Amazon vs Walmart Marketplace: Where Should You Sell in 2026?
Walmart's marketplace is growing fast but Amazon still dominates. We compare fees, fulfillment programs, and buyer demographics.
Amazon
Best for: Sellers who prioritize maximum traffic, Prime buyer access, mature advertising, and global expansion.
Walmart
Best for: Sellers seeking lower fees, less competition, value-conscious shoppers, and in-store return acceptance.
Which Should You Choose?
The right platform depends on your situation. Find your profile below.
If you prioritize low startup costs and want to avoid monthly subscription fees
Walmart's zero monthly subscription fee and lower referral rates in most categories make it more affordable for new sellers testing the marketplace waters without upfront commitment.
If you prioritize maximum traffic, mature advertising, and proven fulfillment infrastructure
Amazon's 300M+ buyers, sophisticated advertising platform, and battle-tested FBA network provide the infrastructure and buyer access that high-volume sellers need to scale efficiently.
If you prioritize visibility and organic discoverability with fewer competing sellers
Walmart's 150K+ seller base versus Amazon's 2M+ means dramatically less competition for search rankings, better organic visibility, and lower advertising costs for growing brands.
If you want to capture both convenience-driven and value-conscious shoppers across demographics
Amazon remains the primary revenue engine for most enterprise sellers, but the smartest strategy combines both platforms to capture Amazon's Prime shoppers and Walmart's value-conscious families.
Amazon vs Walmart
Side-by-side feature comparison to help you understand both platforms.
Overview
Amazon has led US ecommerce for over a decade, but Walmart Marketplace is its most credible challenger. With massive physical retail presence and growing online traffic, Walmart is impossible for serious sellers to ignore.
Amazon offers sheer scale, FBA logistics, and the Prime ecosystem. Walmart counters with lower fees, less seller competition, and the world's largest retailer brand halo. WFS is maturing as a credible FBA alternative.
The two marketplaces are complementary. Amazon captures convenience-driven Prime shoppers while Walmart appeals to value-conscious buyers. Nventory makes dual-marketplace selling seamless.
Amazon
Amazon dominates US ecommerce with ~38% market share and 200M+ Prime members. Its FBA program, advertising platform, and massive buyer base make it the default marketplace for most sellers.
Walmart
Walmart Marketplace has grown to 150,000+ third-party sellers. Lower referral fees, WFS fulfillment, and access to 150 million weekly Walmart shoppers make it increasingly attractive.
Category-by-Category Breakdown
Click each category for detailed analysis and platform-specific insights.
Running both platforms? Nventory syncs Amazon and Walmart automatically.
See integration detailsFrequently Asked Questions
Yes. Unlike Amazon's $39.99/month Professional plan, Walmart charges no monthly subscription. You only pay referral fees when items sell.
Yes. Many sellers use FBA for Amazon and WFS for Walmart. Nventory manages inventory allocation across both fulfillment networks.
Walmart has an application process reviewing your business history and capabilities. Approval is not guaranteed for newer sellers.
Walmart ads currently offer lower CPC and less competition, potentially better ROI. Amazon's platform is more mature but more expensive.