The Short Answer: No, It Is Not a Scam
Litbuy is a community-curated spreadsheet. It does not take your money. It does not process orders. It simply lists suppliers and batches. Calling Litbuy a scam is like calling a restaurant directory a scam because one restaurant had bad service. The tool itself is neutral.
Where the Risk Actually Lives
The risk is not in the spreadsheet. It is in the supplier you choose and the payment method you use. A scam in this context usually means:
- A supplier who takes payment and never ships.
- A supplier who sends a completely different item than what was promised.
- A supplier who refuses to fix clear quality issues.
How to Avoid Scams
- Only use suppliers with recent, verified reviews from multiple buyers.
- Always pay with buyer protection (PayPal Goods & Services, credit card).
- Request QC photos before the item ships — never accept "trust me, it is good."
- Start with a small test order before committing to a large purchase.
What the 2026 Data Shows
The vast majority of complaints in 2026 are about shipping delays, not scams. Actual fraud cases are rare and usually involve new buyers who skip the community research step. The buyers who use the spreadsheet properly, read reviews, and pay securely rarely have issues.
Bottom Line
Litbuy is not a scam. It is a reference tool. Your safety depends on your own research and payment habits. Follow the community guidelines, use buyer protection, and you will be fine.

