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Seller_M4NWRaRnU1uDM

FBA sellers..how have you been adapting to the inbound placement fee?

I am just wondering how some of the FBA Sellers are handling this ridiuculous placement fee hike and the incoming low inventory fee. I have only sent in one shipment (or batch of shipments this month - 5 total boxes) , which is way lower than usual). I am winding down my FBA operations and looking for somewhere else to sell/something else to do. I think Amazon is on the decline for its retail sellers and with the recent fee increases and decline in services (missing shipments, horrible customer support, increasing amount of glitches that are not fixed, and the myriad of other issues facing us every day), Amazon does not look like a long term solution. Actually, it is not a long term solution and I do not think sellers can ignore this any longer.

Just wondering what other sellers are doing.

1.6K views
53 replies
311
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user profile
Seller_M4NWRaRnU1uDM

FBA sellers..how have you been adapting to the inbound placement fee?

I am just wondering how some of the FBA Sellers are handling this ridiuculous placement fee hike and the incoming low inventory fee. I have only sent in one shipment (or batch of shipments this month - 5 total boxes) , which is way lower than usual). I am winding down my FBA operations and looking for somewhere else to sell/something else to do. I think Amazon is on the decline for its retail sellers and with the recent fee increases and decline in services (missing shipments, horrible customer support, increasing amount of glitches that are not fixed, and the myriad of other issues facing us every day), Amazon does not look like a long term solution. Actually, it is not a long term solution and I do not think sellers can ignore this any longer.

Just wondering what other sellers are doing.

311
1.6K views
53 replies
Reply
53 replies
user profile
Seller_z3XfkorVSmnEY

Adapting. Spending way too much time trying to optimize shipping quantities. We ship multiple SKUs. Thought we had a system down and then this week options are different.

Also, moving to more FBM and also selling off-Amazon.

130
user profile
Seller_Sram36TnVt73c

im raising my prices...when products stop selling at what I need to charge, they get yanked.

I used to have 100s of SKUs in FBA. I now have just a handful there.

110
user profile
Dominic_Amazon

Hi @Seller_M4NWRaRnU1uDM,

We have heard a lot of feedback from our Sellers about the New Inbound Placement Fee.

You are able to choose Amazon split shipments if you qualify and avoid the fee entirely.

When you create a shipping plan, you can select one of the following inventory inbound placement options:

  • Minimal shipment splits: You can send your inventory to the minimal number of inbound locations, generally to a single location, and we will spread inventory across our network on your behalf, for a fee. The fee may vary by inbound location—for example, there may be higher fees for shipments sent to locations in the West versus other parts of the country.
  • Partial or Amazon-optimized shipment splits: Send your inventory to multiple inbound locations yourself for a reduced or no fee. The reduced fees will depend on the number of shipments and inbound locations that you send your inventory to. For instance, if your shipping plan qualifies, you can select the inbound placement option to send your inventory to the optimal number of inbound locations recommended by Amazon, generally four or more locations, and pay no fee. If you select the placement option in which you send your inventory to a partial number of inbound locations, generally two or three, you will pay a reduced fee.

Inbound placement options will be provided when your shipments qualify. Factors that affect the number of inbound options include the following:

- Whether your shipment includes a mix of standard-size items, non-standard-size items, or special handling categories

- Whether each box contains the same mix and quantities of SKUs

- Quantities and number of boxes for each item

- Geographical demand

To maximize the number of inbound options, try the following:

- Create separate shipments for standard-size items, non-standard-size items, and each special handling category

- Ensure that the item mix and item quantities are equal across all boxes

- Increase the number of boxes

Additionally one thing to note:

  • On average, we will decrease FBA fulfillment fee rates for standard-sized products by $0.20 per unit and for Large Bulky-sized products by $0.61 per unit. These fees will apply starting April 15, 2024, the same date that the first inbound placement fees will begin to be charged. Products priced below $10 will continue to have an additional $0.77 discount on per-unit fees. Go to the FBA fulfillment fee rates page for more details.

Please let me know if you have any questions.

Best,

Dominic

290
user profile
Seller_2VvE1As3Hvl6A

I'm only sending in my highest volume sku's and raising prices. I also had 100's of sku's in FBA, but slowly trimming them back and switching to FBM when my FBA stock runs out. I am also listing a LOT more of my items on other sites, since they won't be FBA.

The downside is that i won't get the buybox as often, but the upside is that my inventory is immediately available instead of taking a month or more.

Between the DC->FC transfer process losing inventory from shipments, warehouse damage without adequate compensation, letting customers steal, low inventory fees, and now the inbound placement fee.

The straw that broke the camel's back Amazon.

310
user profile
Seller_wc3hEgm0kJ23u

Our forwarder tries to support us and offers a good price for sending goods to 5 warehouses, still cheaper than paying those FEES

10
user profile
Seller_Qvkq0XIyYVeNa

I am TRYING to raise prices of my FBA offerings, but I am getting flagged for High Price violations.

I don't understand how Amazon can raise fees but not allow sellers to raise their prices.

440
user profile
Seller_2nHKMJRUHkO90

Spending more on marketing my shopify store, which is working. Must diversify off Amazon

190
user profile
Seller_ftCS5LmKZ26gg

We never did the placement program. The per unit fees would have averaged us about 35 cents, which would have cost us over $1,800 per month. It just worked better to allow split shipments.

21
user profile
Seller_M4NWRaRnU1uDM

FBA sellers..how have you been adapting to the inbound placement fee?

I am just wondering how some of the FBA Sellers are handling this ridiuculous placement fee hike and the incoming low inventory fee. I have only sent in one shipment (or batch of shipments this month - 5 total boxes) , which is way lower than usual). I am winding down my FBA operations and looking for somewhere else to sell/something else to do. I think Amazon is on the decline for its retail sellers and with the recent fee increases and decline in services (missing shipments, horrible customer support, increasing amount of glitches that are not fixed, and the myriad of other issues facing us every day), Amazon does not look like a long term solution. Actually, it is not a long term solution and I do not think sellers can ignore this any longer.

Just wondering what other sellers are doing.

1.6K views
53 replies
311
Reply
user profile
Seller_M4NWRaRnU1uDM

FBA sellers..how have you been adapting to the inbound placement fee?

I am just wondering how some of the FBA Sellers are handling this ridiuculous placement fee hike and the incoming low inventory fee. I have only sent in one shipment (or batch of shipments this month - 5 total boxes) , which is way lower than usual). I am winding down my FBA operations and looking for somewhere else to sell/something else to do. I think Amazon is on the decline for its retail sellers and with the recent fee increases and decline in services (missing shipments, horrible customer support, increasing amount of glitches that are not fixed, and the myriad of other issues facing us every day), Amazon does not look like a long term solution. Actually, it is not a long term solution and I do not think sellers can ignore this any longer.

Just wondering what other sellers are doing.

311
1.6K views
53 replies
Reply
user profile

FBA sellers..how have you been adapting to the inbound placement fee?

by Seller_M4NWRaRnU1uDM

I am just wondering how some of the FBA Sellers are handling this ridiuculous placement fee hike and the incoming low inventory fee. I have only sent in one shipment (or batch of shipments this month - 5 total boxes) , which is way lower than usual). I am winding down my FBA operations and looking for somewhere else to sell/something else to do. I think Amazon is on the decline for its retail sellers and with the recent fee increases and decline in services (missing shipments, horrible customer support, increasing amount of glitches that are not fixed, and the myriad of other issues facing us every day), Amazon does not look like a long term solution. Actually, it is not a long term solution and I do not think sellers can ignore this any longer.

Just wondering what other sellers are doing.

Tags:FBA
311
1.6K views
53 replies
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53 replies
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Seller_z3XfkorVSmnEY

Adapting. Spending way too much time trying to optimize shipping quantities. We ship multiple SKUs. Thought we had a system down and then this week options are different.

Also, moving to more FBM and also selling off-Amazon.

130
user profile
Seller_Sram36TnVt73c

im raising my prices...when products stop selling at what I need to charge, they get yanked.

I used to have 100s of SKUs in FBA. I now have just a handful there.

110
user profile
Dominic_Amazon

Hi @Seller_M4NWRaRnU1uDM,

We have heard a lot of feedback from our Sellers about the New Inbound Placement Fee.

You are able to choose Amazon split shipments if you qualify and avoid the fee entirely.

When you create a shipping plan, you can select one of the following inventory inbound placement options:

  • Minimal shipment splits: You can send your inventory to the minimal number of inbound locations, generally to a single location, and we will spread inventory across our network on your behalf, for a fee. The fee may vary by inbound location—for example, there may be higher fees for shipments sent to locations in the West versus other parts of the country.
  • Partial or Amazon-optimized shipment splits: Send your inventory to multiple inbound locations yourself for a reduced or no fee. The reduced fees will depend on the number of shipments and inbound locations that you send your inventory to. For instance, if your shipping plan qualifies, you can select the inbound placement option to send your inventory to the optimal number of inbound locations recommended by Amazon, generally four or more locations, and pay no fee. If you select the placement option in which you send your inventory to a partial number of inbound locations, generally two or three, you will pay a reduced fee.

Inbound placement options will be provided when your shipments qualify. Factors that affect the number of inbound options include the following:

- Whether your shipment includes a mix of standard-size items, non-standard-size items, or special handling categories

- Whether each box contains the same mix and quantities of SKUs

- Quantities and number of boxes for each item

- Geographical demand

To maximize the number of inbound options, try the following:

- Create separate shipments for standard-size items, non-standard-size items, and each special handling category

- Ensure that the item mix and item quantities are equal across all boxes

- Increase the number of boxes

Additionally one thing to note:

  • On average, we will decrease FBA fulfillment fee rates for standard-sized products by $0.20 per unit and for Large Bulky-sized products by $0.61 per unit. These fees will apply starting April 15, 2024, the same date that the first inbound placement fees will begin to be charged. Products priced below $10 will continue to have an additional $0.77 discount on per-unit fees. Go to the FBA fulfillment fee rates page for more details.

Please let me know if you have any questions.

Best,

Dominic

290
user profile
Seller_2VvE1As3Hvl6A

I'm only sending in my highest volume sku's and raising prices. I also had 100's of sku's in FBA, but slowly trimming them back and switching to FBM when my FBA stock runs out. I am also listing a LOT more of my items on other sites, since they won't be FBA.

The downside is that i won't get the buybox as often, but the upside is that my inventory is immediately available instead of taking a month or more.

Between the DC->FC transfer process losing inventory from shipments, warehouse damage without adequate compensation, letting customers steal, low inventory fees, and now the inbound placement fee.

The straw that broke the camel's back Amazon.

310
user profile
Seller_wc3hEgm0kJ23u

Our forwarder tries to support us and offers a good price for sending goods to 5 warehouses, still cheaper than paying those FEES

10
user profile
Seller_Qvkq0XIyYVeNa

I am TRYING to raise prices of my FBA offerings, but I am getting flagged for High Price violations.

I don't understand how Amazon can raise fees but not allow sellers to raise their prices.

440
user profile
Seller_2nHKMJRUHkO90

Spending more on marketing my shopify store, which is working. Must diversify off Amazon

190
user profile
Seller_ftCS5LmKZ26gg

We never did the placement program. The per unit fees would have averaged us about 35 cents, which would have cost us over $1,800 per month. It just worked better to allow split shipments.

21
user profile
Seller_z3XfkorVSmnEY

Adapting. Spending way too much time trying to optimize shipping quantities. We ship multiple SKUs. Thought we had a system down and then this week options are different.

Also, moving to more FBM and also selling off-Amazon.

130
user profile
Seller_z3XfkorVSmnEY

Adapting. Spending way too much time trying to optimize shipping quantities. We ship multiple SKUs. Thought we had a system down and then this week options are different.

Also, moving to more FBM and also selling off-Amazon.

130
Reply
user profile
Seller_Sram36TnVt73c

im raising my prices...when products stop selling at what I need to charge, they get yanked.

I used to have 100s of SKUs in FBA. I now have just a handful there.

110
user profile
Seller_Sram36TnVt73c

im raising my prices...when products stop selling at what I need to charge, they get yanked.

I used to have 100s of SKUs in FBA. I now have just a handful there.

110
Reply
user profile
Dominic_Amazon

Hi @Seller_M4NWRaRnU1uDM,

We have heard a lot of feedback from our Sellers about the New Inbound Placement Fee.

You are able to choose Amazon split shipments if you qualify and avoid the fee entirely.

When you create a shipping plan, you can select one of the following inventory inbound placement options:

  • Minimal shipment splits: You can send your inventory to the minimal number of inbound locations, generally to a single location, and we will spread inventory across our network on your behalf, for a fee. The fee may vary by inbound location—for example, there may be higher fees for shipments sent to locations in the West versus other parts of the country.
  • Partial or Amazon-optimized shipment splits: Send your inventory to multiple inbound locations yourself for a reduced or no fee. The reduced fees will depend on the number of shipments and inbound locations that you send your inventory to. For instance, if your shipping plan qualifies, you can select the inbound placement option to send your inventory to the optimal number of inbound locations recommended by Amazon, generally four or more locations, and pay no fee. If you select the placement option in which you send your inventory to a partial number of inbound locations, generally two or three, you will pay a reduced fee.

Inbound placement options will be provided when your shipments qualify. Factors that affect the number of inbound options include the following:

- Whether your shipment includes a mix of standard-size items, non-standard-size items, or special handling categories

- Whether each box contains the same mix and quantities of SKUs

- Quantities and number of boxes for each item

- Geographical demand

To maximize the number of inbound options, try the following:

- Create separate shipments for standard-size items, non-standard-size items, and each special handling category

- Ensure that the item mix and item quantities are equal across all boxes

- Increase the number of boxes

Additionally one thing to note:

  • On average, we will decrease FBA fulfillment fee rates for standard-sized products by $0.20 per unit and for Large Bulky-sized products by $0.61 per unit. These fees will apply starting April 15, 2024, the same date that the first inbound placement fees will begin to be charged. Products priced below $10 will continue to have an additional $0.77 discount on per-unit fees. Go to the FBA fulfillment fee rates page for more details.

Please let me know if you have any questions.

Best,

Dominic

290
user profile
Dominic_Amazon

Hi @Seller_M4NWRaRnU1uDM,

We have heard a lot of feedback from our Sellers about the New Inbound Placement Fee.

You are able to choose Amazon split shipments if you qualify and avoid the fee entirely.

When you create a shipping plan, you can select one of the following inventory inbound placement options:

  • Minimal shipment splits: You can send your inventory to the minimal number of inbound locations, generally to a single location, and we will spread inventory across our network on your behalf, for a fee. The fee may vary by inbound location—for example, there may be higher fees for shipments sent to locations in the West versus other parts of the country.
  • Partial or Amazon-optimized shipment splits: Send your inventory to multiple inbound locations yourself for a reduced or no fee. The reduced fees will depend on the number of shipments and inbound locations that you send your inventory to. For instance, if your shipping plan qualifies, you can select the inbound placement option to send your inventory to the optimal number of inbound locations recommended by Amazon, generally four or more locations, and pay no fee. If you select the placement option in which you send your inventory to a partial number of inbound locations, generally two or three, you will pay a reduced fee.

Inbound placement options will be provided when your shipments qualify. Factors that affect the number of inbound options include the following:

- Whether your shipment includes a mix of standard-size items, non-standard-size items, or special handling categories

- Whether each box contains the same mix and quantities of SKUs

- Quantities and number of boxes for each item

- Geographical demand

To maximize the number of inbound options, try the following:

- Create separate shipments for standard-size items, non-standard-size items, and each special handling category

- Ensure that the item mix and item quantities are equal across all boxes

- Increase the number of boxes

Additionally one thing to note:

  • On average, we will decrease FBA fulfillment fee rates for standard-sized products by $0.20 per unit and for Large Bulky-sized products by $0.61 per unit. These fees will apply starting April 15, 2024, the same date that the first inbound placement fees will begin to be charged. Products priced below $10 will continue to have an additional $0.77 discount on per-unit fees. Go to the FBA fulfillment fee rates page for more details.

Please let me know if you have any questions.

Best,

Dominic

290
Reply
user profile
Seller_2VvE1As3Hvl6A

I'm only sending in my highest volume sku's and raising prices. I also had 100's of sku's in FBA, but slowly trimming them back and switching to FBM when my FBA stock runs out. I am also listing a LOT more of my items on other sites, since they won't be FBA.

The downside is that i won't get the buybox as often, but the upside is that my inventory is immediately available instead of taking a month or more.

Between the DC->FC transfer process losing inventory from shipments, warehouse damage without adequate compensation, letting customers steal, low inventory fees, and now the inbound placement fee.

The straw that broke the camel's back Amazon.

310
user profile
Seller_2VvE1As3Hvl6A

I'm only sending in my highest volume sku's and raising prices. I also had 100's of sku's in FBA, but slowly trimming them back and switching to FBM when my FBA stock runs out. I am also listing a LOT more of my items on other sites, since they won't be FBA.

The downside is that i won't get the buybox as often, but the upside is that my inventory is immediately available instead of taking a month or more.

Between the DC->FC transfer process losing inventory from shipments, warehouse damage without adequate compensation, letting customers steal, low inventory fees, and now the inbound placement fee.

The straw that broke the camel's back Amazon.

310
Reply
user profile
Seller_wc3hEgm0kJ23u

Our forwarder tries to support us and offers a good price for sending goods to 5 warehouses, still cheaper than paying those FEES

10
user profile
Seller_wc3hEgm0kJ23u

Our forwarder tries to support us and offers a good price for sending goods to 5 warehouses, still cheaper than paying those FEES

10
Reply
user profile
Seller_Qvkq0XIyYVeNa

I am TRYING to raise prices of my FBA offerings, but I am getting flagged for High Price violations.

I don't understand how Amazon can raise fees but not allow sellers to raise their prices.

440
user profile
Seller_Qvkq0XIyYVeNa

I am TRYING to raise prices of my FBA offerings, but I am getting flagged for High Price violations.

I don't understand how Amazon can raise fees but not allow sellers to raise their prices.

440
Reply
user profile
Seller_2nHKMJRUHkO90

Spending more on marketing my shopify store, which is working. Must diversify off Amazon

190
user profile
Seller_2nHKMJRUHkO90

Spending more on marketing my shopify store, which is working. Must diversify off Amazon

190
Reply
user profile
Seller_ftCS5LmKZ26gg

We never did the placement program. The per unit fees would have averaged us about 35 cents, which would have cost us over $1,800 per month. It just worked better to allow split shipments.

21
user profile
Seller_ftCS5LmKZ26gg

We never did the placement program. The per unit fees would have averaged us about 35 cents, which would have cost us over $1,800 per month. It just worked better to allow split shipments.

21
Reply