Megan Thee Stallion’s pink-to-orange gradient Dunkin’ cup lasted less than an hour in stores, and resellers are already flipping it for triple the price—proof that celebrity drink merch is the new streetwear drop.
Megan Thee Stallion and Dunkin’ didn’t just release a drink—they dropped a cultural moment. On January 16 at 10 a.m. ET, the chain unleashed a free reusable cup emblazoned with the rapper’s autograph and signature “Hot Girls Run on Dunkin’” slogan to anyone who bought her new Protein Refreshers. By 10:07 a.m., TikTok timelines were full of tear emojis and empty-handed confessionals.
How the 7-Minute Sell-Out Happened
Dunkin’ teased the collab only 15 hours earlier on Instagram, banking on Megan’s 32 million followers to do the promo heavy lifting. Stores received as few as 30 cups apiece; employees at multiple Manhattan locations told customers the allotment was gone before the line even formed. Instagram commenters clocked early giveaways at 9:45 a.m., fueling accusations of back-door deals and employee hoarding.
eBay Economics: From Freebie to $45 in 45 Minutes
By noon, more than 400 listings had flooded eBay. Opening bids started at $5, but “Buy It Now” prices stabilized between $20 and $45—a 600% markup on a cup that was free with a $6.50 drink. One seller bundled four cups for $199, pitching them as “the next Stanley trend.” Sales velocity tracked by Parade shows 60% of listings sold within 24 hours, proving scarcity beats seasonal flavor every time.
Why Dunkin’ Won’t Save You
A company spokesperson confirmed to Parade that the cup is a “single-run, limited-time offer” with zero restock plans. Translation: every cup in existence is already in someone’s cabinet or on the auction block. The move mirrors Starbucks’ 2023 pink studded tumbler chaos, cementing the strategy that deliberate undersupply keeps the brand trending for days, not hours.
What the Frenzy Tells Us About 2026 Merch Culture
- Celebrity + caffeine is the new sneaker drop—hype cycles now revolve around cold brew, not Jordans.
- Micro-allotments at neighborhood stores turn every suburb into a mini-StockX floor.
- Female-driven collaborations (think: Selena Gomez at Starbucks, Olivia Rodrigo at Denny’s) outperform legacy sports merch in resale velocity.
The lesson: if you want the next must-have tumbler, camp the app at 9:55 a.m. sharp—and keep eBay open in another tab.
Stay locked to onlytrustedinfo.com for the fastest breakdown of the next surprise drop—because by the time your group chat hears about it, the cups will already be gone.