Jellycat does not publish a strict “every X days” restock schedule, but most restocks happen quietly on weekdays and follow a few recognizable patterns rather than a fixed calendar.

Typical restock timing

  • Jellycat’s online stock tends to update on business days (Monday–Friday), with weekend restocks described as very rare.
  • Activity windows often line up with UK business hours, meaning mid‑morning to afternoon UK time can be prime moments to see new stock appear.
  • There is no official daily or weekly promise; instead, inventory is refreshed in small “micro‑drops” plus occasional larger waves.

How often items come back

  • Jellycat does not follow a rigid, brand‑wide restock cadence; frequency varies by design, demand, and production cycle. Popular characters may return multiple times, while others disappear for long stretches or retire entirely.
  • When the product page shows messaging like “more on the way” or “temporarily unavailable,” that generally signals confirmed incoming stock rather than a permanent sell‑out, though exact dates are still not guaranteed.

Seasonal and yearly patterns

  • Restocks and new drops often cluster around seasonal launches , such as early‑year spring collections, mid‑year previews, and pre‑holiday waves, rather than on a fixed monthly schedule.
  • Around peak gifting seasons (especially before Christmas), there are usually extra redistribution and limited restock pushes, which can make certain sold‑out characters briefly reappear.

Practical tips to catch restocks

  • Focus checking the site on weekdays , especially during daytime UK hours, instead of constantly refreshing on weekends.
  • Use “notify when available” and email alerts, but remember that stock can sometimes appear before notifications are sent, so periodic manual checks can still give an edge.
  • Authorized retailers and stockists sometimes receive inventory on a different timeline than the main site, so checking reputable third‑party stores can help when the official site shows out of stock.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.