Amazon Seller Updates: US Seller-Fulfilled Returns Tighten Timelines, FBA Donation Certificates, and Critical Compliance Alerts – Feb 17, 2026

Good morning, sellers! Welcome to February 17, 2026’s edition of your daily Amazon briefing.
Today we’re covering US seller-fulfilled returns + SAFE-T reimbursement timeline tightening, critical policy updates, fresh opportunities in FBA Donations / Grade and Resell, and the compliance changes you need to know before they hit your account. Let’s dive in…

Data timestamp: February 17, 2026 — 8:22 AM ET


1. TOP STORY OF THE DAY

What happened:
Amazon has now stacked multiple US FBM return/reimbursement timeline changes that materially increase “oops you missed the window” loss risk:

  • Amazon Prepaid Return Label (APRL) is required for US seller-fulfilled returns regardless of item value effective February 8, 2026 (high-value exemption removed). (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • The US SAFE-T claim filing window drops from 60 days to 30 days effective February 16, 2026—with the 30-day clock starting from return delivery scan or refund date (whichever is later). (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Amazon forum moderation is also explicitly linking these changes to the January 26, 2026 refund-timing update and warning about SAFE-T eligibility loss when Amazon issues the refund automatically (except limited cases). (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Why it matters:

  • Profitability: Mandatory prepaid labels on high-ticket FBM returns makes return shipping a guaranteed COGS line item on discretionary returns—not an exception case anymore. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Claims leakage: Cutting SAFE-T from 60 → 30 days increases “missed filing” loss—especially if your ops team batch-reviews returns weekly/biweekly or relies on manual reporting. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Account health + ops: The new environment rewards sellers who can document, inspect, and file fast—sloppy receiving processes become a margin bleed.

Expert take:
Amazon is compressing seller-side timelines to reduce internal friction and accelerate customer resolution—your reimbursement process is being treated like a “short-fuse exception workflow,” not a default safety net. The second-order effect is staffing: sellers who can’t operationalize 24-72 hour returns processing will quietly lose reimbursements without any single “big” suspension event.

Action items (today):

  1. Build a 30-day SAFE-T queue immediately — Filter returns/refunds where the event date is approaching 30 days and assign daily ownership (no weekly batching). Do now. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  2. Add “refund issued by Amazon?” as a hard gate in your SOP — per Amazon forum guidance, auto-refunds can reduce/kill eligibility except limited scenarios. Do now. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  3. High-ticket FBM triage — Identify SKUs where a single return label wipes margin; consider shifting those ASINs to FBA, raising price to cover expected return freight, or tightening order defect exposure via packaging/inspection documentation. Hedge. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Sources: (sellercentral.amazon.com)


2. AMAZON POLICY & PROGRAM UPDATES

A) Selling Policies & Terms

  • Brand/category restriction enforcement (forum report): Sellers report notices that “branded listings will be removed” and that impacted products are “restricted to qualified sellers,” with disputes routed via View Selling Applications. Treat as a gating/compliance workflow change risk if you operate cross-border entities. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

B) FBA & Fulfillment

  • FBA Donations — Amazon now provides a donation certificate from Good360 inside Seller Central for sellers who donated inventory in 2024 (useful for tax documentation and audit trails). (sell.amazon.com)
  • FBA Grade and Resell — Program expanded into five categories: Watches, Jewelry, Luggage, Shoes, Apparel, plus automatic pricing adjustments for Used inventory to track New pricing/discounts. (sell.amazon.com)

C) Advertising & Marketing

Unavailable — No Amazon Ads “What’s New” items in the last 48 hours were found that materially change Sponsored Ads workflows. (Most recent relevant official update surfaced in our scan is older than 48 hours.) (advertising.amazon.com)

D) Compliance & Safety

  • CPSC recall (active risk): LShome 3-Pack Smoke Detector Fire Alarms recalled (~11,000 units)—model XG-7D04-KZ9Z, SKU CX-50YP-A5VN—sold on Amazon from February 2024–December 2025 for about $30. If you wholesale/RA in safety devices or adjacent listings, check for stranded/commingled contamination exposure. (cpsc.gov)

E) Payments & Financial

Unavailable — No verified Seller Wallet, reserve, disbursement, or FX-fee changes in the last 48 hours located in today’s source sweep.


2A. FALSE ALARMS & NOISE FILTER

What’s circulating but NOT verified:
“Amazon inbound now has new packaging/label verification per-unit fees (e.g., $0.12/unit).”

  • Status: Unverified
  • Why it matters if true: Direct per-unit P&L hit + inbound compliance risk.
  • What we actually know: No corroborating Amazon primary documentation surfaced in the last 48 hours during today’s scan. Unavailable (treat as noise until an official Seller Central help page / announcement is located).

3. MARKETPLACE OPPORTUNITIES & THREATS (Verified only)

Opportunity: monetize dead/return inventory with documentation upside

Setup: FBA Donations now provides Good360 donation certificates for 2024 donations inside Seller Central. (sell.amazon.com)

Math: If you routinely pay $0.30–$1.20/unit in removal/disposal costs, shifting a portion of long-tail inventory into FBA Donations can reduce cash burn; the certificate adds documentation value for tax filing (exact tax benefit depends on your accountant/treatment). (sell.amazon.com)

Who this fits: Private label sellers with 50–500 SKUs carrying aging returns/overstock.

Window: Relevant now for 2024 donations—get it into your 2025/2026 tax workflow ASAP. (sell.amazon.com)

Execute:

  1. Pull your 2024 donation activity and download the certificate.
  2. Reconcile donated units vs. your inventory ledger and COGS.
  3. Hand certificate + reconciliation to your CPA for filing position review.

Sources: (sell.amazon.com)

Threat: safety recall contamination risk in “safety devices”

Setup: CPSC recall on specific smoke detectors sold on Amazon. (cpsc.gov)

Math: One recalled-ASIN enforcement event can cause listing removal + stranded inventory + potential account health hits; expected loss is SKU-dependent but often exceeds a month of net profit for small accounts.

Who this fits: OA/RA sellers in Home Improvement, Safety, Tools, Electronics; also private label sellers sourcing similar factory categories.

Window: Immediate—recall date February 12, 2026. (cpsc.gov)

Execute:

  1. Audit catalog for the model/SKU identifiers in the recall notice.
  2. If exposed, stop replenishment and open a case with documentation.
  3. Check for stranded/removed inventory and initiate removal if required.

Sources: (cpsc.gov)


4. TOOLS, SOFTWARE & AUTOMATION UPDATES

  • Unavailable — No verified >20% pricing changes or workflow-critical releases from major seller tools (Helium 10/Jungle Scout/AMZScout or major repricers) published in the last 48 hours surfaced in today’s scan.

Seller impact:
– Keep focus on ops automation around returns + SAFE-T (internal process), not tool churn.


5. ADVERTISING & PPC INSIGHTS

Unavailable — No new, verifiable Ads console feature launches or policy changes in the last 48 hours found today. (Last official item we surfaced was older.) (advertising.amazon.com)


6. INTERNATIONAL & CROSS-BORDER

Germany antitrust authorities fined Amazon over price-filtering tools affecting third-party offer visibility (EU context; not a confirmed immediate change to US Buy Box rules).
Status: Verified news, but seller-facing operational change: Unavailable until Amazon publishes marketplace-specific implementation details. (wsj.com)


7. SELLER COMMUNITY PULSE

Pattern recognition from forums:

  • Early warning signals: Multiple threads focusing on seller-fulfilled returns tightening—especially APRL scope and SAFE-T timeline compression. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Workarounds in action (reported): Sellers shifting high-ticket items away from FBM or tightening receiving documentation to support SAFE-T claims. Forum-based—Monitoring. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Mistake patterns: Waiting until the end of the (old) 60-day period to file reimbursements—now structurally invalid post February 16, 2026. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Practical Q&A (showing up repeatedly):

  • “When does the new SAFE-T 30-day clock start?” → It starts from the return delivery scan at your warehouse or the refund date, whichever is later; for lost shipments it starts from the last scan event. Build your workflow around that trigger, not the order date. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • “Are high-value items still exempt from prepaid return labels?” → No—effective February 8, 2026, US seller-fulfilled returns must use APRL regardless of item value (category/eligibility exemptions still apply). (sellercentral.amazon.com)

8. COMPLIANCE & ACCOUNT HEALTH ALERTS

  • CPSC recall enforcement risk—smoke detectors (model XG-7D04-KZ9Z, SKU CX-50YP-A5VN). If you touch regulated safety products, increase catalog auditing frequency this week. (cpsc.gov)
  • Deadline passed but impact ongoing: SAFE-T 30-day filing window is already effective as of February 16, 2026—miss it and reimbursement eligibility expires for older events. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

9. DEALS, EXITS & ACQUISITIONS

Unavailable — No verified aggregator acquisition/multiple updates in the last 48 hours found in today’s scan.


10. LOOKING AHEAD

  • February 16, 2026 (effective): US SAFE-T filing window now 30 days—adjust weekly/monthly reimbursement cadence immediately. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Ongoing (already effective): US seller-fulfilled returns require APRL regardless of item value (high-value exemption removed). (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Tax workflow (now): Download FBA Donations certificates for 2024 donations and reconcile to inventory/COGS before your filing finalization. (sell.amazon.com)

11. KEY METRICS SNAPSHOT (when available)

Unavailable — No last-7-days published benchmarks for average CPC / ACOS / fee baselines from authoritative sources surfaced in today’s 48-hour sweep.


CLOSING

Tomorrow’s Watch List:

  • Any further Seller Central clarification on SAFE-T eligibility rules tied to automatic refunds. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Additional recall notices in Home/Safety that could trigger listing sweeps. (cpsc.gov)
  • Any US marketplace-level announcement expanding Grade and Resell or changing pricing logic beyond what’s published. (sell.amazon.com)

Question of the Day:

Which 10 SKUs in your catalog would become unprofitable if you assume one paid return label per 10 orders under APRL—and do you have a pricing/FBA switch plan for them?

Quick Win:

Audit and file any eligible US SAFE-T claims older than 30 days that you still planned to submit → Prevent immediate reimbursement forfeiture under the new 30-day window → Seller Central (News/Announcements guidance) + your returns/refunds reporting workflow. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Amazon Seller Update – Feb 15, 2026: FBA Billing Changes & Sponsored Brands Opportunities

Good morning, sellers! Welcome to February 15, 2026‘s edition of your daily Amazon briefing.
Today we’re covering FBA removal/disposal billing changes, critical policy updates, fresh opportunities in Sponsored Brands, and the compliance changes you need to know before they hit your account. Let’s dive in…

Data timestamp: February 15, 2026, 8:35 AM ET


1. TOP STORY OF THE DAY — FBA Removal Order Fees + FBA Disposal Order Fees switch to per-unit, as-processed billing

What happened:
Amazon is changing when you’re charged for FBA removal and disposal. Starting February 15, 2026, Amazon will charge per unit at the time each unit is removed/disposed—instead of one lump-sum charge when the entire order finishes. Fee rates are unchanged; only the billing timeline changes. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Why it matters:

  • Cash flow + reserves: Large cleanups (aged inventory, stranded cleanups, hazmat pulls) will create continuous debits instead of one predictable hit—this can trip low-balance accounts and increase the odds you hit negative disbursement periods. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Accounting reconciliation: You’ll see more frequent line items in Payments → Transaction View, which will break “one removal order = one charge” assumptions in bookkeeping workflows and P&L rollups. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Operational control: The change increases visibility into partial processing—useful when removals stall and you need to decide whether to pivot to liquidation, accelerate coupons, or shut off PPC. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Expert take:
Amazon is tightening the feedback loop between inventory decisions and financial impact. Sellers who treat removals as a quarterly “cleanup event” will feel margin pressure sooner—because the costs now surface daily/weekly while the removal is in-flight, not only at completion. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Action items:

  • Do now (today): If you run large removals, add a “removal burn” line to your cash forecast—assume charges will post progressively for weeks. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Do now: Tell your bookkeeper/VA to reconcile removals by Removal Order ID + date range, not by single transaction. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Hedge: If you’re about to nuke a slow-moving SKU set, consider staging removals in smaller batches so you don’t create a long tail of micro-debits that’s hard to audit.

Sources: (sellercentral.amazon.com)


2. AMAZON POLICY & PROGRAM UPDATES

A) Selling Policies & Terms

  • Amazon Prepaid Return Label (APRL) requirement expanded (US, seller-fulfilled) — effective February 8, 2026, the prior “high-value return exemption” is removed and sellers must use APRL for customer returns regardless of item value (existing category exemptions still apply). Practical impact: you should expect higher return-label cost exposure on high-AOV FBM catalogs and tighter need for SAFE-T documentation discipline. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

B) FBA & Fulfillment

  • FBA Removal Order Fees / FBA Disposal Order Fees billing timeline change — effective February 15, 2026, charged per unit as processed, rates unchanged, applies automatically to new orders created on/after February 15, 2026. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

C) Advertising & Marketing

  • Sponsored Brands “collections” format shift — Amazon is rolling out a Sponsored Brands collections experience that replaces the older product collections workflow in the ad console; key operational constraint: new collections require at least 3 ASINs (up to 10), and creative dependency is reduced (Amazon auto-pulls product assets). Existing campaigns continue running, but you may be unable to add new ad groups in legacy formats. (Official Amazon Ads documentation with full change log was Unavailable in the last 48 hours; see sources below for the advertiser email/reporting.) (ampmpodcast.com)

D) Compliance & Safety

  • CPSC recall (hard compliance exposure if you’re in the same niche) — LShome 3-Pack Smoke Detector Fire Alarms sold exclusively on Amazon are recalled (Recall date February 12, 2026; ~11,000 units). Model XG-7D04-KZ9Z; SKU CX-50YP-A5VN. If you sell smoke alarms/CO detectors, expect heightened scrutiny on claims, certifications, and listing content. (cpsc.gov)

E) Payments & Financial

  • No new Amazon-issued disbursement schedule change found in the last 48 hours — Unavailable (no qualifying official post surfaced in sources searched).

2A. FALSE ALARMS & NOISE FILTER

What’s circulating but NOT verified:

  • $100 Amazon Ads credit code for launching Sponsored Products” (promo code shared on Reddit).
    Status: Unverified
    Why it matters if true: Could subsidize testing in a new marketplace or new account structure.
    What we actually know: Only a user post; no Amazon Ads promo terms located in official sources in the last 48 hours — treat as Unavailable until confirmed inside your Amazon Ads → Billing & payments → Promotions screen. (reddit.com)

3. MARKETPLACE OPPORTUNITIES & THREATS (verified only)

Threat: FBM returns cost exposure just increased for high-AOV catalogs

Setup: APRL is now required for US seller-fulfilled returns regardless of item value (effective February 8, 2026). (sellercentral.amazon.com)
Math: If your average FBM return label cost is $8.00–$18.00 and you do 200 returns/month, that’s $1,600–$3,600/month incremental exposure if you previously relied on exemptions for high-value items (your exact delta depends on how many returns were previously exempt). (Exact Amazon-provided cost impact: Unavailable—label costs vary by carrier/package.) (sellercentral.amazon.com)
Who this fits: FBM-heavy sellers in Electronics, Home Improvement, Tools, Luxury, any $200+ ASP mix.
Window: Live now (since February 8, 2026). (sellercentral.amazon.com)
Execute:

  1. Audit FBM return rate + AOV SKUs → identify the top 20 ASINs by “return shipping cost risk.”
  2. Update SOP: every return gets photos on receipt + condition notes to preserve SAFE-T eligibility. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  3. Consider selectively moving the worst offenders to FBA (if margin allows) to shift the return label mechanics.

Sources: (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Opportunity: Sponsored Brands collections now structurally favors broader catalogs

Setup: New Sponsored Brands collections flow supports 3–10 ASINs and reduces custom creative dependency, potentially lowering setup friction. (ampmpodcast.com)
Math: If you were blocked by creative throughput (designer time, brand approvals), the time-to-launch can drop from days to hours. (Performance lift claims: Unavailable—no official benchmark found in the last 48 hours.)
Who this fits: Brand Registry sellers with 5–50 related SKUs (variants, bundles, complementary items).
Window: Live/rolling (reporting indicates rollout beginning January 28, 2026). (ampmpodcast.com)
Execute:

  1. Build 3–5 “tight” collections by shopper mission (not by internal taxonomy).
  2. If Amazon offers AI-curated product selection in your console, run an A/B: manual ASIN picks vs dynamic selection for 7 days.
  3. QA your images/pricing across the 10-ASIN grid—weak listings will drag CTR.

Sources: (ampmpodcast.com)


4. TOOLS, SOFTWARE & AUTOMATION UPDATES

No qualifying tool updates (>20% pricing change or workflow-affecting change with verifiable publication in the last 48 hours) — Unavailable.


5. ADVERTISING & PPC INSIGHTS (verified)

  1. Sponsored Brands collections now forces catalog discipline
    ROI impact: If you only have 1–2 hero ASINs, you may lose the ability to spin up new collections-style structures—expect budget to shift back toward Sponsored Products or SB video for those brands. (ampmpodcast.com)
  2. Creative bottleneck reduction changes the competitive set
    ROI impact: More advertisers can launch SB collections faster—expect increased top-of-search competition in niches where SB was previously underused due to creative requirements. (Quantified CPC change: Unavailable.) (ampmpodcast.com)

6. INTERNATIONAL & CROSS-BORDER

No verified cross-border program changes published in the last 48 hours — Unavailable.


7. SELLER COMMUNITY PULSE

Pattern recognition from forums:

  • Early warning signals: Sellers discussing operational fallout from APRL expansion—especially higher FBM return shipping cost on expensive items. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Workarounds in action: Forum guidance is converging on tighter SAFE-T documentation (photos, serial capture) and faster returns processing SOPs. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Mistake patterns: Treating “policy effective” as “policy enforced later.” This one is already live (effective February 8, 2026). (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Practical Q&A (appearing repeatedly):
– “Do I still have any exemptions from APRL?” → Yes, Amazon lists continuing category exemptions (for example Handmade, certain dangerous goods, non-physical items, and other ineligible-for-prepaid-label scenarios). Confirm your specific category eligibility before changing SOPs. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
– “Will Amazon reimburse me for abusive returns?” → You can file reimbursement via SAFE-T when you believe the refund wasn’t your fault; outcomes depend on documentation quality and policy eligibility. (sellercentral.amazon.com)


8. COMPLIANCE & ACCOUNT HEALTH ALERTS

  • CPSC recall alert — Smoke detectors (LShome 3-pack) recalled on February 12, 2026; if you sell in adjacent categories (smoke/CO alarms), review certification and claims immediately to reduce suppression/claim risk. Missing or weak compliance language can turn into listing removals once enforcement heat rises post-recall. (cpsc.gov)
  • Returns policy compliance (US FBM): APRL requirement effective February 8, 2026—noncompliance risk is operational (returns workflow breaks) and could create A-to-z / chargeback exposure if returns aren’t processed cleanly. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

9. DEALS, EXITS & ACQUISITIONS

No verified seller-relevant M&A/aggregator activity published in the last 48 hours — Unavailable.


10. LOOKING AHEAD

  • February 15, 2026FBA removal/disposal per-unit, as-processed billing is effective for new orders created on/after today. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Next 7 days: Watch for seller reports of reconciliation issues in Payments → Transaction View due to the new debit cadence (whether Amazon’s UI filtering is sufficient). (sellercentral.amazon.com)

11. KEY METRICS SNAPSHOT (when available)

No fresh, citable benchmark metrics (CPC, ACOS, fee baselines) published in the last 7 days in the sources pulled today — Unavailable.


CLOSING

Tomorrow’s Watch List:

  • Any enforcement escalation or new exemptions clarifications for APRL in Seller Central. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Seller reports on whether removal/disposal charges are posting cleanly (and how fast) under the new per-unit billing. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • More official detail (or console UI changes) around Sponsored Brands collections rollout behavior and campaign editing limitations. (ampmpodcast.com)

Question of the Day:

Which 10 SKUs in your catalog have the worst combined profile of (return rate × return label cost × resale loss), and do you have a SAFE-T evidence SOP documented for them?

Quick Win:

Export your last 30 days of FBM returns and flag any ASINs with ASP > $200 → Prioritize APRL cost containment + SAFE-T documentation on the highest-risk SKUs → Seller Central Reports (returns) + internal SOP update in your returns intake workflow. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Amazon Seller Briefing — February 14, 2026: Enforced Prepaid Return Label for All FBM Returns & Key Updates

Edition date: February 14, 2026
Data timestamp: 5:30 AM ET (data gathered)

Good morning, sellers! Welcome to February 14, 2026’s edition of your daily Amazon briefing.
Today we’re covering Amazon Prepaid Return Label (APRL) enforcement for all FBM returns (including high-value), critical policy updates, fresh opportunities in FBA Grade and Resell expansion categories, and the compliance changes you need to know before they hit your account. Let’s dive in…


1. TOP STORY OF THE DAY

What happened:

Amazon’s Prepaid Return Label (APRL) requirement for US FBM returns is now enforced regardless of item value, removing the prior high-value exemption effective February 8, 2026. Amazon frames this as standardizing returns, accelerating refunds, and reducing buyer–seller messaging during returns. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Why it matters:

  • Profitability hit (FBM high-ticket): You are now structurally paying return shipping on discretionary returns even for $500–$5,000 items unless your category remains exempt. That’s direct margin compression plus higher “refund-before-inspection” exposure when combined with fast refund expectations. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Account health / dispute ops: This pushes sellers toward tighter documentation and SAFE-T discipline for “buyer abuse / wrong item returned” cases. Missed internal SOP steps here become unrecoverable losses, not just operational noise. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Customer comms removed: Less ability to intercept problematic returns via messaging—your prevention now has to happen before shipment (listing clarity, compatibility gating, packaging, serial capture). (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Expert take:

Amazon is clearly trading seller control for predictable buyer CX—meaning high-AOV FBM sellers become the shock absorber. The second-order effect: sellers who can’t operationalize returns proof (photos, serials, packaging condition) will quietly shift inventory to FBA or de-risk by cutting selection (fewer high-ticket SKUs, more consumables), which will tighten competition in certain premium niches.

Action items:

Do now (today):

  • Segment your FBM catalog by return-risk (fragile, high-fraud, compatibility-sensitive). Flag SKUs where a single return wipes profit (e.g., $25–$60 outbound + $25–$60 return shipping + lost sellable unit). (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Build a “SAFE-T-ready” receiving SOP: require unboxing video or photo set + serial/model capture within 24 hours of receipt for flagged SKUs. (If you can’t prove condition, you’re betting against automation.) (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Verify exemptions: Amazon states some exemptions continue (including Handmade, certain dangerous goods, non-physical items, and some heavy/XL cases). Confirm your categories aren’t falsely assumed exempt. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Wait / monitor:

  • Watch your return rate + average return shipping cost per unit on high-AOV SKUs for the next 7 days—if it spikes, test price increases or FBM→FBA swaps on only the most exposed ASINs.

Hedge:

  • For high-value FBM, test compatibility qualifiers and “what’s in the box” tightening in bullets/A+ to reduce “not as described” and “doesn’t fit” discretionary returns (the two most expensive types under APRL).

Sources: (sellercentral.amazon.com)


2. AMAZON POLICY & PROGRAM UPDATES

A) Selling Policies & Terms

  • FBM returns—APRL high-value exemption removed (US) effective February 8, 2026 (all item values). Amazon notes certain category/ineligibility exemptions still apply. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

B) FBA & Fulfillment

  • FBA removal and disposal fees—billing timing change effective February 15, 2026: fees will be charged per unit as processed, not all-at-once when the full removal/disposal order completes. Fee rates unchanged. Applies to orders created on or after February 15, 2026. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Cash flow impact: removal cleanups will “drip” charges across days—plan reconciliation accordingly. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • FBA Grade and Resell—program feature updates + category expansion (posted February 3, 2026): now supports Watches, Jewelry, Luggage, Shoes, Apparel and adds automatic pricing adjustments, ASIN inclusion (opt-in) up to 2,000 ASINs, and automatic out-of-stock SKU removal from inventory management view. (sell.amazon.com)

C) Advertising & Marketing

  • Sponsored Brands—Product Collections replaced by “Sponsored Brands Collections” (phased rollout began January 28, 2026):
    – Ads can feature 3–10 products (minimum 3 ASINs)
    No custom headlines or lifestyle images (reduced creative dependency)
    – Amazon can dynamically curate products via AI or allow manual selection
    – Existing campaigns can continue and be optimized, but can’t add new ad groups in legacy format (ppc.land)

D) Compliance & Safety

  • CPSC recall (Recall date February 12, 2026) for 3-Pack Smoke Detector Fire Alarms sold on Amazon—LShome model XG-7D04-KZ9Z, SKU CX-50YP-A5VN; about 11,000 units. Hazard: may not sound timely if sensing threshold set too high. Remedy: refund. (cpsc.gov)

E) Payments & Financial

Unavailable—no verifiable Seller Wallet, reserve, disbursement, or FX fee updates published in the last 48 hours from accessible official sources.


2A. FALSE ALARMS & NOISE FILTER

What’s circulating but NOT verified:

  • “Amazon cut SAFE-T window to 30 days starting mid-February 2026.”
    Status: Unverified (no accessible Amazon primary documentation located in last 48 hours)
    Why it matters if true: late claims become automatic write-offs on return fraud/damage
    What we actually know: Amazon is explicitly pointing sellers to SAFE-T as the reimbursement path for disputed refunds under APRL—but no fresh primary source confirming a new deadline was found today. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • “Amazon is rolling out AI ‘chat/prompt’ features inside ads with performance lifts.”
    Status: Unverified (circulating via social posts; no Amazon Ads primary announcement located in last 48 hours)
    Why it matters if true: listing content quality would directly affect paid conversion
    What we actually know: Verified change is Sponsored Brands Collections format shift (3–10 ASINs; no headlines/images; AI curation optional). (ppc.land)

3. MARKETPLACE OPPORTUNITIES & THREATS (verified)

Opportunity: FBA Grade and Resell now supports higher-AOV categories

Setup: FBA Grade and Resell expanded into Watches, Jewelry, Luggage, Shoes, Apparel and added opt-in controls and auto-pricing. (sell.amazon.com)

Math: Unavailable—Amazon did not publish seller-average recovery percentages or fee deltas in the update. (sell.amazon.com)

Who this fits: High-return categories (apparel/shoes) and premium accessories sellers who already see meaningful customer returns and want to recapture value instead of liquidating/disposing.

Window: Active now (update posted February 3, 2026). (sell.amazon.com)

Execute:

  1. Audit return-heavy ASINs in those categories and decide whether to opt-in (up to 2,000 ASINs) versus whole-catalog enrollment. (sell.amazon.com)
  2. If you care about used pricing control—understand that automatic pricing adjustments follow New price/discount rules until you manually override (which opts that item out). (sell.amazon.com)
  3. Add a weekly check to confirm out-of-stock SKU removal didn’t hide items your team still needs to manage (operational visibility risk). (sell.amazon.com)

Sources: (sell.amazon.com)


4. TOOLS, SOFTWARE & AUTOMATION UPDATES

Unavailable—no verified workflow-impacting (>20% pricing or major feature) updates from major seller tools (Helium 10, Jungle Scout, AMZScout) published in the last 48 hours in accessible primary sources.


5. ADVERTISING & PPC INSIGHTS (verified)

  1. Sponsored Brands format shift = listing quality becomes the creative. With Sponsored Brands Collections removing custom headlines and lifestyle images, your product titles/images/bullets are now doing more of the persuasion work inside the ad unit. ROI impact: weak main image + vague title will tax CTR and conversion because you can’t “storytell” around it anymore. (ppc.land)
  2. Minimum 3 ASIN requirement changes portfolio construction. If you previously ran 1–2 hero ASIN collections, you can’t build new ad groups that way in the new format. ROI impact: forcing a 3rd ASIN can drag blended ROAS unless you pick a high-converting “supporting” ASIN (often your #2 variant or best margin accessory). (ppc.land)
  3. AI dynamic curation is a control vs scale trade. Amazon allows dynamic selection or manual selection. ROI impact: dynamic can expand coverage but can also allocate impressions to lower-margin ASINs—watch placement and ASIN-level attributed sales closely. (ppc.land)

6. INTERNATIONAL & CROSS-BORDER

Unavailable—no verified international marketplace launch, VAT/GST, or cross-border logistics policy updates published in the last 48 hours from accessible primary sources.


7. SELLER COMMUNITY PULSE

Pattern recognition from forums:

  • Early warning signals: Sellers are discussing APRL enforcement for high-value FBM and the shift in return economics; Amazon forum announcement confirms the rule change. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Workarounds in action: Unavailable—no repeatable, verified “this works” tactical pattern surfaced in accessible threads within the last 48 hours.
  • Mistake patterns: Assuming high-value items remain exempt—Amazon explicitly states the exemption is removed (with only specific category/ineligibility exemptions continuing). (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Practical Q&A (recurring theme):
“Do I need to do anything for the February 15, 2026 removal fee change?” → No action required; it applies automatically to removal/disposal orders created on or after February 15, 2026. Operationally, update your reconciliation cadence because charges will appear as units are processed (not one lump sum). (sellercentral.amazon.com)


8. COMPLIANCE & ACCOUNT HEALTH ALERTS

  • CPSC recall exposure—smoke detectors: If you have any inventory tied to LShome 3-Pack Smoke Detector Fire Alarms (model XG-7D04-KZ9Z, SKU CX-50YP-A5VN), immediately audit listings, stranded inventory, and any removal/returns workflows. Selling recalled products can trigger enforcement and account risk. (cpsc.gov)
  • FBM returns compliance: APRL is required for US FBM returns regardless of item value effective February 8, 2026—non-compliance increases customer escalations and can amplify performance risk via poor return experience. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

9. DEALS, EXITS & ACQUISITIONS

Unavailable—no verifiable aggregator acquisition or valuation multiple update published in the last 48 hours from reputable sources accessible today.


10. LOOKING AHEAD (date-driven)

  • February 15, 2026: FBA removal and disposal fees charged per unit as processed (timing change only). Consequence of ignoring: messier cash-flow forecasting and harder-to-audit removals if you don’t adjust reconciliation. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Ongoing: Sponsored Brands Collections phased rollout that began January 28, 2026—expect account-by-account availability variance. (ppc.land)

11. KEY METRICS SNAPSHOT (when available)

Unavailable—no last-7-days, verifiable benchmarks found today for average CPC, typical ACOS by category, or updated FBA/storage baseline rates from authoritative sources.


CLOSING

Tomorrow’s Watch List:

  • Any additional Amazon clarification on APRL exemptions and operational enforcement (suppression/defect implications) beyond the current announcement. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Early seller reporting on removal/disposal per-unit charge timing once it goes live February 15, 2026. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Performance volatility as more accounts get access to Sponsored Brands Collections. (ppc.land)

Question of the Day:

Which 10 SKUs in your catalog have the worst “return loss per unit” (shipping both ways + unsellable rate), and should any of them be moved from FBM to FBA this week?

Quick Win:

Build a high-ticket FBM returns audit list (>$200 ASP)Reduce return-loss and improve SAFE-T readinessSeller Central > Reports > Fulfillment > Returns (FBM) export + filter by price band, then add a required photo/serial-capture step in your warehouse SOP. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Amazon Daily Briefing: February 13, 2026 – New Amazon Ads Attribution, Sponsored Brands Format Updates, EU Fee Changes, and Compliance Alerts

Good morning, sellers! Welcome to February 13, 2026’s edition of your daily Amazon briefing.
Today we’re covering Amazon Ads reporting + Sponsored Brands format shifts, critical policy updates, fresh opportunities in EU everyday categories, and the compliance changes you need to know before they hit your account. Let’s dive in…

Data timestamp: February 13, 2026, 8:42 AM ET


1. TOP STORY OF THE DAY

What happened:
Amazon Ads switched reporting for Amazon Store ads to a new attribution methodology—shopping-signal enhanced last-touch attribution—with Purchases, Sales, and ROAS under the new methodology becoming standard reporting. All views metrics (14-day window) remain available as separate metrics. (advertising.amazon.com)

Why it matters:

  • Profitability/PPC efficiency — If you optimize to “standard” ROAS without realizing the attribution model changed, you can cut spend on campaigns that are still creating discovery demand (now credited differently). (advertising.amazon.com)
  • Decision risk — Any internal benchmarks (target ROAS, incrementality assumptions, reporting dashboards pulling “standard” metrics) can drift overnight if they’re not pinned to the same attribution definition. (advertising.amazon.com)

Expert take:
Amazon is tightening attribution to better reflect where it believes discovery happens (early browsing/category intent) while compressing the reporting window for “standard” conversions. That nudges sellers toward (1) cleaner funnel measurement and (2) less reliance on generous view-through credit when defending spend.

Action items:

  • Do now (15 minutes): In your reporting stack, label and separate “standard” vs Purchases (all views) / Sales (all views) / ROAS (all views) for Amazon Store ads—then re-baseline targets for each. (advertising.amazon.com)
  • Do now: If your BI pulls via API, confirm which fields your dashboards ingest and whether they defaulted to the new standard. (advertising.amazon.com)
  • Wait: Don’t change budgets off a single day’s post-change ROAS—force a short hold period so your team doesn’t “optimize” into under-spending. (advertising.amazon.com)

Sources: (advertising.amazon.com)


2. AMAZON POLICY & PROGRAM UPDATES

A) Selling Policies & Terms

  • Unavailable — No new verified U.S. policy bulletin in the last 24–48 hours surfaced via accessible sources (Seller Central announcements are not consistently crawlable in real time).

B) FBA & Fulfillment

  • 2026 U.S. fee update reminder (effective January 15, 2026) — Amazon’s published 2026 update reiterates FBA fees increased by an average of $0.08 per unit (effective January 15, 2026, unless otherwise noted). Treat this as “done,” but use it as a baseline when auditing Q1 margin compression. (sellingpartners.aboutamazon.com)
  • EU fee reductions (timing differs by source—verify per marketplace) — Amazon’s published EU update outlines average fee reductions and category-level referral fee cuts (with some changes listed as effective December 15, 2025 and January 5, 2026 on the official Amazon blog). (aboutamazon.eu)
    • Note: A Seller Forums EU post shows certain items “going into effect on February 1, 2026,” which conflicts with the Amazon blog’s stated January 5, 2026 date for some changes—EU sellers should verify the effective date inside their specific marketplace fee page before repricing. (aboutamazon.eu)

C) Advertising & Marketing

  • Sponsored Products / Sponsored Brands “Prompts” (open beta, U.S.)Sponsored Products prompts and Sponsored Brands prompts are automatically enabled (with reporting/management in Ads Console). Listing content quality (bullets/A+/description) now directly influences what the prompt answers can safely pull. (advertising.amazon.com)
  • Sponsored Brands “Collections” format change (3–10 ASINs; no custom headline/image) — Widely reported rollout beginning January 28, 2026: new Sponsored Brands collections allow 3–10 products, with optional AI selection and reduced creative requirements. Unavailable (official Amazon Ads doc not found in today’s crawl)—treat as “monitoring,” but operationally prepare for campaign structure constraints. (linkedin.com)
  • Sponsored Products video (feature videos, bid adjustments) — Newer ad format allows uploading multiple product feature videos and applying bid adjustments to increase video placement likelihood. If you’re struggling with differentiation in high-CPC categories, this is a defensible creative lever. (advertising.amazon.com)

D) Compliance & Safety

  • CPSC enforcement posture remains seller-relevant — The U.S. CPSC finalized an order outlining remediation plans for hazardous products tied to FBA distribution scenarios (not new today, but the compliance takeaway is current): expect faster suppression/removal pressure when products intersect regulated safety issues (CO detectors, certain hairdryers, children’s sleepwear flammability examples in the order). (cpsc.gov)
    • Action: If you sell in Kids, Personal Care electrical, or safety devices, run a weekly audit of certifications/test reports and keep them retrieval-ready.

E) Payments & Financial

  • Unavailable — No verified Seller Wallet, reserve, or disbursement schedule change surfaced in the last 24–48 hours via accessible sources.

2A. FALSE ALARMS & NOISE FILTER

What’s circulating but NOT verified:
Sponsored Brands product collections removed/custom creative disabled for everyone already”

  • Status: Monitoring (not verified via an official Amazon Ads bulletin today) (linkedin.com)
  • Why it matters if true: Breaks workflow for brands relying on custom images/headlines; forces 3+ ASIN structure. (estorefactory.com)
  • What we actually know: Multiple third-party writeups and practitioner posts claim a phased rollout from January 28, 2026; treat account-by-account availability as variable. (linkedin.com)

3. MARKETPLACE OPPORTUNITIES & THREATS (verified only)

Opportunity: EU fee cuts shift pricing power in “everyday” categories

Setup: Amazon’s EU update describes reductions to referral fees in specific categories and expanded lower-cost fulfillment options, designed to lower seller per-unit cost on eligible items. (aboutamazon.eu)

Math: If your EU SKU sits near the price thresholds cited (example: Clothing & Accessories fee moving 8% → 5% at/under £15/€15), the contribution margin swing can be multiple points on low-AOV items. (Exact impact depends on price, category, and whether you qualify at the threshold.) (aboutamazon.eu)

Who this fits: High-velocity EU sellers in Clothing & Accessories, Home Products, Grocery, Pet, Vitamins/Supplements with pricing near the cutoffs. (aboutamazon.eu)

Window: Effective dates vary by change and source—verify your marketplace’s posted effective date before pushing reprices live. (aboutamazon.eu)

Execute (today):

  1. Pull top 50 EU ASINs by units—flag those within 5% of fee-threshold price points.
  2. Re-run unit economics with the updated fee tables in your market.
  3. Test a price drop to capture rank (funded by fee savings) or keep price and bank margin—choose one per ASIN, not both.

Sources: (aboutamazon.eu)


4. TOOLS, SOFTWARE & AUTOMATION UPDATES

  • Unavailable — No verified >20% pricing change or workflow-breaking tool update surfaced in the last 24–48 hours from major platforms (Helium 10/Jungle Scout/AMZScout) via accessible sources.

5. ADVERTISING & PPC INSIGHTS (high ROI, sourced)

  1. Re-baseline Store ads ROAS targets immediately
    ROI impact: Prevents accidental budget cuts caused by the new “standard” attribution shifting what gets credit. (advertising.amazon.com)
  2. Optimize listings for “Prompts” like they’re ad creative
    ROI impact: Better bullet/A+ structure can increase prompt usefulness, improving CTR and conversion on auto-enrolled Sponsored Products/Sponsored Brands prompt experiences. (advertising.amazon.com)
  3. Test Sponsored Products video on your top 10 paid keywords
    ROI impact: When the SERP is crowded, interactive feature videos can defend CTR without purely buying position via CPC. (advertising.amazon.com)

6. INTERNATIONAL & CROSS-BORDER

  • EU fee changes (confirmed via Amazon blog; details in Seller Forums post) — EU sellers should reconcile effective dates and thresholds inside their exact store (UK/DE/FR/IT/ES) because the public blog and forum post show different timing for some changes. (aboutamazon.eu)

7. SELLER COMMUNITY PULSE

Pattern recognition from forums:

  • Early warning signals: One thread shows sellers receiving messages about branded listings being removed due to business location/eligibility claims (anecdotal and seller-posted, not an Amazon bulletin). (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Workarounds in action: Unavailable—no repeatable, verified workaround surfaced in accessible sources today.
  • Mistake patterns: Sellers treating Ads eligibility/restrictions as consistent across competitors—recent community discussion highlights perceived inconsistent enforcement for restricted-content ads eligibility (Reddit report). Unavailable as a generalized claim; treat as isolated report. (reddit.com)

Practical Q&A (appeared repeatedly—Unavailable):
Community pulse: Unavailable—forums quiet or inaccessible today (insufficient verifiable multi-post repetition in accessible sources).


8. COMPLIANCE & ACCOUNT HEALTH ALERTS

  • Product safety documentation readiness (CPSC posture) — The CPSC actions emphasize that when products are deemed hazardous or noncompliant, remediation and removals can accelerate—especially for products fulfilled via FBA in scope categories.
    • Do today: For regulated SKUs, centralize test reports/certifications in a single internal folder mapped by ASIN (and ensure the docs match the exact product configuration). (cpsc.gov)

9. DEALS, EXITS & ACQUISITIONS

  • Unavailable — No verified aggregator acquisition or valuation multiple update surfaced in the last 24–48 hours via accessible sources.

10. LOOKING AHEAD

  • Sponsored Products / Sponsored Brands prompts (beta behavior) — Expect reporting/controls to matter more as prompts scale; plan a weekly audit of prompt-driven placements once your Ads Console exposes the tab and metrics consistently. (advertising.amazon.com)
  • EU fee effective dates — Confirm per marketplace as the public blog and forum post differ on timing for some items. (aboutamazon.eu)

11. KEY METRICS SNAPSHOT (when available)

Unavailable — No last-7-days benchmark dataset (CPC/ACOS/FBA fee baselines) surfaced from authoritative, time-stamped sources in today’s crawl.


CLOSING

Tomorrow’s Watch List:

  • Any official Amazon Ads bulletin clarifying the Sponsored Brands Collections rollout scope (U.S. vs global; who loses custom creative first). (myamazonguy.com)
  • Additional Amazon Ads attribution documentation updates beyond Store ads (whether similar methodology propagates to other report views). (advertising.amazon.com)
  • Any new Seller Central compliance announcement tied to product safety documentation requests.

Question of the Day:

Which 10 ASINs would you stop advertising today if your “standard” ROAS dropped 20% overnight—but your all views ROAS stayed flat?

Quick Win:

Audit your Amazon Store ads dashboards for attribution definitions → Prevents mistaken budget cuts driven by the new “standard” model → Amazon Ads Console (Reporting for Store ads) + your BI/API field mapping. (advertising.amazon.com)

Amazon Seller Update: FBA Capacity Manager Blocks Shipments, PurSteam Recall Impact, and Operational Adjustments

Good morning, sellers! Welcome to February 12, 2026’s edition of your daily Amazon briefing.
Today we’re covering FBA Capacity Manager constraints that are quietly forcing operational changes, critical policy updates, fresh opportunities in Home & Kitchen, and the compliance changes you need to know before they hit your account. Let’s dive in…

Data timestamp: February 12, 2026 — 9:42 AM ET


1. TOP STORY OF THE DAY

What happened:

Seller Forum moderation and official responses continue to confirm a hard constraint: if you are over your FBA capacity/storage limit, you can be blocked from creating new shipping plans—even when the inventory would arrive months later. In one recent thread, an Amazon representative stated sellers “will not be able to create a new shipment until your inventory level drops below your limit,” and warned that units sent above limits “may be refused” at the fulfillment center. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Why it matters:

  • Inventory decisions: You can’t “stage” Q1/Q2 production by building shipping plans early if you’re currently over limit—this pushes you into late planning, higher air freight risk, or missed windows. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Cash flow & margin: Being forced into removal orders (return/dispose) to get under limit can create immediate per-unit cost spikes and liquidation leakage. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Operational risk: This is no longer “just a restock limit issue”—it’s a workflow blocker that hits sourcing timelines.

Expert take:

Amazon’s real lever here is behavioral—capacity constraints aren’t just throttling inbound volume, they’re forcing sellers to prove sell-through before planning inbound. The second-order effect: sellers who rely on long-lead-time manufacturing get squeezed hardest unless they adopt buffer warehousing (AWD/3PL) or keep a cleaner aged-inventory profile.

Action items:

Do now (today):

  • If you’re blocked: create a removal order plan immediately for the slowest movers—Amazon explicitly lists sell-through, return, or disposal as the only paths to reduce FC inventory and restore shipment creation. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Review pending Capacity Manager requests—Amazon evaluates availability “every 3 to 4 days” and allocates based on highest reservation fee per cubic foot until capacity runs out. If you’re low in the stack, you can cancel and resubmit at a higher fee. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Wait / hedge:

  • Don’t over-request capacity you won’t use—Amazon warns unused granted capacity can impact IPI and you’ll owe remaining balance after credits. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Sources: (sellercentral.amazon.com)


2. AMAZON POLICY & PROGRAM UPDATES

A) Selling Policies & Terms

  • Unavailable — No verified Seller Central announcement surfaced in the last 48 hours via accessible sources.

B) FBA & Fulfillment

  • FBA Capacity Limits / Shipping Plan Block — Amazon forum response confirms shipment creation is blocked while you’re over limit; excess inventory “may be refused.” (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Capacity Manager Allocation Mechanics — Availability evaluated “every 3 to 4 days”; approvals start with highest reservation fee per cubic foot; sellers advised to compare their bid vs granted bids and resubmit if needed. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

C) Advertising & Marketing

  • Unavailable — No verified Amazon Ads change published in the last 48 hours found in current sources.

D) Compliance & Safety

  • CPSC Recall—PurSteam Travel Steamers (Burn Hazard)Aterian recalled ~75,400 PurSteam Elite Travel Steamers (PS-510) and ~119,000 PurSteam Mighty Lil Steamers (PS-550) due to hot-water expulsion risk; sold online including Amazon.com. (cpsc.gov)

E) Payments & Financial

  • Unavailable — No verified seller-facing disbursement/reserve update surfaced in the last 48 hours.

2A. FALSE ALARMS & NOISE FILTER

What’s circulating but NOT verified:

  • “AWD appointment booking is still broken across lanes”
    Status: Monitoring (forum anecdote; not confirmed by Amazon). (reddit.com)
    Why it matters if true: AWD becomes the default hedge when FBA capacity blocks shipments.
    What we actually know: Only seller discussion; no official operational notice located. (reddit.com)
  • “Invoices directly from manufacturer still don’t ungate brands”
    Status: Unverified (single thread; not an Amazon policy bulletin). (reddit.com)
    Why it matters if true: Documentation risk elevates Account Health exposure for resellers.
    What we actually know: A seller claims prolonged gating despite documentation; no updated Amazon policy text found today. (reddit.com)

3. MARKETPLACE OPPORTUNITIES & THREATS (Verified Only)

Threat: CPSC recall exposure can cascade into ASIN suppression + account scrutiny

Setup: CPSC recalled specific PurSteam steamers sold on Amazon.com; remedy requires proof of cord cut and refund process. (cpsc.gov)

Math: If you’re holding recalled units at FBA, your downside is not just stranded inventory—expect removal/disposal + suppressed listing + potential reimbursement disputes (case-by-case). (Direct Amazon enforcement mechanics: Unavailable—no Amazon bulletin located.)

Who this fits: Any seller in Home & Kitchen, small appliances, travel steamers—plus any reseller running RA/OA where catalog contamination is common.

Window: Recall date February 5, 2026—immediate action expected; missed action increases safety/compliance risk. (cpsc.gov)

Execute:

  1. Audit catalog for “PurSteam” and model terms “PS-510” / “PS-550”; check stranded/suppressed inventory. (cpsc.gov)
  2. If you have units: pause replenishment; create removals if needed; document lots/date codes where possible (date codes listed by CPSC). (cpsc.gov)
  3. Prep customer support macro: recall acknowledgment + redirect to manufacturer recall portal (don’t improvise safety claims).

Sources: (cpsc.gov)


4. TOOLS, SOFTWARE & AUTOMATION UPDATES

  • Unavailable — No verified, workflow-relevant tool update >20% pricing change or platform-level change surfaced in the last 48 hours from accessible sources.

5. ADVERTISING & PPC INSIGHTS

  • Unavailable — No verified Amazon Ads release/change in the last 48 hours located in current sources. (If you want, tell me your top 3 categories and I’ll narrow-source a category-specific PPC scan next run.)

6. INTERNATIONAL & CROSS-BORDER

  • FBA Capacity Limits expanding (MENA/TR/SG marketplaces) — Amazon announced that on January 1, 2026 it replaced quarterly storage limits with monthly capacity limits in UAE, KSA, Egypt, Türkiye, and Singapore—aligning with systems already in place in US/EU/UK/JP/CA. (Not “new today,” but recently crawled; included only as an operational parallel for global sellers.) (sellercentral.amazon.eg)

If you’re US-based only: actionable impact today is low.


7. SELLER COMMUNITY PULSE

Pattern recognition from forums:

  • Early warning signals: Sellers hitting hard blocks on shipment creation due to current capacity overages—even when inbound won’t arrive until late February 2026. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Workarounds in action: Community discussion converges on removals + selling through + (unverified) AWD/3PL fallback. Officially, Amazon reiterates sell-through/removal/disposal as the levers. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Mistake patterns: Sellers assume they can build shipping plans “in advance” while over limit—current workflow blocks that. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Practical Q&A:

  • “Can I create shipping plans now if the shipment arrives later and I’m currently over limit?” → No—Amazon staff response says you can’t create a new shipment until inventory drops below the limit; excess can be refused at FCs. → Resource: Removal order workflow in Seller Central. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • “How often does Capacity Manager allocate, and how are approvals decided?” → Amazon evaluates availability regularly (example: every 3-4 days) and approves from highest reservation fee per cubic foot downward until capacity is allocated. → Resource: track granted vs your submitted fee; cancel/resubmit if needed. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

8. COMPLIANCE & ACCOUNT HEALTH ALERTS

  • CPSC Recall—PurSteam steamers — If you sell recalled items (even as a reseller), treat this as immediate compliance exposure: suppress listings, pull inventory, and preserve sourcing docs in case of authenticity/safety follow-ups. (cpsc.gov)
  • Broader enforcement backdrop: CPSC has previously asserted Amazon’s responsibility as a “distributor” for hazardous products sold via FBA, increasing platform sensitivity around recalls and remediation actions. (Not new in the last 48 hours; included as context only.) (cpsc.gov)

9. DEALS, EXITS & ACQUISITIONS

  • Unavailable — No verified aggregator/exit market datapoint published in the last 48 hours found in current sources.

10. LOOKING AHEAD

  • If you’re operating near capacity: expect Capacity Manager allocation cycles every few days—plan removals and sell-through with that cadence so you don’t lose another week. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Recall monitoring: set alerts for your top 20 selling SKUs’ subcategory keywords on CPSC (small appliances are active this week). (autodiscover.cpsc.gov)

11. KEY METRICS SNAPSHOT (when available)

  • Unavailable — No last-7-days benchmark datapoints (CPC/ACOS/storage rates) found in current verified sources.

CLOSING

Tomorrow’s Watch List:

  • Any new Seller Central notice tying Capacity Manager reservation fees to updated credit rates or limit calculations. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Additional CPSC recall drops relevant to Amazon-heavy categories (Home & Kitchen, Kids, Tools)—recall feed is active. (autodiscover.cpsc.gov)
  • Seller-reported shipment refusal patterns following “over limit” inbound attempts (needs verification).

Question of the Day:

What % of your FBA cubic feet is tied up in SKUs with <1.0 monthly turns, and what’s your per-unit removal/disposal break-even versus 30-day price cuts?

Quick Win:

Pull a “capacity unblock” removal list → Reduce shipment-creation lock risk within 24-72 hours → Seller Central > Manage Inventory > filter aged/low sell-through SKUs > create Removal order (return or dispose) for the slowest movers. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Amazon Announces Review-Sharing Changes Across Variations with Key Policy Updates and EU Fee Reductions – February 11, 2026

Good morning, sellers! Welcome to February 11, 2026’s edition of your daily Amazon briefing.
Today we’re covering review-sharing changes across variations, critical policy updates, fresh opportunities in EU low-price selection, and the compliance changes you need to know before they hit your account. Let’s dive in…

Edition date: February 11, 2026
Data timestamp: 5:30 AM ET (sources gathered and verified)


1. TOP STORY OF THE DAY

What happened:
Amazon announced a change to how reviews are shared across variation families—starting February 12, 2026, reviews will only be shared between variations with minor differences that don’t affect functionality (ex: color/pattern, pack size, certain size tiers). Variations with significant differences may stop sharing reviews, and Amazon says rollout will be gradual by category from February 12, 2026 through May 31, 2026, with 30 days’ notice before a seller’s products are affected. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Why it matters:

  • Conversion risk: If you’ve been “stacking” unlike products under one parent to pool reviews, expect rating + review-count resets at the child level—often a direct CTR/CVR hit. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Return-rate and CX scrutiny: Amazon is explicitly framing this as “accuracy” and “informed decisions,” which usually correlates with enforcement pressure on variation abuse and listing integrity. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Operational drag: Fixing variation themes after the change is possible, but you should assume there will be a lag while catalog updates propagate and review re-sharing eligibility re-evaluates. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Expert take:
This is Amazon tightening the incentive loop: fewer “Franken-variations” that inflate social proof on weaker children. Sellers who built launch strategy around review pooling will lose leverage; sellers with clean, functionally consistent variation families gain relative positioning because competitor listings will fragment.

Action items:

  • Do now (today):
    • Pull a list of all parent ASINs where children differ by more than color/size/pack/model-fitment—prioritize your top 20% revenue SKUs. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
    • Audit your variation themes in Manage All Inventory—if you used “color” to represent materially different specs, plan a rebuild. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Wait/monitor:
    Watch for Amazon’s 30-day email notice—that’s your category-specific countdown. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Hedge:
    For any child that may “lose” pooled reviews, start protecting rank with Sponsored Products coverage and pricing guardrails before the split occurs.

Sources: (sellercentral.amazon.com)


2. AMAZON POLICY & PROGRAM UPDATES

A) Selling Policies & Terms

  • Variation review sharing—rolls out February 12, 2026 through May 31, 2026 by category; 30 days’ notice promised. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Forum report: sellers receiving notices that branded listings will be removed on February 10, 2026, tied to Amazon’s determination that the business is “located outside of Amazon.com,” and that items are “restricted to qualified sellers.” Treat as seller-reported enforcement messaging, not a universal policy change. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

B) FBA & Fulfillment

Unavailable — no verifiable (last 24–48 hours) US update found in Seller Central sources for FBA fee changes, inbound placement, capacity, or storage limits during data collection.

C) Advertising & Marketing

  • Sponsored Products video—Amazon Ads has a Sponsored Products interactive video format allowing 1–5 feature videos per product and bid adjustments for video placement (announced at unBoxed; still relevant if you’re building 2026 creative SOPs). (advertising.amazon.com)
  • Sponsored Products prompts and Sponsored Brands prompts (beta)—AI-powered interactive variations; Amazon states campaigns can be automatically enrolled, with controls/reporting in-console. (advertising.amazon.com)

D) Compliance & Safety

  • CPSC recall (travel steamers sold online including Amazon)PurSteam Elite Travel Steamer (PS-510) and PurSteam Mighty Lil Steamer (PS-550) recalled due to hot water expulsion burn hazard; CPSC announcement dated February 5, 2026 (outside 48 hours, but high-risk if you sell adjacent SKUs or bundles). Action: immediately check catalog/bundles/returns for these models and remove any stranded units. (people.com)
  • Regulatory context: CPSC has issued orders requiring Amazon to implement notification/refund remedies for hazardous products distributed via its platform—this increases the probability that recalls trigger faster listing suppression and stricter remediation workflows. (cpsc.gov)

E) Payments & Financial

Unavailable — no verified (last 24–48 hours) changes located for disbursements, reserves, Seller Wallet, or FX fees.


2A. FALSE ALARMS & NOISE FILTER

What’s circulating but NOT verified:

  • High-value return exemption removed for FBM as of February 8, 2026
    Status: Unverified (forum/social report only; no Seller Central policy bulletin verified during collection) (reddit.com)
    Why it matters if true: immediate margin hit on high-AOV FBM SKUs due to forced prepaid labels
    What we actually know: no official Amazon policy doc captured in the last 48 hours confirming this; treat as monitoring-only. (reddit.com)
  • SAFE-T window dropping from 60 to 30 days on February 16
    Status: Unverified (Reddit claim; not validated via Amazon policy source during collection) (reddit.com)
    Why it matters if true: less time to recover funds on chargebacks/returns disputes
    What we actually know: Amazon did publish a related, verified change: FBM refund processing window updated (see next section). (sellercentral.amazon.com)

3. MARKETPLACE OPPORTUNITIES & THREATS (Verified only)

Threat: Variation families with “functional differences” will lose pooled reviews

Setup: Amazon limits review sharing to “minor differences,” rolling out February 12, 2026–May 31, 2026. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Math: Unavailable — Amazon did not publish expected rating/CVR deltas; impact is listing-specific. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Who this fits: brands doing heavy variation consolidation (apparel-like strategies applied to non-apparel), resellers inheriting messy legacy parents. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Window: effectively now through your category’s notice date; rollout begins February 12, 2026. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Execute:

  1. Export parent/child map and flag children with different materials, wattage, capacity, or included accessories.
  2. Pre-build compliant new parents so you can relist fast if Amazon splits your family.
  3. Pre-allocate PPC budget to likely “orphaned” children for 14 days around the split.

Sources: (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Opportunity (EU): Lower fees on low-price selection (EU stores)

Setup: EU store announcement: referral fee reductions + Low-price FBA expansion and deal-fee caps were moved to January 5, 2026 in Europe. (sellercentral-europe.amazon.com)

Math: Examples published include referral fee reductions like 15% to 8% for Home Products£20/€20, and 15% to 5% for Pet Clothing and Food£10/€10 (EU). (sellercentral-europe.amazon.com)

Who this fits: EU sellers (or US sellers expanding EU) with sub-£20/€20 SKUs where referral fee is a primary margin constraint. (sellercentral-europe.amazon.com)

Window: already effective (January 5, 2026). (sellercentral-europe.amazon.com)

Execute:

  1. Re-run EU contribution margin on all SKUs at/under price thresholds.
  2. Reprice to defend BSR while keeping contribution constant—don’t “give back” fee savings to competitors by accident.
  3. Re-evaluate Deals participation where fee caps changed (EU). (sellercentral-europe.amazon.com)

Sources: (sellercentral-europe.amazon.com)


4. TOOLS, SOFTWARE & AUTOMATION UPDATES

Unavailable — no verifiable (last 24–48 hours) workflow-impact updates from major seller tool providers were captured during today’s collection window.


5. ADVERTISING & PPC INSIGHTS (Verified)

  • Sponsored Products video: if you’re sitting on flat CTR in high-competition queries, SP video gives you a new creative lever inside Sponsored Products with 1–5 feature videos and optional bid adjustments to win video placement.
    ROI impact: best fit for products where one feature resolves the primary objection (installation, size, before/after). (advertising.amazon.com)
  • Sponsored Products prompts / Sponsored Brands prompts (beta): Amazon states interactive “prompts” can be automatically enabled for existing campaigns, with a Prompts tab and reporting once prompts receive clicks.
    ROI impact: monitor for incremental CVR lift on complex products (tech, tools, supplements) where FAQ friction is high; confirm brand-safety alignment. (advertising.amazon.com)

6. INTERNATIONAL & CROSS-BORDER

  • EU fees: referral and Fulfilment by Amazon reductions / low-price expansion details are live as described in EU Seller Central forum announcements. (sellercentral-europe.amazon.com)
  • Unavailable (forums-only): no verified cross-border logistics or VAT/GST changes in the last 48 hours during collection.

7. SELLER COMMUNITY PULSE

Pattern recognition from forums:

  • Early warning signals: sellers reporting brand-specific listing removals tied to “business located outside of Amazon.com” determinations—suggests increased geo/eligibility enforcement for restricted brands. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Workarounds in action: Unavailable — no repeatable, verifiable workaround pattern observed today.
  • Mistake patterns: variation misuse (quantity/color themes used to represent materially different products) is likely to be punished by the review-sharing change. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Practical Q&A:
“My variations are different sizes—will reviews still share?” → If size changes do not change function (ex: king vs queen bedding), Amazon says reviews will continue to share. If size implies different functionality/specs, plan for review separation. (sellercentral.amazon.com)


8. COMPLIANCE & ACCOUNT HEALTH ALERTS

  • Product safety (CPSC recall exposure): If you sell steamers, travel appliances, or bundles that could include recalled models, check your catalog for PS-510 and PS-550 immediately and remove inventory/listings to avoid selling recalled goods. (people.com)
  • Platform enforcement direction: CPSC’s orders requiring Amazon remediation for hazardous products increase the likelihood of faster marketplace-level suppression when recalls/warnings hit. Treat compliance documentation and test reports as “ready to produce,” not “we’ll find it later.” (cpsc.gov)

9. DEALS, EXITS & ACQUISITIONS

Unavailable — no verifiable (last 24–48 hours) aggregator/M&A developments affecting Amazon sellers were captured today.


10. LOOKING AHEAD (Date-driven)

  • February 12, 2026: Review sharing across variations change begins; rollout continues through May 31, 2026 by category; Amazon says you’ll get 30 days’ notice before your products are impacted. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

11. KEY METRICS SNAPSHOT (last 7 days only)

Unavailable — no fresh, citable benchmark metrics (CPC/ACOS/storage rates/fee baselines) published in the last 7 days were captured in today’s verified source set.


CLOSING

Tomorrow’s Watch List:

  • Seller reports confirming real-world impact from the February 12, 2026 variation review-sharing rollout (rating drops, parent splits, category sequence). (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Any official Amazon clarification on FBM returns/labels/SAFE-T timing (currently Unverified chatter only). (reddit.com)

Question of the Day:

Which of your top 20 parent ASINs would lose the most revenue if the highest-review child stopped sharing reviews tomorrow?

Quick Win:

Audit your top 20 variation families for functional differences → Reduce sudden rating/review fragmentation risk ahead of February 12, 2026 rollout → Seller Central Manage All Inventory + variation theme review. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Amazon’s Review Sharing Policy Update and Key Seller Alerts for February 2026

Good morning, sellers! Welcome to February 10, 2026’s edition of your daily Amazon briefing.
Today we’re covering review sharing across variations, critical policy updates, fresh opportunities in variation-heavy categories (Apparel/Home/Beauty), and the compliance changes you need to know before they hit your account. Let’s dive in…

Data timestamp: February 10, 2026, 8:35 AM ET


1. TOP STORY OF THE DAY

What happened:
Amazon confirmed it is changing how reviews are shared across parent-child variations—starting February 12, 2026—so that reviews will only be shared between variations with “minor differences” that don’t affect functionality. The rollout is category-phased from February 12, 2026, through May 31, 2026, and sellers should expect variation-level review counts and star ratings to change as review pools split. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Why it matters:

  • Profitability: If your top-selling child has been “carrying” weaker children via shared reviews, you may see conversion rate drop and higher PPC spend needed to hold rank once those children lose inherited reviews. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Account risk (soft): Not suspension risk—but mis-modeled variations (wrong theme, incorrect attributes) are more likely to get reinterpreted as “significant differences,” triggering review separation at the worst time (peak ad spend, restock decisions). (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Inventory decisions: Review splits can create sudden winner/loser children—your restock logic (especially for multi-child parents) needs to be child-level, not parent-level, this week. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Expert take:
Amazon is prioritizing buyer trust and lowering returns by reducing “review mismatch” on materially different variants. The second-order effect is a stealth re-ranking event: many parent ASINs will effectively re-enter the market as multiple “newer” children in the customer’s eyes—forcing sellers to rebuild social proof where it was previously borrowed.

Action items:

  • Do now (today):
    1. Pull a list of parents where one child has <15 reviews but still converts well—flag as “review-split exposure.”
    2. Audit variation themes in Manage All Inventory—ensure you’re using the correct theme (don’t abuse color/size for bundle quantity differences). (sellercentral.amazon.com)
    3. Pre-stage PPC: create child-level exact campaigns (or separate ad groups) for the children most likely to lose shared reviews, so you can react within 24 hours post-change.
  • Wait: Don’t rebuild catalogs preemptively unless your variation is clearly mis-modeled—Amazon notes review re-sharing can occur when you correct eligible products after the change. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Hedge: If a child is likely to become review-poor, queue compliant post-purchase review asks (within Amazon policy) and monitor CVR by child daily from February 12 onward.

Sources: (sellercentral.amazon.com)


2. AMAZON POLICY & PROGRAM UPDATES

A) Selling Policies & Terms

  • Review sharing across variations — Change begins February 12, 2026, phased by category through May 31, 2026; reviews will only share across minor-difference variants (examples included in Amazon’s post). (sellercentral.amazon.com)

B) FBA & Fulfillment

  • FBA removal and disposal fees — Billing timeline change effective February 15, 2026: fees will be charged per unit as each unit is processed, instead of one lump charge when the entire order completes. Amazon states fee rates are unchanged; this is timing/visibility only. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
    • Where to verify charges: Payments → Transaction View (shipment-level visibility referenced by Amazon). (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • 2026 US Referral and FBA fees — Amazon reiterates US FBA fees increased by an average of $0.08 per unit for 2026; US referral fees unchanged. Unless otherwise noted, changes were effective January 15, 2026. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

C) Advertising & Marketing

  • Unavailable (last 24–48 hours): No verified, Amazon-published Amazon Ads “What’s new” item in the last 48 hours with direct Sponsored Ads workflow changes surfaced in our source sweep. (Most official Ads updates indexed were older than 48 hours.) (advertising.amazon.com)

D) Compliance & Safety

  • Unavailable (last 24–48 hours): No new FDA, CPSC, FCC, CBP, or sales tax authority enforcement bulletin affecting Amazon sellers was verified in the last 48 hours during our sweep.

E) Payments & Financial

  • FBA removal/disposal fee charge timing (cash-flow impact) — Starting February 15, 2026, expect earlier and more frequent fee postings during removals/disposals. This can shift short-term payout forecasts even if total fees are unchanged. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

2A. FALSE ALARMS & NOISE FILTER

What’s circulating but NOT verified:

  • “Amazon is secretly increasing removal/disposal fee rates on February 15.”
    • Status: Debunked (rate change not supported)
    • Why it matters if true: Would directly raise liquidation/removal cost per unit.
    • What we actually know: Amazon states this is a billing timing change only; “fee rates… remain unchanged.” (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • “Inbound placement fees and inbound defect fees are being double-charged due to transit timing/system ‘received’ errors.”
    • Status: Monitoring (seller reports; not an Amazon-confirmed systemic defect)
    • Why it matters if true: Can create unexpected four-figure fee events on multi-shipment plans.
    • What we actually know: Multiple Seller Forums threads report being charged FBA inbound placement service fee plus an inbound defect fee, and dispute workflows pointing sellers to downloadable fee reports and policy pages. Treat as incident pattern, not confirmed platform bug. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

3. MARKETPLACE OPPORTUNITIES & THREATS (Verified only)

Threat: Variation review pool splits can “reset” social proof on revenue-driving children

Setup: Review sharing changes start February 12, 2026 and roll out through May 31, 2026 by category. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Math: If a child loses shared reviews and drops from 4.4★ (shared) to 3.9★ (child-only), expect CVR compression and CPC inflation; quantify using your own sensitivity model (no universal % published by Amazon). Unavailable (no verified universal impact factor).

Who this fits: Sellers with 10–200 child variations per parent in Apparel, Home, Beauty, Automotive fitments, bundles/multi-packs where “quantity variation” was used aggressively. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Window: Starts February 12, 2026; category-phased to May 31, 2026. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Execute:

  1. Export variation structure + review counts by child (Helium 10 + internal BI).
  2. Fix mis-modeled themes in Manage All Inventory before your category’s cutover email hits (Amazon says you’ll get 30 days notice). (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  3. Build child-level budget guards in PPC (separate portfolio rules) so one “newly weak” child doesn’t burn the parent’s budget.

Sources: (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Opportunity: Better “review relevance” can reduce returns on legitimately different variants

Setup: Amazon explicitly frames this as improving accuracy to help customers make informed decisions and “potentially decreasing returns.” (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Math: Unavailable (Amazon did not publish return-rate deltas).

Who this fits: Brands with real functional differences (materials, performance specs) currently suffering from mismatch reviews dragging down the “good” child.

Window: Same as above. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Execute:

  1. Identify children where negative reviews are for a different variant (materials/fit/performance).
  2. Ensure your attribute data cleanly differentiates the children (so Amazon categorizes differences correctly).
  3. After the split, re-evaluate deals and couponing at the child level.

Sources: (sellercentral.amazon.com)


4. TOOLS, SOFTWARE & AUTOMATION UPDATES

  • Unavailable (last 24–48 hours): No verified updates from Helium 10, Jungle Scout, or AMZScout published in the last 48 hours that materially alter seller workflows were confirmed in our sweep.

Seller impact:
– Keep your automation backlog focused on: (1) variation audits, (2) removal/disposal cash-flow forecasting changes, (3) inbound fee reporting checks—because those are the verified operational movers today. (sellercentral.amazon.com)


5. ADVERTISING & PPC INSIGHTS (Verified + actionable)

  1. Variation review split = PPC guardrails week
    ROI impact: Protect TACOS by preventing “review-poor” children from consuming budgets meant for your hero child once the review pool splits. Verified trigger: review sharing change schedule. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  2. Rebuild your testing cadence around February 12
    ROI impact: Pause major listing experiments on high-variation parents until you see how reviews settle—otherwise you won’t know if CVR moved due to content or review reallocation. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  3. Removal/disposal fees post sooner—align PPC cash pacing
    ROI impact: If you’re doing inventory cleanup + aggressive PPC, fee timing can tighten available balance earlier in the cycle; adjust short-term spend caps to prevent payment account surprises. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

6. INTERNATIONAL & CROSS-BORDER

  • Unavailable (US sellers, last 24–48 hours): No verified cross-border policy change in the last 48 hours surfaced in our sweep that directly impacts US-based FBA operators today.

(Confirmed EU fee reduction posts exist, but they were not within the last 48 hours scope for today’s US-focused brief.) (sellercentral-europe.amazon.com)


7. SELLER COMMUNITY PULSE

Pattern recognition from forums:

  • Early warning signals: Rising complaints about being charged FBA inbound placement service fee plus inbound defect fee, especially when shipments are delayed, rescheduled, or system status shows “received” while in transit. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Workarounds in action: Sellers are being directed to use the downloadable FBA inbound placement service fees report and transaction-level views to reconcile expected vs. actual charges. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Mistake patterns: Abandoning or deleting shipments inside a shipping plan (including via third-party shipment tools) is repeatedly cited as a trigger for “abandoned shipment defects” and related fees. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Practical Q&A (seen repeatedly in threads):
– “Why did my inbound placement fee change after I created an ‘Amazon-optimized’ plan?” → Because the actual placement fee can be recalculated after receipt based on which shipments in the plan were completed and where units were received; sellers report being told preview is an estimate and charges post later based on receipts. → Use Reports → Fulfillment → FBA inbound placement service fees to reconcile by shipping plan/shipment/SKU. (sellercentral.amazon.com)


8. COMPLIANCE & ACCOUNT HEALTH ALERTS

  • Deadline: February 12, 2026review sharing across variations changes begin. Missed consequence: not a policy violation, but a material conversion/review-count shock risk if your variations are mis-modeled or rely on shared reviews for weaker children. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Upcoming operational change: February 15, 2026FBA removal and disposal fees will post per unit as processed. Consequence: fee timing can accelerate; if you run tight cash buffers, it can increase negative-balance risk in short windows. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

9. DEALS, EXITS & ACQUISITIONS

  • Unavailable (last 24–48 hours): No verified aggregator acquisition or valuation multiple update affecting Amazon sellers was confirmed in the last 48 hours during our sweep.

10. LOOKING AHEAD

  • February 12, 2026: review sharing across variations begins; phased through May 31, 2026 by category with Amazon stating sellers will receive 30-day email notice before impact. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • February 15, 2026: FBA removal/disposal fee charges shift to per-unit processing time for orders created on/after that date. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

11. KEY METRICS SNAPSHOT (when available)

  • Unavailable: No last-7-days benchmark data points (CPC averages, ACOS norms, rejection-rate trends) were verified from Amazon or major data providers in the last 7 days during our sweep.

CLOSING

Tomorrow’s Watch List:

  • Category-specific emails tied to the review sharing across variations rollout—capture which of your categories are scheduled first. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Any additional Seller Central clarifications on review eligibility edge cases (fitment, scent, bundles) as the February 12 change begins. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Early reports of payment statement behavior after the February 15, 2026 removal/disposal fee timing shift. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Question of the Day:

Which parent ASIN in your catalog would lose the most revenue if reviews stopped sharing tomorrow—because one child is carrying the entire variation family?

Quick Win:

Audit your top 20 variation parents for “review-split exposure” (children with low review counts but high sales share) → Prevent sudden CVR and TACOS deterioration post-February 12, 2026 → Seller Central Manage All Inventory + your review count export (Helium 10/Xray or internal BI). (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Amazon Seller Briefing: Variation Review Sharing Changes & EU Low-Price FBA Updates (Feb 9, 2026)

Good morning, sellers! Welcome to February 9, 2026’s edition of your daily Amazon briefing.
Today we’re covering variation review sharing changes, critical policy updates, fresh opportunities in EU low-price FBA, and the compliance changes you need to know before they hit your account. Let’s dive in…

Data timestamp: February 9, 2026, 5:30 AM ET.


1. TOP STORY OF THE DAY

What happened:
Amazon is changing how reviews are shared across variations starting February 12, 2026—reviews will only be shared between variations with minor differences that don’t affect functionality, and will stop sharing across variations with significant differences. Rollout is gradual by category from February 12, 2026–May 31, 2026, with 30 days’ email notice before your category is impacted. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Why it matters:

  • Conversion rate + rank risk: If you’ve been “propping up” weaker child ASINs with pooled reviews, expect immediate star rating/review count drops on those children once delinked—this can hit both organic and PPC efficiency. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Returns + CX: Amazon is explicitly framing this as accuracy/trust—listings with mismatched variations are more likely to see suppressed performance and higher return friction once customers can isolate negative feedback per child. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Expert take:
Amazon is tightening the connection between catalog integrity and conversion signals. Second-order effect: brands with messy variation architecture will lose the “review moat” they’ve been unintentionally relying on—while clean catalogs gain relative leverage (higher trust, fewer mis-buys, better long-term CVR). (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Action items:

  • Do now (today): Export your parent/child map and flag any parents where children differ by function (materials, bundle contents, compatibility, included accessories, wattage, capacity, etc.). Prioritize top 20 revenue parents. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Do now (today): For any “iffy” parent, decide: split (new parent) vs re-theme (move to allowed themes like color/pattern/pack size where appropriate). Amazon notes review sharing may resume for eligible products after updating themes. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Hedge: If a child is going to lose shared reviews, pre-load it with better PDP fundamentals (A+ modules, image stack, attribute completeness) before your category’s cutover email arrives. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Sources: (sellercentral.amazon.com)


2. AMAZON POLICY & PROGRAM UPDATES

A) Selling Policies & Terms

  • Variation review sharing update effective February 12, 2026 with category rollout through May 31, 2026 and 30-day notice. Impact: child ASIN star ratings/review counts can change materially. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

B) FBA & Fulfillment

  • Unavailable: No US FBA fee or inbound placement changes verified in the last 24–48 hours from Seller Central announcements during data collection.

C) Advertising & Marketing

  • Unavailable: No Amazon Ads official release-note item verified in the last 24–48 hours during data collection.

D) Compliance & Safety

  • CPSC recall—PurSteam travel steamers (model PS-510 and PS-550) due to burn hazard (hot water expulsion). Seller risk: enforcement actions, stranded inventory, listing removals if you’re on the ASIN. Date: February 5, 2026. (autodiscover.cpsc.gov)
  • CPSC recall—Aroeve air purifiers (reported as ~191,390 units) due to overheating/fire risk. Seller risk: immediate compliance exposure if you sell the affected models. (eatingwell.com)
  • CPSC context: The Commission’s prior order (effective January 26, 2025) requires Amazon remediation/notification behaviors for certain hazardous products sold via FBA—expect faster takedowns and customer-notification workflows when recalls hit. (cpsc.gov)

E) Payments & Financial

  • Unavailable: No verified disbursement, reserve, or currency conversion changes published in the last 24–48 hours during data collection.

2A. FALSE ALARMS & NOISE FILTER

What’s circulating but NOT verified:

  • “New US FBA fee hike this week”
    • Status: Unverified
    • Why it matters if true: immediate margin compression per unit
    • What we actually know: No US fee change was verified from Seller Central announcements in the last 24–48 hours during data collection. Unavailable
  • “Amazon Ads launched a new Sponsored Products placement overnight”
    • Status: Unverified
    • Why it matters if true: could shift CPC and placement mix
    • What we actually know: No official Amazon Ads update verified in the last 24–48 hours during data collection. Unavailable

3. MARKETPLACE OPPORTUNITIES & THREATS (Verified)

Opportunity (EU): Lower fees for low-price + select categories (Europe stores)

Setup: Europe Seller Central posted 2026 updates to European referral and FBA fees, including expanded Low-price FBA eligibility and referral-fee reductions in specific categories/price bands. (sellercentral-europe.amazon.com)

Math:

  • Low-price FBA extension to products priced ≤ £20/€20—Amazon states newly eligible products see average FBA fee reduction of ~£0.40/€0.45 per unit. (sellercentral-europe.amazon.com)
  • Referral fee reductions include (examples): Clothing and Accessories down to 5% at/under £15/€15, and 10% for £15/€15–£20/€20. (sellercentral-europe.amazon.com)

Who this fits:
EU sellers with high-volume, low-AOV SKUs (fast-moving consumables, accessories, low-price home/pet) where £0.40/€0.45 is meaningful versus an 8–15% net. (sellercentral-europe.amazon.com)

Window:
Effective February 1, 2026 (already live)—treat as “act this week” if you haven’t repriced/reforecasted yet. (sellercentral-europe.amazon.com)

Execute:

  1. Pull your EU catalog and filter SKUs priced £18–£22 / €18–€22—test price moves to land at ≤ £20/€20 where contribution margin improves. (sellercentral-europe.amazon.com)
  2. Re-run fee calculators on impacted categories (especially Clothing and Accessories, Home Products, Pet, Grocery, VMS) and update PPC targets to new breakeven ACOS. (sellercentral-europe.amazon.com)
  3. If you run Deals: Amazon also lowered variable fee caps for Best Deals/Lightning Deals in certain EU stores—re-evaluate deal economics with the new cap structure. (sellercentral-europe.amazon.com)

Sources: (sellercentral-europe.amazon.com)


4. TOOLS, SOFTWARE & AUTOMATION UPDATES

  • FBM shipping settings + reporting enhancements: Amazon posted new features for Fulfillment by Merchant sellers including more granular operating days/pickup/cutoff controls in Shipping Settings Automation, added delivery-date transparency columns in FBM order reports, and easier Multi-Location Inventory management (incl. integrator references). (sellercentral.amazon.com)
    • Seller impact: tighten delivery promises and reduce late shipment risk by aligning cutoff times to actual carrier handoff. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

5. ADVERTISING & PPC INSIGHTS (Verified)

  • Variation review delinking will change PPC economics per child ASIN. If a previously “weak” child ASIN loses pooled reviews, expect CVR down → CPC effectively up at the same bid (since you’ll need more clicks per order). Adjust bids at the child level, not just the parent portfolio. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
    • ROI impact: prevents silent ACOS blowouts on children that lose review sharing.
  • Prioritize brand defense on children most exposed to review loss. As star rating drops, competitor conquest becomes cheaper; you’ll see pressure on branded terms first. Prepare “defense-first” budgets for the 2–3 top revenue children per parent. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

6. INTERNATIONAL & CROSS-BORDER

  • EU fee changes noted above are live as of February 1, 2026 across European stores per Seller Central Europe announcement. (sellercentral-europe.amazon.com)
  • Unavailable: No verified new marketplace launches or cross-border logistics program changes published in the last 24–48 hours during data collection.

7. SELLER COMMUNITY PULSE

Pattern recognition from forums:
Official forum “News and Announcements” traffic is centered on variation review sharing changes and FBM tooling updates; limited additional high-signal threads verified in the last 24–48 hours during data collection. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Practical Q&A (recurring):
“Will my reviews disappear if my variation theme is wrong?” → Reviews can stop sharing across children with significant differences; Amazon indicates review sharing will continue for certain variation types and that if you update themes after the change, reviews can be re-shared for eligible products. → Resource: “Review sharing guidelines” referenced in the announcement. (sellercentral.amazon.com)


8. COMPLIANCE & ACCOUNT HEALTH ALERTS

  • Product safety recalls (CPSC): If you sell the recalled PurSteam steamers (PS-510/PS-550) or affected Aroeve air purifiers, treat this as an immediate listing suppression + account health exposure. Pull your catalog for brand/model keywords and check any stranded inventory. (autodiscover.cpsc.gov)
  • Reminder on remediation expectations: CPSC’s order framework increases the likelihood of rapid customer notification/remedy workflows for hazardous products tied to Amazon fulfillment/distribution roles—your best defense is proactive SKU monitoring against recall feeds. (cpsc.gov)

9. DEALS, EXITS & ACQUISITIONS

  • Unavailable: No verified aggregator acquisition/multiple news in the last 24–48 hours during data collection.

10. LOOKING AHEAD

  • February 12, 2026: Variation review sharing change begins; rollout continues through May 31, 2026 by category with 30 days’ email notice. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • February 16, 2026: SAFE-T claim filing window changes to 30 days for US seller-fulfilled orders (operational impact to claims cadence). (sellercentral.amazon.com)

11. KEY METRICS SNAPSHOT (when available)

  • Unavailable: No last-7-days benchmark data (CPC, ACOS, storage rates) from official or widely verifiable sources was confirmed during data collection.

CLOSING

Tomorrow’s Watch List:

  • Category-by-category fallout from variation review sharing—watch for child ASIN rating/count changes after February 12, 2026. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Any new Seller Central posts expanding or clarifying the “minor vs significant differences” criteria for review sharing. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Recall feed additions impacting Amazon-listed products (CPSC). (autodiscover.cpsc.gov)

Question of the Day:

Which of your top 10 parent ASINs is most dependent on pooled reviews to keep a weak child converting—and what’s your split plan before your category’s rollout notice arrives? (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Quick Win:

Audit variation integrity on your top 20 parent ASINs → Reduce rating/CVR shocks when review sharing tightens → Seller Central > Manage All Inventory > filter by parent ASIN and verify variation themes match real product differences. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

February 8, 2026 Amazon Sellers Briefing: FBA Grade and Resell Expansion & Key Policy Updates

Good morning, sellers! Welcome to February 8, 2026’s edition of your daily Amazon briefing.
Today we’re covering FBA Grade and Resell, critical policy updates, fresh opportunities in Apparel and Shoes, and the compliance changes you need to know before they hit your account. Let’s dive in…

Edition date: February 8, 2026
Data timestamp: February 8, 2026, 5:30 AM ET


1. TOP STORY OF THE DAY — FBA Grade and Resell expands into high-return categories

What happened:
Amazon announced new features and category expansion for FBA Grade and Resell, adding five categories: Watches, Jewelry, Luggage, Shoes, and Apparel. Amazon also added automatic pricing adjustments for Used items—Used prices update automatically when the New item price changes, matching discount percentages. (sell.amazon.com)

Why it matters:

  • Profitability: If you have meaningful return volume, this is a direct lever to recover cash from customer returns that would otherwise sit as stranded/unsellable or go to removal/liquidation. (sell.amazon.com)
  • Inventory decisions: Category expansion into Apparel/Shoes/Luggage matters because these are historically return-heavy—this program can change your “allow returns vs. suppress returns” calculus and your removal policy thresholds. (sell.amazon.com)
  • Operational load: Automatic Used repricing reduces manual maintenance, but it also creates a new failure mode—Used price changes may move without you noticing if your New price is being updated by an automated repricer. (sell.amazon.com)

Expert take:
Amazon is tightening the loop between returns and resale to keep more units inside Amazon-controlled channels (and closer to the next buyer). The second-order effect: sellers who don’t monitor Used pricing will accidentally compress margin if New pricing becomes volatile (promo cadence, repricer wars, coupon schedules).

Action items (today):

  • Do now: Identify ASINs in Apparel/Shoes/Luggage/Jewelry/Watches with high return counts—evaluate whether enabling FBA Grade and Resell beats your current removal/liquidation math. (sell.amazon.com)
  • Do now: If you use a repricer, set alerts for New price changes on top-return ASINs—because Used prices will now follow automatically. (sell.amazon.com)
  • Hedge: Build a floor price rule for Used (even if you allow automation)—protect against a New-price dip triggering a Used-price dip you didn’t intend. (sell.amazon.com)

Sources: (sell.amazon.com)


2. AMAZON POLICY & PROGRAM UPDATES

A) Selling Policies & Terms

  • Listing restrictions / branded listing removals (forum report): Seller forum thread reports “branded listings… removed from Amazon.com on February 10, 2026” with language tied to seller location/eligibility and category approval limitations. Status: Forum report—scope and trigger conditions unclear. Treat as a real risk if you operate cross-border entities or recently changed business location details. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

B) FBA & Fulfillment

  • 2026 fee update reminder (effective date reference): Seller Central announcement thread reiterates “Unless otherwise noted, all changes will be effective January 15, 2026,” with an “average $0.08 per unit” increase statement. Status: Confirmed (Seller Central announcement), but NOT new within 48h—use for context only. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Program expansion: FBA Grade and Resell expands to Watches/Jewelry/Luggage/Shoes/Apparel and adds automatic pricing adjustments for Used pricing tied to New price changes. (sell.amazon.com)

C) Advertising & Marketing

  • Sponsored Brands reserved top-of-search (fixed price): Amazon Ads documentation continues to highlight Sponsored Brands reserve share of voice—a fixed, upfront-price option to secure top-of-search for branded keywords, with beta results cited (e.g., impression share moving 62.7% → 99.3% on reserved keywords). Status: Confirmed feature; not a last-48h launch. (advertising.amazon.com)
  • AI “prompts” auto-enrollment (beta): Amazon Ads states Sponsored Products prompts and Sponsored Brands prompts auto-enroll eligible US advertisers (excluding authors/publishers) and are managed inside Ads Console (Prompts tab). Status: Confirmed; not last-48h. (advertising.amazon.com)

D) Compliance & Safety

  • CPSC recall—travel steamers sold on Amazon: PurSteam Elite Travel Steamer (PS-510) and PurSteam Mighty Lil Steamer (PS-550) recalled after burn reports; sold via Amazon (and other channels). If you sell adjacent categories (small appliances, steam devices, heated water devices), this increases scrutiny risk for labeling, safety claims, and post-market incident handling. (people.com)
  • CPSC recall—air purifiers sold on Amazon: Aroeve air purifiers recalled for overheating/burn/fire hazard; units sold on Amazon and other platforms. Treat as a signal to re-check UL/ETL documentation and supplier QA on anything with heating elements, motors, or power supplies. (eatingwell.com)

E) Payments & Financial

Unavailable: No verified Seller Central or Amazon official payments/disbursement update surfaced in the last 48 hours during data collection.


2A. FALSE ALARMS & NOISE FILTER

What’s circulating but NOT verified:

  • “Mass branded listing removals for unrelated brands hitting random categories” (based on a single forum thread)
      Status: Monitoring
      Why it matters if true: sudden ASIN removals can strand inventory and spike IP/Policy workload.
      What we actually know: One documented seller-forum case references branded listing removals effective February 10, 2026 tied to seller location/eligibility language; broad applicability unconfirmed. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

3. MARKETPLACE OPPORTUNITIES & THREATS (verified)

Opportunity — Return recovery in Apparel/Shoes/Luggage

Setup: FBA Grade and Resell now supports Apparel, Shoes, and Luggage. (sell.amazon.com)
Math: Unavailable—Amazon did not publish category-level recovery rates or fee deltas in the announcement. (sell.amazon.com)
Who this fits: Sellers with (a) high return rates, (b) strong unit economics on Used inventory, (c) consistent New price discipline (or tight repricer controls). (sell.amazon.com)
Window: Open-ended; no deadline stated. (sell.amazon.com)
Execute:

  1. Pull last 30–90 days returns by ASIN in Apparel/Shoes/Luggage and rank by return units.
  2. For top 20 ASINs, model: removal + liquidation vs. used resale recovery.
  3. Implement a Used price floor policy before enabling automation broadly. (sell.amazon.com)

Sources: (sell.amazon.com)


4. TOOLS, SOFTWARE & AUTOMATION UPDATES

Unavailable: No verified >20% pricing change or workflow-breaking tool update (Helium 10/Jungle Scout/AMZScout or major PPC platforms) surfaced in the last 48 hours during collection.


5. ADVERTISING & PPC INSIGHTS (verified)

  1. Branded defense can be priced like media, not auctions
    Insight: Sponsored Brands reserve share of voice is explicitly positioned as fixed, upfront pricing for top-of-search branded keywords—useful when you’re losing branded top-of-search share due to competitor conquesting. (advertising.amazon.com)
    ROI impact: Better predictability on branded terms reduces the “random outage” days where branded rank is fine but your branded ad presence collapses.
  2. AI “prompts” are auto-on—monitor brand safety + conversion paths
    Insight: Amazon states eligible campaigns are automatically enrolled in Sponsored Products prompts / Sponsored Brands prompts (beta) and can be reviewed/managed in-console. (advertising.amazon.com)
    ROI impact: If prompts surface benefits pulled from your PDP/Store, weak copy or compliance-risk language on your listing becomes an ad-level problem, not just a PDP problem.

6. INTERNATIONAL & CROSS-BORDER

Unavailable: No last-48h verified US seller–relevant cross-border logistics/payment change found during collection. (One fee-change thread found relates to Amazon.sa and is not a US update.) (sellercentral.amazon.com)


7. SELLER COMMUNITY PULSE

Community pulse: Unavailable—forums quiet or inaccessible today (No sufficient last-48h multi-thread pattern data collected; only isolated threads surfaced.) (sellercentral.amazon.com)


8. COMPLIANCE & ACCOUNT HEALTH ALERTS

  • CPSC recall exposure (Amazon channel explicitly named): If you sell in Small Appliances, Home, Travel gear with heating, or Air Treatment, run a same-day audit on: safety certs (UL/ETL), labeling, instruction manuals, and post-market complaint workflow. Recalls tied to Amazon listings increase enforcement sensitivity and customer complaint velocity. (people.com)
  • Regulatory backdrop (context): CPSC has previously issued an order outlining remediation expectations for hazardous products distributed via Amazon services—keep your documentation and incident response tight because refunds/notifications/remediation are increasingly formalized. Not new within 48h; included as risk context. (cpsc.gov)

9. DEALS, EXITS & ACQUISITIONS

Unavailable: No verified aggregator/M&A news affecting Amazon sellers surfaced in the last 48 hours during collection.


10. LOOKING AHEAD (date-driven)

February 10, 2026 — “branded listings” removal date referenced in forum notice
What to do: If you operate cross-border or recently edited business address/entity data, proactively screenshot Account Info + verify entity/location consistency; watch for sudden listing suppression. Forum-sourced; treat as monitoring, not confirmed universal change. (sellercentral.amazon.com)


11. KEY METRICS SNAPSHOT (when available)

Unavailable: No last-7-days verified benchmark metrics (CPC averages, ACOS norms, storage fee rates by month, etc.) were published in the sources collected today.


CLOSING

Tomorrow’s Watch List:

  • Any additional Seller Central threads confirming scope/criteria behind the February 10, 2026 branded listing removals. (sellercentral.amazon.com)
  • Any Seller Central operational guidance tied to FBA Grade and Resell rollout (eligibility, fee handling, or category-specific constraints). (sell.amazon.com)
  • Any new CPSC recall notices naming Amazon listings in high-volume categories (appliances, kids, ingestibles). (people.com)

Question of the Day:

Are your repricer rules (or promo calendar) robust enough to prevent automatic Used price drops once you enable FBA Grade and Resell in Apparel/Shoes/Luggage? (sell.amazon.com)

Quick Win:

Audit your top 20 return-heavy ASINs in Apparel/Shoes/Luggage for Grade-and-Resell suitability → Recover more value from returns and reduce removal/liquidation losses → Seller Central (program workflow) + repricer rules (set Used floor). (sell.amazon.com)

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Amazon Ads Sponsored Brands Collections Shift to AI-First Format & Key Seller Updates – Feb 7, 2026

Good morning, sellers! Welcome to February 7, 2026’s edition of your daily Amazon briefing.
Today we’re covering Amazon Ads Sponsored Brands Collections (AI format rollout), critical policy updates, fresh opportunities in Sponsored Brands, and the compliance changes you need to know before they hit your account. Let’s dive in…

Edition date: February 7, 2026
Data timestamp: 9:42 AM ET (data gathered)


1. TOP STORY OF THE DAY — Sponsored Brands Collections shifts to AI-first + 3–10 ASIN requirement

What happened:
Amazon has begun rolling out a new Sponsored Brands Collections experience in the US that changes how Sponsored Brands product collections are built—moving toward an AI-curated, multi-product format and reducing manual creative inputs. Multiple industry sources report the rollout date as January 28, 2026, with phased availability across accounts. (myamazonguy.com)

Why it matters:

  • PPC efficiency: If Amazon dynamically selects which ASINs show, your performance becomes more sensitive to catalog hygiene (main image compliance, price competitiveness, review health, availability) than your copywriting. (linkedin.com)
  • Smaller catalogs get squeezed: Brands with fewer than 3 viable ASINs (or only 1–2 hero SKUs) may lose the ability to create new collections-style builds without restructuring. (linkedin.com)
  • Creative workflow changes: Reduced dependency on custom headlines/images (as reported) shifts your bottleneck from creative production to ASIN eligibility + retail readiness. (linkedin.com)

Expert take:
Amazon’s real play is standardizing Sponsored Brands into a lower-friction, more automated format that (1) increases SB adoption, and (2) gives Amazon more control over “what to show” to match shopper intent. That raises the value of clean conversion signals and in-stock depth—while reducing the leverage of clever creative.

Action items (today):

  • Do now (30 minutes): For every brand running Sponsored Brands, build a “Collections-ready bench” of 3–10 ASINs per theme (same use case, price band, and review tier). If you don’t have 3, plan a variation strategy or a bundle/pack-size expansion that is policy-safe. (linkedin.com)
  • Do now (15 minutes): Audit those ASINs for “AI friendliness”: main image clarity, titles without suppressed terms, no coupon/price whiplash, and no inbound stock risk. (If AI can pick winners/losers inside the ad, you can’t afford weak links.) (linkedin.com)
  • Wait/hedge: Keep high-performing legacy SB product-collection campaigns running (reported as still optimizable), but stop building plans that rely on adding new ad groups to 1–2 ASIN collection structures. (linkedin.com)

Sources: (myamazonguy.com)


2. AMAZON POLICY & PROGRAM UPDATES

A) Selling Policies & Terms

  • Unavailable: No verified US Seller Central policy bulletin published in the last 48 hours surfaced in our checks that materially changes gating, authenticity documentation rules, or Account Health metrics.

B) FBA & Fulfillment

  • Reminder with seller impact (not new today): Amazon’s published 2026 US Referral and FBA fees update states FBA fees increase by an average of $0.08 per unit effective January 15, 2026 (unless otherwise noted). This is already in effect now—if your pricing/replen model didn’t bake in the per-unit delta, you’re leaking margin daily. (sellingpartners.aboutamazon.com)
  • Operational tool callout (from the same Amazon post): Amazon explicitly points sellers to the Revenue Calculator, Fee and Economics Preview report, and Profit Analytics dashboard for modeling fee impact at SKU level. If you’re still updating spreadsheets manually, you’re slower than the fee changes. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

C) Advertising & Marketing

  • Attribution model change for Store ads (effective January 1, 2026): Amazon Ads launched a “shopping-signal enhanced last-touch attribution model” for Amazon Store ads reporting, changing how conversions/ROAS are attributed (and adding “all views” metrics as an alternate view). If you’re comparing 2025 ROAS to 2026 ROAS without controlling for the model change, you can misdiagnose performance and cut winners. (advertising.amazon.com)
  • Sponsored Products video format (launch announced November 11, 2025): Amazon introduced Sponsored Products video capability integrated with SP campaigns, with Amazon-reported early testing lifts (internal data). Treat this as an “incremental placement” lever—test on top 10 converting queries where PDP CVR is strong. (advertising.amazon.com)

D) Compliance & Safety

  • CPSC action affecting FBA sellers (high leverage for suspension/recall exposure): The U.S. CPSC issued a final order outlining remediation plans for hazardous products sold on Amazon and fulfilled via FBA, covering more than 400,000 products (faulty CO detectors, hairdryers lacking electrocution protection, and children’s sleepwear violating flammability standards). This is not “Amazon policy,” but it increases the odds of sudden ASIN pulls, forced refunds, and documentation escalations for affected product types. (cpsc.gov)

E) Payments & Financial

  • Unavailable: No verified Seller Wallet/disbursement/reserve policy change published in the last 48 hours surfaced in our checks.

2A. FALSE ALARMS & NOISE FILTER

What’s circulating but NOT verified:
– “Sponsored Brands product collections now require 3+ ASINs everywhere immediately.”

  • Status: Monitoring—rollout reported as phased, so account-to-account availability differs. (linkedin.com)
  • Why it matters if true: Could break your SB scaling plan if you rely on 1–2 ASIN collection structures.
  • What we actually know: Industry reporting indicates a rollout starting January 28, 2026 with phased visibility; existing campaigns can continue running (per reports). (linkedin.com)

3. MARKETPLACE OPPORTUNITIES & THREATS (verified only)

Threat — Attribution changes can “fake” ROAS declines in Store-centric strategies

Setup: Store ads reporting moved to a new attribution model on January 1, 2026. (advertising.amazon.com)
Math: If your internal KPI thresholds are hard-coded (e.g., pause below 2.5 ROAS), you can incorrectly pause campaigns after a methodology shift—especially if you’re mixing “standard” vs “all views” metrics. (advertising.amazon.com)
Who this fits: Brands running Store-forward funnels (SB → Store → purchase) and agencies using automated rules.
Window: Now—damage compounds every day your rules fire on apples-to-oranges metrics.
Execute:

  1. In Ads Console / reporting exports, pull both the new standard metrics and “(all views)” metrics where available. (advertising.amazon.com)
  2. Freeze automated pausing rules for Store-heavy campaigns for 72 hours while you re-baseline KPIs.
  3. Rebuild dashboards to annotate January 1, 2026 as a measurement break. (advertising.amazon.com)

Sources: (advertising.amazon.com)


4. TOOLS, SOFTWARE & AUTOMATION UPDATES

  • Unavailable: No >20% pricing changes or workflow-breaking tool changes verified in the last 48 hours from major seller software vendors surfaced in our checks.

5. ADVERTISING & PPC INSIGHTS (high ROI)

  1. Sponsored Brands Collections shift = catalog hygiene becomes a PPC lever
    ROI impact: As product selection and presentation become more automated (per reports), weak ASINs can drag down campaign conversion rate—raising CPC required to maintain rank. (linkedin.com)
  2. Store ads attribution model change: reset baselines before optimizing
    ROI impact: Avoid killing profitable traffic because ROAS moved due to attribution methodology—not shopper behavior. (advertising.amazon.com)
  3. Sponsored Products video: test on proven query sets, not broad discovery
    ROI impact: Use SP video where you already have PDP conversion strength—video can lift CTR, but it won’t rescue a weak offer. (Amazon cites CTR uplifts from internal testing; validate with your own incrementality.) (advertising.amazon.com)

6. INTERNATIONAL & CROSS-BORDER

  • Unavailable: No verified marketplace launch, VAT/GST change, or cross-border logistics program update published in the last 48 hours surfaced in our checks.

7. SELLER COMMUNITY PULSE

Community pulse: Unavailable—forums quiet or inaccessible today.
(We did not find verifiable, time-relevant forum threads in the last 48 hours that met the “3+ repeated questions this week” threshold.)


8. COMPLIANCE & ACCOUNT HEALTH ALERTS

  • CPSC-driven enforcement risk (FBA sellers): If you sell in or adjacent to CO detectors, hair dryers, or children’s sleepwear, increase monitoring for sudden ASIN enforcement, removals, and refund pressure tied to the CPSC remediation order and recall process. Missing documentation or slow response can cascade into Account Health hits via safety complaints and policy actions. (cpsc.gov)
  • Action: Run a keyword + category audit across your catalog today and flag any SKUs that could plausibly fall into those product families for preemptive document readiness (test reports, compliance certs, supplier invoices). (cpsc.gov)

9. DEALS, EXITS & ACQUISITIONS

  • Unavailable: No verified aggregator acquisition / multiple data point published in the last 48 hours surfaced in our checks.

10. LOOKING AHEAD (date-driven)

  • Sponsored Brands Collections rollout: Expect continued phased account availability following the reported January 28, 2026 start—plan restructures before you need to scale SB. (linkedin.com)
  • Measurement breakpoint: January 1, 2026 attribution reporting change for Store ads remains a key line in the sand for YoY analysis. (advertising.amazon.com)

11. KEY METRICS SNAPSHOT (when available)

  • Unavailable: No last-7-days benchmark dataset (CPC, ACOS, rejection rates) from an authoritative source surfaced in the last 48 hours.

CLOSING

Tomorrow’s Watch List:

  • Wider confirmation (or official Amazon Ads documentation) of Sponsored Brands Collections requirements and edit limitations across accounts. (linkedin.com)
  • Additional CPSC recall releases connected to the remediation plan process impacting Amazon listings. (cpsc.gov)
  • Any new Seller Central News and Announcements tied to fee enforcement, inbound defects, or returns workflows. (sellercentral.amazon.com)

Question of the Day:

Which 3–10 ASIN clusters in your catalog are “retail ready” enough to survive AI-driven selection—without your worst ASIN dragging conversion rate down?

Quick Win:

Build a ‘Collections-ready’ SB set (3–10 ASINs) for your top brand theme → Reduce risk of being blocked by the 3-ASIN minimum and protect SB scaling velocity → Amazon Ads Console > Sponsored Brands campaign creation (and/or your SB planning sheet). (linkedin.com)