Here's the truth: most new sellers pick FBA because everyone seems to use it -- without ever checking if it actually makes sense for their product.
92% of Amazon sellers use FBA. That number sounds convincing. But it also means some of those sellers are quietly losing money on fees they didn't account for before they started.
Before you ship a single unit, understand what you're choosing between.
What FBA and FBM Actually Mean
FBA (Fulfillment by Amazon): You ship your inventory to Amazon's warehouses. Amazon stores it, picks it, packs it, ships it, and handles customer returns. You pay fulfillment fees + monthly storage fees on top of your selling fees.
FBM (Fulfillment by Merchant): You store your own inventory and ship every order yourself (or through a third-party logistics provider). You keep more control -- and more responsibility.
FBA is not automatically better. It's a tradeoff: you pay Amazon to handle logistics. The question is whether that cost makes sense for your specific product.
When FBA Is the Right Call
FBA wins when:
- Your product is small and light. FBA fees are based on size and weight. A product that fits in a shoebox and weighs under a pound? You might pay $3.50-$5.00 in fulfillment fees -- very manageable. A bulky product that triggers oversized rates? Fees can jump to $10-$20+ per unit.
- You're selling in a competitive category. Prime eligibility matters. Buyers filter by Prime constantly. If your competitors are FBA and you're not, you're invisible to a huge chunk of shoppers.
- You don't want to deal with shipping. FBA removes daily operational work. If you're a solo seller with a day job or limited time, that's worth paying for.
- Your product sells steadily. FBA charges monthly storage fees -- currently $0.78/cubic foot (Oct-Dec it jumps to $2.40). Slow-moving inventory left in the warehouse for months will quietly drain your margins.
When FBM Makes More Sense
FBM wins when:
- Your product is large or heavy. If you're selling something oversized -- furniture, large appliances, bulky outdoor gear -- FBA fees can make your listing unprofitable before you sell a single unit. FBM plus your own shipping rate can be significantly cheaper.
- Your product sells slowly. If you're turning over 5 units a month, long-term storage fees will eat you alive in FBA. FBM keeps inventory costs predictable.
- You're doing retail arbitrage or reselling. RA sellers often FBM first to test a product quickly without the hassle of sending a box to Amazon's warehouse. Once you've confirmed something sells, you can switch to FBA at scale.
- You make handmade or custom items. Custom orders, made-to-order products, personalized items -- FBA doesn't work here. FBM is your only option.
The Fast Math Test
Before you commit to either, run this quick check:
- Find your product's dimensions and weight.
- Use Amazon's FBA Revenue Calculator (free, built into Seller Central) to see your exact FBA fees.
- Estimate your own shipping cost per order if you fulfilled it yourself (check USPS, UPS, or ShipStation rates).
- Compare the total cost of each option against your selling price.
If FBA fees eat more than 25-30% of your selling price, that's a red flag. Either price higher, or go FBM.
You can run both at the same time. Many sellers list the same product as FBA and FBM -- FBA handles Prime shoppers, FBM serves as a backup when FBA stock runs out. This is called a merchant fulfilled backup and it's worth setting up.
The Beginner Default (And When to Break It)
If you're launching your first private label product and it's a standard-size item priced between $20-$60? Go FBA. The Prime badge alone improves conversion rates, and handling your own shipping while you're learning everything else is one headache too many.
But if you're doing retail arbitrage or selling large or heavy goods, run the numbers first. FBM plus learning to ship efficiently can actually give you a margin advantage that FBA sellers in your category don't have.
Most sellers don't realize: the fulfillment method you choose affects your Buy Box eligibility, your search ranking, and your profits. It's not just logistics -- it's strategy.
One Action for Today
Open Amazon's FBA Revenue Calculator (search it in Seller Central or Google it directly), plug in your product, and see the actual fee breakdown. Five minutes of math now can save you from a very expensive lesson later.
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