On social media, one unimpressed fashion fan suggested that the jumper looked like a "joke Tesco Value" jumper, referencing the value range sweater the supermarket giant has previously sold.
Another quipped that they could pick one up in Sainsbury's at "a third of the price".
Elsewhere, others couldn't handle the idea that the same slogan was also being printed on a t-shirt too.
@Frhosace wrote: "The fact that the 'Beyonce holiday sweater' is a t shirt is stressful to me."
Of a pink t-shirt with the same words: @The_AlexWhittle penned 'It is the laziest creative design I've ever seen. It's not even a sweater.'
Her main designer range, Ivy Park, has been a huge commercial success; its name featuring the star's oldest child Blue Ivy.
In October, Beyoncé hit back in the latest legal battle over the trademarking of her daughter's name, demanding that the proceedings of the saga be kept quiet from the public.
Documents obtained exclusively by DailyMailTV reveal the singer's company BGK Trademark Holdings has lashed out against 'Blue Ivy' events for its 'desire to harass' the mother-of-three in the tug-of-war over the unique moniker.
The 36-year-old has been fighting since 2012 - when Blue Ivy was born- to claim the trademark but was denied the rights because the event company already owned the mark.
Now Beyoncé's lawyers are demanding that the proceedings be kept quiet out of concern of 'privacy' and 'physical safety' for the Hollywood family.