and the app makes it very easy to order them, but the confidence level around fit is not always as high as it should be. Product browsing is smooth, yet sizing clarity can still lag behind the convenience of checkout. If you know your fit in H&M already, this is manageable. If you do not, there is a good chance you will hesitate, order multiple sizes, or prepare yourself for a return. That would be less of a problem if the return and exchange flow felt painless. Unfortunately, that is the app’s other major weak spot. Shopping is easy; unwinding a purchase feels less so. Returns and exchanges do not project the same frictionless design as browsing and buying. When sizing varies from item to item, the after-sales process becomes part of the product experience, and here H&M still feels more cumbersome than it should. This is especially noticeable for shoppers who treat mobile ordering as an at-home fitting room. If you expect a seamless buy-try-return loop, the app may test your patience. A smaller but still noticeable annoyance is that some parts of the app feel just a little too constrained for heavy users. Favorites and stock notifications are useful, but they can also feel limited or unreliable depending on how closely you track restocks or build wish lists over time. None of this ruins the app, but it does chip away at the sense of polish for frequent shoppers. So who is H&M for? It is an excellent fit for people who shop the brand regularly, especially for basics, denim, kidswear, home items, or seasonal wardrobe refreshes. It also suits busy shoppers who prefer quick mobile browsing over visiting stores, and anyone who values strong filtering and a clean shopping flow. If you already know your preferred H&M cuts and sizes, the app is an easy recommendation. Who is it not for? If you are highly sensitive to sizing inconsistencies, rely on ultra-smooth exchanges, or get frustrated by occasional cart and stock quirks, this may not be your ideal shopping app. It is convenient, but not always forgiving. Even with those caveats, H&M remains one of the stronger mainstream fashion retail apps on Google Play. It gets the most important things right: it is fast, easy to navigate, visually clear, and genuinely helpful for repeat shopping. I came away thinking this is an app I would keep installed, not because it is perfect, but because when I want to browse H&M quickly and actually find what I need, it usually does the job better than the store visit does.
Alternative apps