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Marketplace13 min read

The $0.08 FBA Fee Increase That's Actually Costing Sellers $48,000/Year.

M
Marc Verhoeven·Mar 3, 2026
Calculator breakdown showing how Amazon FBA fee increases compound across volume levels for ecommerce sellers

Eight cents. That is what Amazon's FBA fee increase amounts to on a per-unit basis. When the announcement came out, most sellers shrugged. Eight cents. Barely worth thinking about.

Then someone did the multiplication.

$0.08 x 50,000 units/month = $4,000/month = $48,000/year.

That is not pocket change. That is an employee. That is a year of advertising budget. That is the margin on $240,000 in revenue at 20% net margin. Gone. Because of eight cents.

But here is the part that should genuinely alarm you: the $0.08 fee increase is not the problem. It is the smallest of six simultaneous cost increases Amazon rolled out in 2026. When you stack them all together, a mid-tier seller doing 50,000 units per month is looking at $80,000 to $120,000 in new annual costs.

Let me show you the full picture.

The Direct Math: $0.08 Across Volume Levels

Start with the straightforward calculation. The FBA fulfillment fee increased by $0.08 per unit across all size tiers effective January 15, 2026:

Monthly VolumeMonthly Cost IncreaseAnnual Cost IncreaseEquivalent Revenue Lost (at 20% margin)
5,000 units$400$4,800$24,000
10,000 units$800$9,600$48,000
25,000 units$2,000$24,000$120,000
50,000 units$4,000$48,000$240,000
100,000 units$8,000$96,000$480,000

Look at the right column. At 50,000 units per month, the $0.08 fee increase eliminates the profit equivalent of $240,000 in additional revenue. You would need to sell $240,000 more per year just to stay at the same net profit level you had in 2025.

And this is just the first hit.

Cost Increase #2: FBA Prep Services Eliminated

Effective January 1, 2026, Amazon stopped offering FBA prep services for US-bound shipments. If you relied on Amazon to label, poly-bag, or prep your products, you now have two options:

  1. Do it yourself, requires warehouse space, labor, and supplies
  2. Use a third-party prep center, typically $0.20-$0.50 per unit depending on complexity

For a 50,000-unit/month seller who was using Amazon's prep services:

Prep MethodPer Unit CostMonthly CostAnnual Cost
Amazon prep (eliminated)$0.00 (included in FBA)$0$0
Third-party prep (basic labeling)$0.20$10,000$120,000
Third-party prep (poly-bag + label)$0.35$17,500$210,000
In-house prep (labor + materials)$0.15-$0.30$7,500-$15,000$90,000-$180,000

Not every seller used Amazon's prep services, but for those who did, particularly sellers shipping directly from overseas manufacturers to Amazon, this is a significant new cost with added logistical complexity. Conservatively, this adds $12,000 to $18,000 per year for a mid-tier seller who needs basic labeling and poly-bagging.

Cost Increase #3: Reimbursement Policy Gutted

When Amazon loses or damages your inventory in their warehouse, they used to reimburse you at your selling price minus fees. Now they reimburse at sourcing cost.

Here is what that looks like for a product with a $25 selling price:

MetricOld PolicyNew PolicyDifference
Selling price$25.00$25.00,
Amazon fees (referral + FBA)$10.50$10.50,
Reimbursement amount$14.50$8.00 (sourcing cost)-$6.50 per unit

That is a 55% reduction in reimbursement value per unit. Amazon is telling you that when they lose your product, they will pay you what it cost to make, not what you could have sold it for.

At a 2% loss/damage rate (which is conservative for FBA), a 50,000-unit/month seller loses 1,000 units per month. At $6.50 less per unit, that is $6,500/month or $78,000 per year in reduced reimbursement value. Even at a 0.5% loss rate, you are looking at $19,500/year in value erosion.

For the calculator below, I will use a conservative 1% loss rate: $3,600 to $7,200 per year.

Cost Increase #4: Low-Inventory-Level Fees at FNSKU Level

Amazon's low-inventory-level fee previously calculated at the aggregate account level. Now it calculates at the FNSKU level: meaning each individual product variant is evaluated independently.

This is devastating for sellers with large catalogs. Even if your total FBA inventory is healthy, individual SKUs that have low velocity will trigger the fee. A seller with 200 SKUs might have 150 above the threshold and 50 below. Those 50 SKUs now each incur low-inventory surcharges.

The impact varies widely by catalog size and velocity distribution, but sellers are reporting $500 to $1,000 per month in new low-inventory-level fees, or $6,000 to $12,000 per year.

Cost Increase #5: DD+7 Cash Flow Drain

DD+7 is not a fee. It is a delay. Amazon now holds your money for 7 additional days after the customer receives their order. But delayed money has a real cost.

At 50,000 units per month with a $25 average selling price, your monthly revenue is $1.25 million. DD+7 locks up approximately $116,000 to $167,000 in additional working capital at any given time.

If you finance that gap at 8% annual interest (Amazon Lending, Wayflyer, Clearco), the cost is:

Locked CapitalInterest RateAnnual Financing Cost
$116,0008%$9,280
$140,0008%$11,200
$167,0008%$13,360

Even if you do not use external financing, the opportunity cost of that capital is real. Money sitting in Amazon's account is not buying inventory, funding advertising, or earning returns elsewhere. Conservatively: $4,800 to $9,600 per year in direct or opportunity cost.

Cost Increase #6: Tariff Changes on Imported Goods

The de minimis exemption has been eliminated, and Section 122 tariffs sit at 10-15% baseline. If you import from China, and most Amazon FBA sellers do, your landed cost per unit has increased significantly.

For a product with a $6.00 FOB cost:

Cost Component20252026Increase
FOB cost$6.00$6.00$0.00
Shipping per unit$1.20$1.50+$0.30
Tariff (was 0-7.5%, now 10-15%)$0.45$0.90+$0.45
Total landed cost$7.65$8.40+$0.75

At $0.75 more per unit landed cost across 50,000 units per month: $37,500/month or $450,000/year. Not every seller imports from China, and tariff impacts vary by product category, but for those who do, this is often the single largest cost increase of 2026.

For the composite calculator, I will use a moderate impact of $18,000 to $30,000 per year (covering sellers with mixed sourcing).

The Complete 2026 Cost Increase Calculator

Here is every cost increase stacked together for a seller doing 50,000 units per month at a $25 average selling price:

Cost CategoryLow Estimate (Annual)High Estimate (Annual)
FBA fee increase ($0.08/unit)$48,000$48,000
FBA prep services (eliminated)$12,000$18,000
Reduced reimbursements$3,600$7,200
Low-inventory-level fees (FNSKU)$6,000$12,000
DD+7 financing / opportunity cost$4,800$9,600
Tariff increases (imported goods)$18,000$30,000
Total Annual Increase$92,400$124,800

Read that bottom row. A mid-tier Amazon seller is facing $92,400 to $124,800 in new annual costs in 2026. At a 20% net margin on $1.25 million in monthly revenue, your annual profit was roughly $3 million. These increases wipe out 3-4% of your total revenue: and at lower margins, the impact is proportionally worse.

Scaled by Volume Level

Monthly VolumeMonthly Revenue ($25 ASP)Annual Cost Increase (Low)Annual Cost Increase (High)
10,000 units$250,000$18,500$25,000
25,000 units$625,000$46,200$62,400
50,000 units$1,250,000$92,400$124,800
100,000 units$2,500,000$184,800$249,600

At 100,000 units per month, you are looking at nearly a quarter million dollars in new annual costs. That is not a rounding error. That is a fundamental shift in the economics of selling on Amazon.

Where the Money Is Actually Going

Let me put this bluntly. Amazon is not increasing fees because their costs went up proportionally. FBA fulfillment costs have actually decreased for Amazon as they have built out their logistics network and increased automation. The fee increases are margin extraction. Amazon is taking a larger share of your revenue because they can.

Consider: Amazon's third-party seller services revenue hit $156.1 billion in 2025. Fee increases across millions of sellers, even small ones, generate billions in additional revenue for Amazon. The $0.08 increase alone, across Amazon's estimated 2 million active FBA sellers, generates well over $1 billion in additional annual revenue for Amazon.

You are funding Amazon's profitability. That is the business model.

Why You Cannot Just Raise Prices

The obvious response to increased costs is raising your selling price. But on Amazon, this creates a cascade of problems:

  • Conversion rate drops: Amazon's algorithm tracks conversion rate and deprioritizes listings that convert below category averages. Even a 5% price increase can reduce conversion by 10-15% in price-sensitive categories.
  • BSR ranking falls: Lower conversion means fewer sales. Fewer sales means lower BSR. Lower BSR means less organic visibility. Less visibility means even fewer sales. The spiral accelerates.
  • Competitor advantage: If your competitors absorb the cost increase (eating into margins) while you raise prices, they gain ranking at your expense. And once you lose ranking, getting it back costs significantly more in PPC spend than it would have cost to absorb the fee increase.
  • Amazon's own comparison tools: Rufus now actively compares prices across products when customers ask. A higher price with no clear attribute advantage means Rufus recommends your competitor.

Raising prices on Amazon is a last resort, not a first response.

The Multichannel Margin Offset

Here is the strategy that is actually working for sellers who are absorbing these cost increases without losing profitability: shifting volume to higher-margin channels.

Compare the fee structure across channels for a $25 product:

ChannelTotal FeesNet to SellerMargin After COGS ($8)
Amazon FBA (2026)$10.58 (42.3%)$14.42$6.42 (25.7%)
Walmart Marketplace$3.75 (15.0%)$21.25$13.25 (53.0%)
eBay$3.48 (13.9%)$21.52$13.52 (54.1%)
Shopify (self-fulfilled)$1.03 (4.1%)$23.97$15.97 (63.9%)

Look at those margins. The same product at the same price generates $6.42 in margin on Amazon versus $15.97 on Shopify. Shopify margin is 2.5 times Amazon margin. Every unit you shift from Amazon to Shopify is worth 2.5 Amazon units in profit contribution.

This is why smart sellers are not trying to fight Amazon's fee increases on Amazon. They are building multichannel businesses where Amazon serves as a discovery and volume channel while Shopify, eBay, and Walmart generate the actual profit.

The Operational Catch

Multichannel selling sounds great on a spreadsheet. In practice, it creates a significant operational challenge: inventory synchronization.

When you sell the same inventory pool across Amazon, Shopify, eBay, and Walmart, every sale on one channel must immediately update inventory on every other channel. If your sync is slow or unreliable, you oversell. Overselling leads to cancellations, negative reviews, and marketplace penalties that cost far more than the margin gain of multichannel selling.

This is the exact problem tools like Nventory solve, keeping inventory counts accurate across every channel in real time so sellers can confidently allocate stock to higher-margin platforms without the risk of overselling. The sellers who are successfully shifting volume away from Amazon all have one thing in common: rock-solid inventory sync across every channel they sell on.

Without reliable sync, multichannel selling creates more problems than it solves. With it, the margin improvement from channel diversification more than offsets Amazon's 2026 cost increases.

The Real Decision: Absorb, Offset, or Exit

Every Amazon seller now faces one of three choices:

Option 1: Absorb the Costs

Accept $80K-$120K in reduced annual profit. This works if your margins are large enough and your volume is high enough that you are still profitable. But remember: Amazon raises fees every year. Absorbing this year's increase means absorbing next year's too, and the year after that. This is a shrinking-margin strategy with a definite end date.

Option 2: Offset Through Channel Diversification

Shift volume to higher-margin channels. If you move 30% of your volume from Amazon to Shopify, the margin improvement on those units can offset the cost increases on the remaining Amazon units. This requires operational investment (inventory sync, fulfillment infrastructure, marketing on new channels) but builds a more resilient business.

Option 3: Exit Amazon

For sellers in low-margin categories where Amazon's all-in cost now exceeds viable margins, exiting Amazon entirely and moving to a combination of Shopify, eBay, and Walmart may be the rational choice. This is extreme, but for some product categories, Amazon's 42%+ fee burden simply does not work anymore.

Your Action Plan

  1. Calculate your real number, Use the tables above and plug in your actual volume, ASP, and sourcing details. Know exactly what 2026 is costing you.
  2. Identify your highest-margin products, Which ASINs still have healthy margins after the 2026 cost increases? Focus Amazon investment on those. Deprioritize or remove products where Amazon margins are below 15%.
  3. Set up at least one additional channel, Shopify, eBay, or Walmart. Start with your top 20% of SKUs. The margin improvement on even a small volume shift makes a meaningful difference.
  4. Invest in inventory sync, Multichannel without real-time sync is a trap. Get your synchronization right before you scale channel diversification.
  5. Renegotiate supplier terms, Push for net-45 or net-60 payment terms to offset DD+7 cash flow delays. Also negotiate volume discounts to offset the per-unit fee increase.
  6. Audit your FBA catalog, Remove low-velocity SKUs that trigger the new FNSKU-level low-inventory fees. Consolidate variations where possible. Less catalog complexity means lower fee exposure.

Eight cents per unit. That is how Amazon framed it. But eight cents is not what it costs. It costs $48,000 per year in direct fees, and $80,000 to $120,000 when you add the five other changes Amazon made at the same time.

The sellers who treat this as an eight-cent problem will wonder why their margins are gone by Q3. The sellers who see the full picture are already building the multichannel infrastructure to offset it. Which one are you?

Frequently Asked Questions

Amazon increased FBA fulfillment fees by $0.08 per unit effective January 15, 2026. This applies across all size tiers. At 10,000 units per month the direct cost is $9,600/year. At 50,000 units per month it is $48,000/year. At 100,000 units per month it is $96,000/year. This is only the direct fee increase, it does not include the five other cost changes Amazon made simultaneously.

For a mid-tier seller doing 50,000 units per month at a $25 average selling price, the total 2026 cost increase is approximately $80,000 to $120,000 per year when you combine the FBA fee increase ($48,000), eliminated FBA prep services ($12,000-$18,000), reduced reimbursement values ($3,600-$7,200), expanded low-inventory-level fees ($6,000-$12,000), DD+7 cash flow cost ($4,800-$9,600 in financing), and tariff increases ($18,000-$30,000 on imported goods).

You can, but the math rarely works in your favor. FBM removes FBA fees but also removes Prime eligibility, which typically reduces conversion rates by 30-50%. You also take on shipping costs, packaging, and customer service. For most sellers, the net result of switching to FBM is lower total profit despite lower fees. The exception is large, heavy items where FBA dimensional weight charges are disproportionately expensive.

DD+7 delays your payouts by 7 additional days after delivery. This means the higher fees hit your account immediately (Amazon deducts fees before disbursement), but your revenue arrives later. At 50,000 units per month with a $25 ASP, you have roughly $116,000-$167,000 in additional locked working capital. If you need to finance that gap, even at 8% annual interest, you are paying $9,300-$13,400/year just to maintain the same cash position.

Amazon eliminated FBA prep services for US-bound shipments effective January 1, 2026. Previously, Amazon would label, poly-bag, bubble-wrap, or otherwise prepare products for FBA storage for a per-unit fee. Now sellers must prep everything before shipping to Amazon or use a third-party prep center. For sellers who shipped directly from manufacturers to Amazon, this adds $0.20-$0.50 per unit in third-party prep costs plus additional transit time and logistical complexity.

Use this formula: (Monthly Units x $0.08 x 12) for the direct fee increase. Add (Monthly Units x $0.25 x 12) if you previously used FBA prep services. Add (Monthly Returns x Old Reimbursement - Monthly Returns x New Reimbursement x 12) for reduced reimbursements. Add the financing cost of your DD+7 locked capital. Add any tariff increases to your landed cost. The total gives you your annual incremental cost of selling on Amazon in 2026 versus 2025.