Selling on Amazon can give brands access to a massive customer base, but the platform is not cost-free. For many sellers, the challenge is not just launching products. It is understanding how Amazon fees affect pricing, fulfillment, advertising, and long-term profitability.
Amazon's selling costs vary based on your category, fulfillment method, sales volume, and growth strategy. That means two brands selling at the same price point may walk away with very different margins, which is why many sellers work with a full-service Amazon agency to better manage costs and protect profitability as they scale.
Amazon fees usually start with referral fees. These are category-based charges taken from each sale. Many categories fall around the 8% to 15% range, though some product types can be higher. This is why sellers need to calculate margins before setting prices, not after products are already live.
Selling plan fees also matter. Smaller sellers may use the Individual plan, which charges per item sold. Higher-volume brands often use the Professional plan because it provides broader selling tools for a monthly fee.
Fulfillment is another major cost area. Sellers who manage orders themselves through FBM may have more control, but they still need to account for shipping, handling, packaging, and customer expectations. Sellers using Amazon FBA pay for services such as storage, picking, packing, shipping, returns, and customer service.
Amazon ads can help products gain visibility, especially in competitive categories. However, ad spend should be treated as part of the total cost structure, not as a separate growth lever.
Campaigns such as Amazon Advertising, Sponsored Products, Sponsored Brands, and Sponsored Display can improve exposure, but they also work on a bid-based model. Sellers pay when shoppers click, so poor targeting or weak listings can quickly reduce profitability.
A smarter approach is to connect advertising with organic performance. Ads may help drive traffic, while better listing content, keyword strategy, and conversion improvements can support stronger long-term results. For more context, sellers can review how ads may boost Amazon's organic ranking when used strategically.
Some Amazon costs are avoidable with better planning. Overstocking, slow-moving inventory, incorrect labelling, long-term storage, and unnecessary removal fees can all reduce profit.
Brands should regularly review inventory turnover, forecast demand, and compare fulfillment options. FBA may be valuable for Prime eligibility and operational convenience, but it is not automatically the best choice for every product. Large, slow-moving, or low-margin items may require a different approach.
The most successful Amazon sellers do not only ask, “How much does Amazon take?” They ask how every cost affects their pricing model, cash flow, and ability to scale.
That includes reviewing:
For growing brands, expert support can also help uncover hidden inefficiencies. An Amazon account management expert can help align pricing, fulfillment, inventory, and advertising decisions around profitability.
This article highlights key ideas from beBOLD Digital’s original guide.
For the complete breakdown and detailed strategies, read the full article here: https://www.bebolddigital.com/blog/how-much-does-it-cost-to-sell-on-amazon