^I came across the same post recently, though not from an Indian source (that in itself is kind of funny in an ironic way).
Below is a video of China's high trust society captivated in a Western setting, aka IKEA. It's spot on. Concepts like personal space, personal property, decency, personal hygiene and behaviour in public all get interpreted a bit different in China. That's why in public settings disgusting, inconsiderate and anti-social behavior is the norm.
IKEA was a hype in the second part of the 2010s. Now, like so many other Western companies, they are leaving.
No, LaNegra, you're making stuff up again, Ikea is not leaving China, that is a pretty dumb idea, don't believe that Arun Pudur dude, Ikea being the largest furniture retailer in the world, and China being the 2nd largest market, with a high growth rate.
- The post shares a video of Chinese shoppers napping on IKEA furniture during a heatwave, using sarcasm to mock it as evidence of futuristic living while claiming it drives brand exits like IKEA's.
- This napping trend stems from affordable air-conditioned public spaces serving as refuges for urban dwellers with limited home cooling, a pattern observed worldwide, including U.S. IKEAs sheltering homeless individuals during heatwaves.
- Contrary to the post, IKEA is expanding in China with two new stores planned for Liaoning and Sichuan in 2025, signaling long-term commitment despite past selective closures amid shifting retail dynamics.
More from a reliable source:
"Here are the straight facts about IKEA in China (as of November 2025, no fluff, no exaggeration):
• IKEA has 34 large-format stores + several smaller city stores and experience centers in mainland China.
• China is IKEA’s 4th-largest market globally by number of stores (behind Sweden, Germany, USA).
• Only 3 stores have closed in the past 5 years:
• Guiyang (2022)• Shanghai Yangpu (2022)
• Shanghai Jing’an small-format pilot (end of 2024) → All were underperforming locations; none signal an exit.
• IKEA is actively expanding:
• New mega-store + Livat shopping mall opening in Shanghai Hongqiao in 2026.
• Invested an additional €20 million in September 2025 just to extend price cuts
• Sales in China remain strong: ~3.5–3.6% of IKEA’s global revenue.
• Online sales (Tmall, JD, WeChat) are growing fast; physical stores are still packed, especially in summer (people do use air-conditioning as a free public space — IKEA accepts it).
• No official statement, plan, or credible report says IKEA is leaving China.
Bottom line: IKEA is not shutting down in China. The viral X post uses old footage and false claims. Fact-checked and confirmed false by multiple sources including IKEA China’s own channels."