When I first saw the Faith Wardrobe ads flooding Facebook and Instagram, I felt a gut punch. They opened with:
“With a heavy heart, Faithwardrobe extends its deepest condolences to the family, friends, and community of Charlie Kirk. His tragic death leaves us grieving for this true follower of Christ…”
Like so many others, I was still processing the news that Charlie Kirk had been fatally shot on September 10, 2025, during an event at Utah Valley University. It was shocking, heartbreaking, and absolutely real. But what Faith Wardrobe is doing with that grief? Feels gross and suspicious.
What Faith Wardrobe Is Selling

Through faithwardrobe.com, the site claims to honor Kirk’s “freedom legacy” by selling dozens of Charlie Kirk memorial T-shirts, hoodies, and mugs.
The ads run all over Meta’s network, on Facebook, Messenger, Threads, and Instagram, targeting anyone who’s mentioned or searched his name since the tragedy.
On the surface, it might look like a heartfelt tribute shop. But once I dug deeper, the red flags started screaming.
Red Flags That Faith Wardrobe Might Be a Scam
Here’s what I uncovered:
- WHOIS data shows Chinese nameservers, odd for a supposedly U.S.-based Christian memorial brand.
- Facebook page is owned by a Chinese-language name, with at least one page manager located in Russia.
- No verified presence on BBB, Consumer Reports, or Trustpilot, meaning no reliable customer feedback or history.
- Stock-style product photos that are likely stolen from other websites, with generic descriptions.
- The site fits the pattern of seasonal dropshipping scam shops that pop up during high-emotion moments (like now) and disappear once they’ve taken enough money.
In short: they’re using real grief as clickbait to funnel people into what looks like a classic low-quality merch scam.
What Usually Happens If You Order
Based on similar sites I’ve investigated, customers risk:
- Receiving nothing at all (and getting ghosted by support), or
- Receiving poor-quality knockoffs that look nothing like the advertised designs
And because the sellers are overseas and anonymous, getting a refund is next to impossible.
By following these tips, you can significantly reduce your risk of falling victim to phishing scams and keep your personal and financial information safe.
Conclusion:
There’s no polite way to say this: Faith Wardrobe is exploiting Charlie Kirk’s death to sell cheap merch, and it shows every sign of being a scam.
It’s manipulative, misleading, and likely won’t deliver what you paid for. If you truly want to honor Kirk’s legacy, look for verified U.S.-based charities, foundations, or official memorial merchandise, not an unknown website with shady roots.
One of such scams we have discussed here is the Travis Mathew Warehouse Sale Scam