Alexa Chung has revealed that she’ selling some of her most iconic looks, seen on runways and Glastonbury fields alike, on Vinted for an endometriosis charity that’s “close to my womb”

English model and TV presenter, Alexa Chung has confirmed she will be selling her clothes on Vinted, telling fans on TikTok proceeds will be going to a cause “very close to my womb”.

The 41-year-old revealed earlier this year that she had underwent surgery for endometriosis, a condition where tissue similar to the uterine lining grows outside the uterus, which can potentially lead to infertility and other complications.

Alexa was diagnosed with the condition in July 2020, calling her experience in getting treatment “frustrating” while services were “under-funded”.

In April 2025, the Popworld presenter confirmed her first Vinted sale drop, in which she flogged items from her own wardrobe in order to raise money for Endometriosis UK, prompting millennial hysteria.

Alexa Chung just wore a high street trench coat to Cannes and it’s still in stock

She has since taken part in other drops, with the latest confirmed in the video she shared to TikTok on Wednesday (July 2). “I’ll be selling things such as these glorious boots,” Alexa told viewers in front of a backdrop featuring the piar of black, leather Prada boots.

“I literally love them, they’ve served me very well but they’ve gotta go. Because, the proceeds go to Endometriosis UK, which is, of course, very close to my womb, I guess.

“There’s load of other amazing things in there [the drop], they’ve got a Dior bag – a really nice, 90s red sequence dress. And I want to say thank you so much if you bought things last time.”

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More than 1.5million people in the UK live with the condition, roughly one in 10 women. Since her diagnosis, Alexa has continued to campaign and raise awareness for Endometriosis UK.

Speaking earlier this year, Alexa told The Telegraph how she had underwent a laparoscopy, where the pelvis is accessed through small incisions, to cut out the affected tissue to try and aid her symptoms.

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“A number of years ago, I had a laparoscopy to help cure it,” She explained. “They don’t really know how to cure endometriosis but they do like cutting it out of people quite a lot, just on the off chance that it might work.

“I do come up against this wall, where no matter how helpful or amazing the doctors I’ve seen have been, you reach a point in the cul-de-sac of information where you realise there’s a definitive end to the amount of treatment they can give you. I find it super frustrating. It’s part of a canon of women’s health issues that are desperately under-researched,” she added.

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