Here's the simplest definition of retail arbitrage: you buy something at a store for less than it sells for on Amazon, then sell it on Amazon and pocket the difference.
That's it. No manufacturing. No branding. No minimum order quantities. You walk into a Target or Walmart, spot a clearance item selling for $8, check your phone to see it's going for $24 on Amazon, buy a few, ship them in, and make $10–12 per unit after fees.
For many sellers, this is how they made their very first Amazon sale. It's a low-barrier entry point — and it's still very much alive in 2026 for sellers who approach it smartly.
How Retail Arbitrage Actually Works
The core loop is simple:
- Scan products in stores using a free app like Amazon Seller or a paid scanner like Scoutify
- Check the live Amazon price and estimated sales velocity (BSR — how BSR works)
- Calculate profit after Amazon's referral fee (~15%) and FBA fulfillment fees
- Buy what's profitable, prep and ship to an Amazon warehouse
- Amazon sells it and deposits your payout every two weeks
The scanning apps pull Amazon's live price and your estimated net profit in real time. You point your phone camera at a barcode and within seconds you know: buy this or leave it.
The key insight: You're not creating a product — you're moving existing products from where they're cheap (retail stores) to where buyers already are (Amazon).
Where RA Sellers Actually Shop
Retail arbitrage works best in stores with frequent clearance, seasonal markdowns, or inconsistent regional pricing:
- Big-box stores: Target, Walmart, Home Depot, Lowe's
- Department stores: Kohl's, Macy's, TJ Maxx, Marshalls
- Drugstores: CVS, Walgreens (especially clearance health and beauty)
- Grocery outlets and liquidation stores
- Dollar Tree / Five Below for certain categories
Toys, health and beauty, grocery, and household items tend to be the most profitable categories for RA because price gaps are common and sales velocity on Amazon is strong.
What Fees Do You Actually Pay?
This is where most beginners get surprised. Amazon takes a cut on every sale:
- Referral fee: Usually 8–15% of the sale price depending on category
- FBA fee: Roughly $3.00–$5.50 per unit for a typical small product (based on size and weight)
- Monthly storage fee: Small — usually cents per unit per month unless inventory sits too long
On a $20 sale, expect to pay roughly $6–8 in total Amazon fees. You generally need to buy at 25–40% of the Amazon sale price to make healthy margins.
Use Amazon's FBA Revenue Calculator (free, no login required) before you buy anything. Type in the ASIN and your cost, and it shows your exact estimated profit.
The Real Talk: What's Changed in 2026
Retail arbitrage is not as simple as it was in 2018. A few things to know going in:
- Brand restrictions: Many brands now restrict resellers. You may buy a product only to find you're not approved to list it on Amazon. Always scan before you buy — the app will warn you if you're restricted.
- IP complaints: Some brands file intellectual property complaints against unauthorized resellers. This is less common with clearance goods but worth being aware of for certain categories.
- Price tanking: If five sellers list the same clearance item at once, the price collapses. Moving quickly matters.
- Receipts vs invoices: Amazon may ask for invoices (not store receipts) if a brand files a complaint. RA receipts sometimes aren't enough — this is the main risk for newer sellers.
Tip: Stick to categories and brands where you're already approved to sell. Your Seller Central account shows your eligibility before you buy anything — check it.
RA vs Online Arbitrage vs Wholesale
Once you get the concept, you'll hear two related terms constantly:
- Online Arbitrage (OA): Same idea as RA, but you source from websites (Amazon itself, Walmart.com, brand websites on sale) instead of physical stores. You can scale faster without driving anywhere.
- Wholesale: You buy directly from a brand's distributor at bulk prices, with an invoice, and resell on Amazon. More documentation, more upfront cost — but fewer account risks.
Many successful Amazon sellers start with RA to learn the basics, then move into wholesale or private label as they grow. RA teaches you how to read demand, understand fees, and move inventory fast — skills that transfer directly.
Your Action for Today
Download the free Amazon Seller app (iOS or Android). Next time you're at a Target or Walmart, scan one clearance item with the barcode scanner. Just one. See what comes up — whether you're restricted, what the price gap is, what the BSR says about how fast it sells.
That first scan is the moment retail arbitrage clicks. Most people who do it immediately start scanning everything.
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