Amazon is adding a fuel surcharge to fees it collects from third-party sellers (cnbc.com)

by lehi 106 comments 166 points
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106 comments

[−] binarysolo 43d ago
Amazon third party seller (low 8s) here: last time this happened was during COVID and it ended up being a permanent FBA shipping price increase.

Practically speaking shipping accounts for 10-20% of the sale price, so realistically it's the seller who will absorb it and maybe pass on costs to the buyers, but we're talking about 3.5% of 10-20%, which is really a 1% price increase, so a noticeable but not make-or-break issue in the death-by-1000-cuts.

The Andy-led Amazon is less forgiving than the Jeff "your margin is my opportunity"-led Amazon on profitability so price shocks have passed through to sellers much more immediately than prior years where Amazon would just move slowly and stably.

The bigger Amazon news recently is on DD+7 and how Amazon basically increased their float and delayed payments on all sellers, and that's been kinda a pain to navigate.

[−] ilamont 43d ago
Amazon still charges ebook publishers the same “delivery fee” for each sold digital copy (US$0.15/megabyte) as it did in the mid 2000s when Kindles came with 3g chips.

https://kdp.amazon.com/en_US/help/topic/G200634500

[−] zobzu 43d ago
i fully expect it yo be permanent. they know its likely to come back down.
[−] Brainspackle 43d ago
Do you buy off Temu and re-sell on amazon?
[−] gnabgib 43d ago
Title could really use "for third-party sellers who use fulfillment services" (this is not a 3.5% surcharge on AWS, Prime, or Amazon orders)
[−] exabrial 43d ago
We could immediately provide relief to fuel prices, while doing the climate a huge favor, by immediately suspending the USPS accepting marketing material through the mail.

My mailbox is permanently jammed with paper that useless paper that is both produced and hauled away to a landfill by diesel fuel.

No I do not want your credit card offer.

No I do not want to switch phone plans.

No I do not want an extended warranty.

[−] 0cf8612b2e1e 43d ago
Last year, Amazon backed down from sharing tariff pricing. I assume the same will happen here.
[−] jazz9k 43d ago
I made a living selling on Amazon about 15 years ago. It all came crashing down when they held all of my money (around $50,000) and had to 'investigate'.

Nothing ever came of it and they released my money, but banned my seller account for 10 years.

It was actually a good thing. I started my own site and made a good living for a decade. Covid shutdown the business.

Building a business on Amazon is a mistake.

[−] assimpleaspossi 43d ago
Please don't tell anyone but I've been a delivery driver for Amazon's Flex program (where we use our own cars). If my route has an especially long number of miles, they slip me an extra $5 in my pay.

Normally it's around 100 miles per route, with around 45 deliveries, but if it creeps over 120 or so, that's when I see it.

[−] ulrashida 43d ago
I wonder how visible it will be when showing final charges for an order.

I'd definitely be more likely to "wait it out" when considering purchases in my cart if I can see what I expect will be a temporary levy.

[−] jrockway 43d ago
Sometimes I wonder if we just do these wars so that companies can raise prices and when the war ends, not lower them. Do we ever see "oil prices are down 3.5%, we are lowering our prices by 3.5%"? Never. "But the free market will force someone to do this to gain marketshare." But Amazon is the only Amazon, so I doubt that will happen.
[−] GeoSys 42d ago
I'm sure they'll pass it on to the end consumers - there goes the inflation bit by bit on every front ...
[−] t1234s 43d ago
Does that 3.5% get passed to the seller if they are not using Amazon to ship the product?
[−] jeremie_strand 43d ago
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[−] LightBug1 43d ago
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[−] rdevilla 43d ago
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