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Here is a mistake a lot of 7-figure Amazon sellers have made: they hit $500K/year on .com, feel like they have maxed out the US market, and immediately spin up UK, DE, CA, and AU at the same time. Six months later, they are managing four underperforming storefronts, drowning in VAT compliance, and their US business has actually slipped because their attention got split four ways.

International expansion is real growth leverage — but only when you are ready, and only if you go in the right order.

The Readiness Test: Don't Expand Until You Can Answer Yes to These

If you can't pass all four, you are not expanding — you are just distributing your problems to new zip codes.

The Right Expansion Order

Most sellers default to UK first because it is in English. That is a reasonable instinct, but Canada is actually the smarter first move for US sellers — and here is why.

1. Canada (.ca) — Start Here

Canada is the lowest-friction international marketplace for US sellers. You can use Amazon's North America Unified Account to list on .ca with your existing Seller Central account. No separate account, no new business entity required.

Your US English listings work almost verbatim. The only real gotcha is bilingual labeling laws — French is required on physical packaging in Canada (not just the listing). If your product ships in manufacturer packaging, check this carefully before you go live with FBA CA.

Start with FBM Canada to test demand with zero inventory risk. If a product sells, ship inventory into Amazon CA. Canada typically generates 8–15% of US revenue for the same SKU, with similar margins. It is not transformational, but it is close to free money once set up.

2. UK (.co.uk) — Your First Real International Market

After Canada is humming, UK is the right next step. English-language listings, strong Amazon infrastructure, and significantly less competition than the US in most niches.

What to know before you go:

3. Germany (.de) — The EU Anchor

Germany is the largest Amazon marketplace in Europe by revenue. If you expand to EU at all, DE should be your anchor.

This is where complexity goes up significantly: full German translation required (not Google Translate — hire a native speaker), German VAT registration, strict product compliance (especially for anything electrical, toys, or health-related), and consumer protection laws that are more seller-unfriendly than in the US.

Germany is worth it at scale. It is not worth rushing into before UK is profitable.

What Most Guides Don't Tell You

The biggest trap in international expansion is not logistics or VAT — it is diluted focus. Every new marketplace is a separate ranking algorithm, a separate PPC account, separate customer service, and separate inventory planning. A new marketplace is not passive. It demands at least 5–10 hours/week to manage properly while ramping.

Before expanding, document your US SOPs — listing creation, PPC setup, review monitoring, restock logic. If you can not hand those to a VA or run them in under 5 hours/week, international will overwhelm you.

The sellers who expand successfully treat each new marketplace like a mini-launch: research demand first, prove it with FBM, then invest in FBA inventory. They do not assume their US winner will automatically win elsewhere.

One Thing to Do This Week

Pull your top 3 ASINs and search them manually on Amazon.ca and Amazon.co.uk. Are there existing listings? What is the BSR? Are competitors thin? That 10-minute search is the fastest way to know whether your products have international legs — before you spend a dollar on expansion.

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