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The Real Guide to Dropshipping on Amazon Costs, Rules, and What to Expect

Dropshipping on Amazon means selling products on the platform without owning or warehousing inventory. A supplier fulfills each order on your behalf, shipping directly to the customer while you collect the difference between your selling price and the wholesale cost.

It's a genuinely accessible entry point into ecommerce but access and profitability are two very different things, and most introductions to the model skip the gap between them.

Understanding the Amazon Dropshipping Model

The mechanics are simple. You list a product. A customer buys it. You pay your supplier the wholesale price, give them the shipping address, and they send the item directly to the buyer. You keep the margin minus whatever Amazon takes in fees.

What makes this model attractive is what you don't need: warehouse space, upfront inventory investment, or a logistics operation. What makes it difficult is what you can't control: supplier reliability, shipping timelines, and the product quality your customer actually receives.

Is Dropshipping Permitted on Amazon?

Yes Amazon allows dropshipping, but it comes with firm conditions. You must be identifiable as the seller on all packaging and documentation.

Your supplier cannot insert their own branding or invoices. And you are fully accountable for customer service and returns, regardless of where the fulfillment breakdown happened.

These aren't suggestions. Violations lead to listing suspensions or permanent account closure.

How Dropshipping on Amazon Compares to Other Selling Models

Sellers often confuse dropshipping with private label and Fulfillment by Amazon (FBA). They operate very differently.

Selling Model

Holds Inventory?

Startup Cost

Margin Potential

Operational Complexity

Dropshipping

No

Low

Low–Medium

Low–Medium

Private Label

Yes

High

High

High

FBA (Wholesale)

Yes (at Amazon warehouse)

Medium

Medium

Medium

Retail Arbitrage

Yes

Low–Medium

Variable

Medium

Dropshipping wins on upfront cost and simplicity. It loses on margin control and differentiation. Sellers who scale usually transition toward private label or a hybrid model once they have cash flow and market intelligence from early dropshipping operations.

The Honest Case For and Against Dropshipping on Amazon

Most articles list the pros enthusiastically and bury the cons. Both sides deserve equal weight.

Why sellers choose it:

  • No inventory risk — you only pay for products once they're already sold
  • Low capital requirement to get started
  • Easy to test multiple niches before committing to one
  • Runs on Amazon's existing traffic without needing to build your own audience

Why sellers struggle or quit:

  • Margins erode fast once Amazon referral fees, shipping, and ad spend are factored in
  • You bear customer service responsibility for problems created by your supplier
  • Competition in popular categories is intense and often from sellers with better pricing power
  • Policy missteps — even unintentional ones — can result in account suspension

The single most underestimated challenge isn't the fees or the competition. It's this: when something goes wrong on the supplier's end, the negative review lands on your seller account. Not theirs.

Can You Actually Make Money? Dropshipping on Amazon Profit Reality

The short answer is yes but the range of outcomes is wide and depends on decisions made before your first sale, not after.

Where the Money Comes From

You make money on the spread between wholesale cost and retail price, after Amazon's cut. The challenge is that Amazon's fee structure compounds quickly, and many new sellers underestimate the total take.

As reported by Fortune, Amazon brought in more than $150 billion in revenue from seller fees in 2024 alone covering warehousing, shipping, commissions, and advertising charges.

That figure reflects how deeply fees are embedded into the economics of every Amazon seller, including dropshippers.

Real Profit Math With Fees Applied

Here is what a typical transaction looks like with all deductions applied:

Transaction Element

Amount

Customer purchase price

$45.00

Amazon referral fee (15%)

−$6.75

Wholesale cost paid to supplier

−$18.00

Outbound shipping (supplier-fulfilled)

−$4.50

Net profit per unit

$15.75

Net margin

~35%

That margin is possible in a clean scenario. Add advertising spend which most new listings require and real-world margins drop to 10–20% for most sellers. In categories with strong price competition, margins can fall below 10%.

What Does Monthly Income Look Like?

New dropshippers typically earn between a few hundred and $2,000 monthly in their first few months. Established sellers with optimized product selection and repeatable supplier relationships can earn $5,000–$15,000 monthly.

Hitting six figures annually is achievable but requires strong volume, disciplined cost management, and at least one solid niche that isn't overpopulated with competitors.

How Quickly Can You Make Your First Sale?

With a well-optimized listing and a small initial ad budget, most sellers see their first sale within two to four weeks.

Without optimization or advertising, the timeline often extends to two or three months. Product selection matters more than timing the right product in the right category will move faster regardless of when you list it.

What Does It Actually Cost to Start Dropshipping on Amazon?

Getting this number wrong is one of the most common reasons new dropshippers underestimate how long it takes to reach profitability.

Fixed and Variable Cost Breakdown

Cost Item

Type

Estimated Amount

Amazon Individual Seller Plan

Variable

$0.99 per unit sold

Amazon Professional Seller Plan

Fixed

$39.99/month

Amazon referral fees

Variable

8%–15% per sale

Supplier cost per unit

Variable

Depends on product

Outbound shipping (if not FBA)

Variable

Varies by size/weight

Product research tool

Optional

$0–$49/month

Amazon advertising (PPC)

Optional but practical

Budget-dependent

Individual vs Professional Seller Plan: Which One?

The Individual plan at $0.99 per unit makes sense only if you're selling fewer than 40 units monthly. Beyond that threshold, the Professional plan at $39.99/month is more economical.

The Professional plan also enables advertising access and opens up certain gated product categories that the Individual plan locks out.

How Amazon Referral Fees Work

Every sale on Amazon incurs a referral fee a percentage taken from the sale price before any payment reaches you. These fees are mandatory and category-dependent.

Product Category

Referral Fee Rate

Electronics

8%

Home and Kitchen

15%

Clothing and Accessories

17%

Toys and Games

15%

Baby Products

8%–15%

Sports and Outdoors

15%

Pet Supplies

15%

Electronics carries the lowest referral fee at 8%, but competition in that space is among the highest on the platform. Most general categories sit at 15%.

FBA vs Supplier-Fulfilled Dropshipping: A Cost Comparison

Traditional dropshipping means your supplier ships directly to the customer no FBA involvement.

If you want Amazon to handle fulfillment, you would need to send supplier stock to Amazon's warehouses first, converting the model into an FBA-hybrid. Each approach carries different cost structures:

Supplier-fulfilled: Lower per-unit fees, but you carry the risk of supplier shipping delays, packaging non-compliance, and inconsistent delivery times.

FBA hybrid: Higher fees (storage + fulfillment charges per unit), but better Buy Box positioning, Prime eligibility, and Amazon-managed customer service.

Most pure dropshippers start supplier-fulfilled and evaluate FBA once they identify which products sell consistently.

Amazon's Dropshipping Policy: What the Rules Actually Require

Amazon's dropshipping policy is short, but breaking any part of it has serious consequences.

You Must Be the Seller of Record

Every document the customer sees the packing slip, invoice, shipping label, and return information must identify you as the seller.

Your supplier's name, logo, or contact details cannot appear anywhere in the package. This requirement exists to protect customers from confusion, and Amazon enforces it actively.

Packaging Cannot Carry Supplier Branding

This is the most common compliance failure among new dropshippers. A supplier who includes their own branded packaging, a receipt from their warehouse, or promotional materials for their own store puts your account at risk the moment that package reaches a customer.

You must explicitly confirm with every supplier that they ship blind with no reference to their business.

Returns Are Your Responsibility

When a buyer wants to return a product, that transaction runs through you. Amazon will not redirect a return complaint to your supplier.

You handle the return authorization, the refund timeline, and the dispute resolution. Build your supplier agreement around this reality before your first order ships, not after a complaint arrives.

What Gets Accounts Suspended

Violation

Risk Level

Typical Outcome

Supplier branding inside shipment

High

Listing removal, account warning

Supplier name on seller documents

High

Account suspension

Retail arbitrage (buying from other Amazon sellers to resell)

High

Immediate suspension

Late shipment rate above Amazon's threshold

High

Account deactivation

Order defect rate above 1%

High

Selling suspension

Unprocessed return requests

Medium

Negative seller metrics

One violation type deserves a specific call-out: purchasing products from another Amazon seller or retail site (Walmart, Target, etc.) and routing them to your buyer.

This is explicitly prohibited. Amazon can detect it through packaging and invoicing, and the resulting suspension is typically swift.

How to Start Dropshipping on Amazon: A Practical Walkthrough

Getting started is straightforward. Getting started correctly takes more care.Follow these steps to build a compliant, functional Amazon dropshipping operation from the ground up not just a seller account with listings.

Step 1 — Register Your Amazon Seller Account

Go to Seller Central (sellercentral.amazon.com) and create your account. You'll need a government-issued ID, a chargeable credit card, bank account details, and tax identification information.

Choose your plan based on projected monthly volume: Individual for under 40 units, Professional for anything above.

Step 2 — Decide on Your Fulfillment Approach

Before selecting products, decide how orders will be fulfilled:

Supplier direct-ship — the supplier ships each order to the customer directly. Lowest cost and

complexity, highest dependency on the supplier.

FBA hybrid — you purchase inventory in bulk from your supplier, send it to Amazon's fulfillment centers, and Amazon handles shipping and customer service. Higher cost, better Prime eligibility and Buy Box positioning.

Print-on-demand — a production partner creates and ships custom-designed products per order. Useful for sellers building a differentiated product line without bulk investment.

Step 3 — Source and Vet Your Supplier

Your supplier is the single biggest variable in your business. They determine shipping speed, product quality, packaging compliance, and your ability to handle returns.

Choosing poorly here creates problems that are very difficult to fix after you have live listings and customer expectations.

When evaluating suppliers, look for:

  • Verifiable on-time shipping history
  • Explicit policy on blind, unbranded packaging
  • Transparent returns and damage replacement process
  • Availability of sample orders before committing
  • Real communication responsiveness (test it before you launch)

A Note on AliExpress and Alibaba as Supplier Sources

Sourcing from AliExpress or Alibaba is not automatically prohibited on Amazon. The problem is practical: AliExpress suppliers frequently ship with their own branding, have long and inconsistent delivery times, and generate customs paperwork that confuses buyers.

Many experienced Amazon dropshippers use these platforms to identify viable products and price ranges, then source actual fulfillment through more reliable domestic or regional wholesale equivalents.

Step 4 — Identify Products Worth Selling

Product selection determines whether your business grows or stagnates. The goal is to find products with genuine demand, manageable competition, and enough margin to survive Amazon's fee structure.

Research tools that help with this process:

  • Jungle Scout — demand and competition data, sales estimates, keyword analysis
  • Helium 10 — listing optimization, keyword tracking, competitor research
  • Google Trends — free validation of whether interest in a product is growing or declining
  • AMZScout — niche tracking and profitability analysis

Categories With Consistent Demand

These categories tend to have reliable search volume and manageable entry-level competition:

  • Home organization and storage
  • Pet accessories
  • Fitness equipment and accessories
  • Kitchen tools and gadgets
  • Office and desk accessories

Gated and Restricted Categories

Some categories require Amazon approval before you can list products. Health supplements, fine jewelry, automotive parts, and collectibles are common examples.

Always check category eligibility in Seller Central before building your product strategy around a niche  approval is not guaranteed and can take time.

Step 5 — Create Listings That Rank and Convert

A listing has two jobs: appear in search results and persuade the buyer to purchase. Most new sellers optimize for one and neglect the other.

For search visibility: include the primary keyword in the product title, bullet points, and backend search terms.

For conversion: write benefit-focused bullet points, use high-resolution images that show the product from multiple angles, and set a price that is competitive without destroying your margin.

Step 6 — Drive Traffic to Your Listings

Organic ranking takes weeks or months to build on a new listing. Most sellers use Amazon Sponsored Products (PPC) advertising to generate early visibility and sales velocity, which in turn helps organic ranking.

Start with a modest daily budget, monitor which search terms are converting, and cut spend on terms that generate clicks but no sales.

The Hidden Challenges Nobody Warns You About

Most dropshipping guides stop at setup here's what actually catches sellers off guard once they're live on Amazon.

Competing for the Buy Box

The Buy Box is the default purchase button on every Amazon product page. When multiple sellers list the same product, Amazon determines which seller's offer appears in the Buy Box based on price, fulfillment method, seller rating, and shipping speed.

Dropshippers selling commoditized products routinely compete with dozens of other sellers on the same listing many of whom have better seller metrics or lower pricing from volume relationships.

Losing the Buy Box means your listing becomes essentially invisible for most buyers, and conversion rates drop significantly as a result.

Supplier Disruptions and Out-of-Stock Risk

This is the operational risk that gets the least attention in beginner guides. When a supplier runs out of stock, closes without warning, or begins shipping late, you cannot pause your Amazon listings quickly enough to avoid order failures.

Late shipment rates and order cancellations accumulate on your account metrics within days of a supplier problem starting.

The practical mitigation: identify a backup supplier for your top-selling products before you need one, not after a crisis forces the decision.

Market Saturation in Popular Niches

The same low-barrier entry that makes dropshipping accessible means that every profitable niche on Amazon attracts rapid competition.

Products that generate strong margins in month one can become heavily contested by month three. Long-term sustainability in this model requires either ongoing product research or a transition toward more defensible positions private label, exclusivity agreements, or FBA with strong reviews.

Amazon Dropshipping vs Your Own Website: Weighing the Trade-Offs

Amazon gives you immediate access to one of the world's largest retail audiences. According to data from Statista, third-party sellers accounted for 61% of all paid units sold on the platform in 2025 a figure that has climbed steadily for over a decade.

That audience doesn't require you to build or pay for traffic from scratch.The trade-off is platform dependency. Amazon sets the rules, the fees, and the visibility algorithm.

A policy change or account suspension removes your entire sales channel overnight. Sellers running their own Shopify or WooCommerce store retain full control over customer data, pricing, and the shopping experience but are responsible for generating every visit themselves.

Most experienced dropshippers treat these as complementary channels rather than competing ones: Amazon for volume and discovery, a standalone store for customer retention and margin improvement.

Helpful Tools for Running an Amazon Dropshipping Business

Tool

What It Does

Who It's Best For

Starting Cost

Jungle Scout

Product research, competitor tracking

New sellers finding their first niche

From $49/month

Helium 10

Keyword research, listing audit, rank tracking

Sellers optimizing existing listings

From $39/month

AMZScout

Market and niche analysis

Sellers evaluating category entry

From $29/month

Spocket

Supplier sourcing (US/EU-based)

Sellers needing faster shipping suppliers

From $39/month

Google Trends

Free demand validation

Any seller before committing to a product

Free

Keepa

Price history and rank tracking

Sellers monitoring competitive pricing

Free / From $19/month

None of these tools are essential on day one. Most new dropshippers begin with Google Trends and one paid research platform, then add tools as the business generates enough revenue to justify the subscriptions.

Final Verdict: Is Dropshipping on Amazon Worth Doing?

Dropshipping on Amazon works for sellers who treat it as a real business and not a passive income setup. The margin is genuine but compressed. The competition is real and mobile. The rules are firm and enforced.

Sellers who succeed are those who choose products carefully, vet their suppliers thoroughly, stay compliant with Amazon's policies from day one, and understand that the first few months are about building operational stability, not just revenue.

Those who approach it expecting fast, hands-off income rarely make it past the first supplier problem or the first account warning.

The model has a ceiling in its basic form. Most sellers who build something durable use dropshipping as a foundation to learn what sells, identify reliable suppliers, and build capital before transitioning to higher-margin models like private label or FBA. Used that way, it's a legitimate and practical starting point.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does dropshipping on Amazon require a registered business?

No. You can begin as a sole proprietor using your personal information. However, as your revenue grows, forming an LLC or equivalent business entity is advisable for liability protection and cleaner tax management. It's not a prerequisite to open a seller account.

Can I use Amazon itself as a supplier for dropshipping?

No. Purchasing products from Amazon and having them shipped to your buyer is a clear violation of Amazon's dropshipping policy. Amazon can detect this through packaging and invoicing, and it typically results in immediate account suspension.

What is the minimum budget needed to start?

The Professional Seller plan costs $39.99/month. Beyond that, your main cost is advertising which is optional at the very start but practically necessary to generate early sales.

A realistic starting budget for the first month, including the plan fee and modest ad spend, is $150–$300.

How is dropshipping on Amazon different from Amazon FBA?

In dropshipping, your supplier ships directly to the customer Amazon never handles the physical product. In FBA, you send your own inventory to Amazon's warehouses, and Amazon fulfills orders on your behalf.

FBA involves higher upfront costs but typically improves shipping speed, Buy Box performance, and customer service quality.

What happens if a customer leaves a negative review because of my supplier's mistake?

The review stays on your listing. Amazon does not remove reviews based on supplier errors the seller is responsible for the full customer experience. This is one of the clearest reasons why supplier vetting is not a secondary consideration in this model.