The fees went up. That part’s not surprising. What’s different this year is how they went up — and how fast the compounding effect can quietly eat into margins you thought were safe.
This isn’t just a rate card adjustment. Amazon’s 2026 updates represent a fundamental shift in how the platform charges for fulfillment. The sellers who thrive will be the ones who understand the mechanics, not just the headline numbers.
Here’s everything you need to know.
The 6 Key Changes at a Glance
3.5% Fuel Surcharge
Effective Apr 17, 2026. Applies to FBA, MCF & Buy with Prime.
New Fulfillment Tiers
3 price brackets: under $10, $10–$50, and over $50.
Inbound Placement Fees
Minimal splits cost more. Ship to 5+ locations for $0 fee.
Low-Inventory Fees
Now per FNSKU — huge impact for apparel & beauty sellers.
Aged Inventory
Surcharges now start at 181 days — 90 days earlier than 2025.
Returns Processing
Now applies to almost every product category, not just apparel.
Understanding the 2026 Fee Landscape
The 2026 FBA updates cover more ground than a single line item. Every touchpoint in your fulfillment chain now has a cost attached:
- How your product is priced
- Where your inventory ships from
- How long it sits in a warehouse
- Whether you run low on a single variant
- How often customers return it
This matters beyond just your P&L. A 3.5% fuel surcharge landed on April 17, 2026 — applied to all FBA fulfillment fees in the US and Canada. For high-volume sellers, even a modest per-unit increase compounds into thousands of dollars fast. And that surcharge is just one piece of a much larger picture.
1. The 3.5% Fuel Surcharge: What Hit This Month
Shipping costs don’t exist in a vacuum. Diesel prices climbed sharply in Q1 2026, and Amazon responded with a direct pass-through to sellers.
Effective April 17, 2026, a 3.5% surcharge applies to every FBA fulfillment fee in the US and Canada. If you use Multi-Channel Fulfillment or Buy with Prime, your date is May 2, 2026.
The surcharge is calculated on your fulfillment fee — not your sale price. For a typical standard-size item, that’s roughly $0.15 to $0.35 per unit. Doesn’t sound like much. But multiply that across 10,000 monthly units and you’re looking at $1,500 to $3,500 in new monthly costs — from a single line item.
Practical moves that work:
- Recalculate your cost-of-goods immediately to reflect the new per-unit cost
- If you’re pricing at thin margins, identify which SKUs are most exposed
- For MCF sellers, update your off-Amazon channel pricing before May 2
Amazon isn’t alone here. The US Postal Service recently announced a similar fuel surcharge. This is the new normal for logistics pricing — variable, responsive, and tied to global energy markets.
2. New Fulfillment Fee Tiers by Price
Starting January 15, 2026, standard-size fulfillment fees are split into three price brackets. The same physical item, shipped the same way, now costs a different amount to fulfill depending on what you charge for it.
Price tier
Under $10
Discounted rate
Everyday essentials get a fee reduction to encourage affordable products on the platform.
-$0.77 vs. standardPrice tier
$10 – $50
Standard rate
Most everyday products fall here. Modest increase vs. 2025 levels.
~+$0.10 avg vs. 2025Price tier
Over $50
Premium rate
Highest fees — Amazon allocates additional insurance, security, and customer service resources to high-value items.
Biggest increase💡 Tip: If your product is priced just above $50, run the numbers on whether a small pricing adjustment changes your fee bracket — it might be worth it.
Under $10: You get a discount — about $0.77 less per unit compared to standard rates. Amazon wants everyday essentials on the platform, and this is how they incentivize it.
$10 to $50: Standard rates. Most products live here. Expect a modest average increase of around $0.10 per unit compared to 2025.
Over $50: The steepest increases. Amazon allocates additional insurance, security, and customer service resources to high-value shipments — and now charges for it.
If your product sits just above $50, it’s worth running the numbers on whether a pricing adjustment makes sense. The difference in fulfillment fees might surprise you.
3. Bulky Items: A New Split — and a Hidden Fee Trap
The old “Large Bulky” tier is gone. In its place: Small Bulky and Large Bulky — a more precise structure that lets Amazon charge differently for items that take up volume but don’t weigh much.
| Size tier | Weight | Enrolled in SIPP | Not enrolled in SIPP |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small Bulky | 0–50 lb | Save ~$1.00+/unit | +~$1.50 packaging fee |
| Large Bulky | 0–50 lb | Save ~$0.90+/unit | +~$1.50 packaging fee |
| Extra-Large | 0–50 lb | — | Premium rate applies |
| Extra-Large | 150+ lb | — | Highest rate applies |
What is SIPP? The Ships in Product Packaging program lets qualifying items ship in their own box — no Amazon over-box required. Packaging must pass ISTA-6 durability standards. For sellers moving 10,000+ bulky units per month, enrollment can save over $180,000 annually in avoided packaging fees.
Here’s where sellers get caught off guard. Average base fees for bulky items actually decreased in 2026 — but only if you’re enrolled in the Ships in Product Packaging (SIPP) program. If you’re not, a mandatory packaging fee of roughly $1.50 per unit gets added on. That effectively wipes out the base rate savings entirely.
SIPP requires your packaging to meet ISTA-6 durability standards. It’s an investment upfront. But for a seller moving 10,000 bulky units per month, that enrollment can mean over $180,000 in annual fee avoidance.
The math is hard to argue with.
Managing FBA doesn’t have to be a hassle.
Partnering with a 3PL like eFulfillment Service means you can focus on growing your business while we handle the prep. Request a Free Quote Today!
4. Inbound Placement Fees: The Cost of Convenience
Amazon wants your inventory distributed across multiple fulfillment centers before orders come in. The closer product is to the customer, the cheaper it is for Amazon to fulfill. And now they’re pricing that preference directly into your costs.
If you ship everything to one location — called a “minimal split” — Amazon handles the redistribution internally. Convenient for you. Expensive, too. High-volume sellers are finding that minimal split placement fees can consume up to 5% of total product margins. On a shipment of 5,000 large standard units, placement fees alone can exceed $3,000.
The alternative is straightforward, if operationally heavier:
- Partial split (2–3 locations): Reduced fees
- Amazon-optimized split (5+ locations): $0 placement fee
Getting to zero requires either enrolling in Amazon Warehousing and Distribution (AWD) or working with a 3PL partner capable of splitting freight across multiple destinations. Neither is effortless — but both pay off fast at volume.
5. Inbound Defect Fees: Zero Tolerance, Higher Stakes
| Size tier | Weight | Change vs. 2025 |
|---|---|---|
| Small standard | 16 oz or less | Up ~30% |
| Large standard | 12 oz or less | Up ~30% |
| Large standard | 15–20 lb | Significant increase |
| Small bulky | 0–5 lb | Up ~30% |
Amazon simplified its penalty structure for non-compliant shipments in 2026. Simplified doesn’t mean lenient — defect fees for misrouted, late, or abandoned shipments increased by up to 30% compared to 2025 levels.
A single mislabeled pallet of 1,000 units can now generate a defect charge that erases the profit margin for that entire inventory cycle. Not a recoverable rounding error. A genuine wipeout.
This makes shipment accuracy a revenue issue, not just an operations issue. Prep quality, label accuracy, and routing compliance now carry direct financial consequences that show up on your statement. Working with an FBA Prep service is one of the most reliable ways to eliminate this exposure entirely.
6. Inventory Management: Three Fees That Sneak Up on You
Aged inventory surcharges
The safe zone is shorter now. Surcharges used to kick in at 271 days. In 2026, they start at 181 days — 90 days earlier.
That means inventory you thought had plenty of runway is already in the “watch zone.” Anything approaching 150 days right now needs a liquidation or removal decision today, not next quarter.
Low-inventory fees: now per variant
This one catches apparel and beauty sellers especially hard. Previously, Amazon evaluated your low-inventory fee at the parent ASIN level. As of January 2026, it’s calculated at the individual FNSKU level.
What that means in practice: you could have 500 units of “Black, Large” sitting healthy in a warehouse while “Blue, Small” has 3 units left. Under the old rules, you were fine. Under the new rules, “Blue, Small” incurs fees on every single sale until you restock it above 28 days of supply.
Some sellers are reporting single SKUs losing 10% of their revenue to low-inventory fees alone. The only reliable escape hatch is enrollment in AWD, which provides automatic replenishment and a complete waiver of low-inventory charges. A 3PL with strong inventory management tools can also help you stay ahead of variant-level stockouts before they become fee events.
Q4 storage spikes
Storage fees triple during peak season — October through December — for standard-size items. Don’t let slow-moving inventory drift into Q4. The carrying cost will exceed almost any short-term sales benefit.
Managing FBA doesn’t have to be a hassle.
Partnering with a 3PL like eFulfillment Service means you can focus on growing your business while we handle the prep. Request a Free Quote Today!
7. Returns Processing Fees: Now Almost Universal
Returns used to be mostly an apparel problem. In 2026, that changed. Returns processing fees now apply to nearly every product category on the platform.
Example: Same parent ASIN, two very different outcomes
Black / Large
500 units in stock
No fee ✓Blue / Small
3 units in stock
Fee on every sale ✕Under the 2026 rules, Amazon evaluates each variant (FNSKU) independently. Even though the parent ASIN looks healthy overall, "Blue / Small" will incur low-inventory fees on every single sale until it's restocked above 28 days of supply. Sellers with many variants — especially in apparel and beauty — need FNSKU-level monitoring, not just parent ASIN totals.
Amazon sets a return rate threshold for each category based on historical averages. Exceed your category threshold over a trailing three-month window, and you pay a fee for every unit returned above it.
Apparel and shoes are the hardest hit — they carry a 0% threshold, meaning every return is charged regardless of how well you perform. But electronics, watches, and luggage sellers are also in high-exposure territory.
The fix isn’t complicated, but it requires intention:
- Accurate product descriptions and photography that set real expectations
- Detailed sizing charts that reduce bracketing — the habit of buying multiple sizes to try
- Proactive post-purchase communication that heads off buyer’s remorse before it becomes a return
Every return you prevent is a direct fee savings. At scale, that’s not a small number. And if returns management is eating into your team’s time, outsourcing that piece to a reliable 3PL is worth a serious look.
| Category | Threshold | Risk level |
|---|---|---|
| Grocery & Gourmet | Higher threshold | Lower risk |
| Toys & Games | Mid threshold | Moderate |
| Home & Kitchen | Mid threshold | Moderate |
| Consumer Electronics | Lower threshold | Higher risk |
| Watches | Low threshold | Higher risk |
| Apparel & Shoes | 0% — every return is charged | Maximum exposure |
| Backpacks & Luggage | Low threshold | Higher risk |
How the threshold works: Amazon calculates your return rate over a rolling 3-month window. If your rate exceeds the category threshold, you're charged a fee for every unit returned above it. Apparel carries a 0% threshold — meaning every return is charged regardless of performance.
How to Protect Your Margins: A Three-Part Strategy
The sellers winning in 2026 aren’t just reacting to fee changes — they’re building operations that structurally avoid the most punishing costs. Three levers make the biggest difference.
01
SIPP Program
- Ship in your own packaging — no over-box from Amazon
- Must pass ISTA-6 durability standards
- Saves $0.25–$1.32/unit on standard items
- Avoids ~$1.50 mandatory packaging fee on bulky items
02
Amazon AWD
- Eliminates low-inventory (FNSKU-level) fees completely
- No Q4 storage price spikes
- Auto-replenishes FBA inventory
- Managed service: 25% off storage + 25% off transport
03
Optimized Inbound Splits
- 5+ fulfillment centers = $0 placement fee
- Use AWD or a multi-destination 3PL
- Best ROI for 1,000+ unit shipments
- Combine with SIPP for maximum savings
SIPP enrollment: Ship in your own box. Eliminate the packaging surcharge. Save $0.25 to $1.32 per unit on standard items. For 10,000 monthly units, that’s potentially $36,000 or more back annually.
Amazon AWD: Bypass low-inventory fees entirely. Avoid Q4 storage spikes. Let Amazon auto-replenish your FBA inventory. The managed service tier adds 25% off both storage and transportation on top of that.
Optimized inbound splits: Get to five or more fulfillment center destinations and your placement fee drops to zero. At volume, this single change can save thousands per shipment. Pair it with a 3PL that knows Amazon FBA inside and out and the math compounds quickly.
None of these are free to implement. All of them pay back faster than you’d expect.
New Seller? You Have a Running Start
If you listed your first buyable ASIN after March 1, 2026, Amazon’s New Seller Incentives program offers real money to cushion the learning curve:
- 10% back on the first $50,000 in branded sales, then 5% on the next $900,000 — up to a $50,000 credit
- $200 Vine credit for generating initial reviews
- $200 in partnered carrier credits, plus an inbound placement credit
- Up to $500 in Sponsored Products advertising credits
These aren’t marketing gimmicks. They’re designed to give new brands a year to get their supply chain right before the full weight of 2026 fees lands on the bottom line.
Key Takeaways for Amazon Sellers:
If the product is the promise, fulfillment is where you keep it. The 2026 fee structure doesn’t punish sellers for selling — it punishes sellers for operating sloppily.
The margin isn’t just in the product anymore. It’s in the precision of how you run your operation. Start with the highest-friction point in your fulfillment chain. Fix it this month. Then the next. Over time, you’ll build a cost structure that holds up — no matter what Amazon changes next year.
If you want a fulfillment partner that handles FBA prep, multi-destination inbound splits, and inventory management without the guesswork, eFulfillment Service has been doing exactly that for Amazon sellers since 2001. Request a free quote to see what it looks like for your business.
What to Do This Week
-
Check your FNSKU inventory levels
Identify any variants under 28 days of supply and restock immediately. Under the 2026 rules, a single low-stock variant generates fees on every sale — regardless of how healthy your overall inventory looks.
-
Review your inbound shipment plans
Are you using minimal split? Calculate what placement fees cost you over the last 90 days. At volume, the savings from switching to a 3PL or AWD are often immediate.
-
Audit your aged inventory
Anything approaching 150 days needs a liquidation or removal decision now — before the 181-day surcharge clock starts running. Don't let procrastination become a fee.
-
Evaluate SIPP eligibility
Especially critical for bulky items. Without SIPP enrollment, a mandatory ~$1.50 packaging fee now applies to every unit — wiping out the base rate savings Amazon introduced.
-
Update your COGS calculations
The 3.5% fuel surcharge is live right now. Every SKU's cost structure needs to reflect the new per-unit reality before it quietly erodes margins you thought were safe.
-
Audit return rates by category
If you sell electronics, watches, or apparel, pull your trailing 3-month return rate and compare it against Amazon's threshold for your category. Listings that drive returns are now a direct fee liability.
The 2026 fee environment rewards sellers who run tight operations. The fees themselves aren't catastrophic — but they compound fast when you're not watching inventory levels, shipment routing, and packaging compliance at the same time.
Ready to talk fulfillment or FBA Prep solutions? The team at eFulfillment Service is happy to help answer questions and set you up for fulfillment success. Here’s to fewer headaches and more growth ahead!
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