Amazon vendors face a paradox: some of their best-selling products can suddenly become “CRaP”—Amazon’s blunt acronym for “Can’t Realise a Profit.” When a product gets hit with the CRaP label, Amazon stops ordering it and slashes its visibility, leaving vendors scrambling to salvage sales. In this guide, we’ll explore why products fall into Amazon’s CRaP category and, more importantly, how to avoid or recover from this situation. Drawing on expert insights from an episode of the Marketplace Masters webinar with Will Haire of BellaVix, we’ll turn these hard lessons into actionable strategies. Whether you’re an Amazon agency professional managing client accounts or a vendor yourself, this comprehensive playbook will help you navigate Amazon’s profitability mandates and keep your products safely off the CRaP list.
“CRaP” stands for Cannot Realize a Profit – Amazon’s internal shorthand for products it sells at a loss. If Amazon’s systems determine an item isn’t financially viable (based on its net pure profit margin, or net PPM), they’ll stop ordering it for retail and may even suppress the listing. In practical terms, a CRaP designation halts your 1P (first-party) sales dead in their tracks.
“When your products become CRaP, Amazon will stop ordering them – you lose sales and rankings, Subscribe & Save gets turned off, and even your ads and promotions grind to a halt.” — Will Haire, CEO & Co-Founder of BellaVix
Amazon takes this step to protect its own margins. Remember, as a 1P vendor you’re essentially a wholesaler to Amazon – and like any retailer, Amazon won’t stock items that hurt their bottom line. Historically, many low-cost, everyday items fell into the CRaP category because the cost to pick, pack, and ship was greater than the product’s margin. Amazon’s retail leadership has even noted that reducing the “cost to serve” these products (e.g. through more efficient logistics) is key to expanding selection profitably. Until those efficiencies fully materialise, though, vendors must proactively manage their portfolio’s profitability. In short, if Amazon can’t make money on your product, it’s CRaP – and that’s a situation you need to foresee and prevent.
Amazon doesn’t usually give advance warning that a product is slipping toward CRaP status. As Will Haire explained, once your item’s profit profile falls below Amazon’s threshold (measured by net PPM), the hammer drops almost automatically. You’ll receive an email notice, and the item becomes unorderable on Vendor Central. The key is to monitor the telltale signs before that happens:
In summary, any factor that increases Amazon’s cost or lowers the price of your product can jeopardise its profitability. As an Amazon-focused agency, you should routinely audit your clients’ items for these risk factors. A proactive review of pricing consistency, weight-to-price ratios, margins, and returns can literally save a product from falling off Amazon’s virtual shelf.
The best cure for CRaP is prevention. By baking profitability into your Amazon strategy from the start, you can spare yourself the pain of rescue missions later. Here are the key preventative measures that vendors (and the agencies who support them) should implement:
What if you’re reading this a bit late and an ASIN has already been CRaPped out? All is not lost. While it’s better to preempt CRaP, vendors can often resuscitate a CRaP product by addressing the core issues. Here’s a plan of attack:
Identify the Root Cause: First, determine why Amazon flagged the product as CRaP. Was the margin too low because your cost to Amazon was too high? If so, can you afford to lower your cost of goods to Amazon (or temporarily offer a deal) to get back in stock? Or was it triggered by outside price competition (i.e., you got undercut elsewhere)? If yes, stopping the bleeding on external pricing is priority #1 (cut off those channels or enforce MAP immediately). Or perhaps excessive returns pushed it over – then you need to fix the product or listing issues causing returns. Knowing the cause guides the solution.
Involve Your Vendor Manager (If You Have One): A good Amazon Vendor Manager can be your ally in a CRaP crisis. Reach out to them, explain the steps you’re willing to take (e.g. “We’ll improve packaging to cut weight by 10%” or “We’ve eliminated an unauthorised discounter causing price erosion”), and ask for a chance to get the item reinstated. They might recommend specific actions like increasing your damage allowance or adjusting the item’s pack size. In the best case, they can manually override and reinstate orders once convinced of the fix. Be prepared to show data or commitments (like new cost structures) to prove the item will be profitable going forward.
Use Direct Fulfillment to Keep Selling: If Amazon Retail isn’t ordering your product, consider turning on Direct Fulfillment (DF) for that ASIN. Direct Fulfillment, also known as 1P drop-shipping, allows you to fulfill orders to the end customer while Amazon still handles the transaction on the front end. In Vendor Central, you can enroll the product in DF so that when customers buy it, the order routes to you to ship (often within 2 days to meet Prime standards). This can be a temporary lifeline to keep the SKU alive on Amazon.com and serving customers, even though Amazon’s warehouses won’t stock it. It buys you time to fix profitability while not losing the listing entirely. (As a bonus, selling via DF means Amazon isn’t incurring fulfillment cost, so technically those sales don’t worsen Amazon’s margin.) If you’re already running a hybrid model, alternatively switch the item to FBM (fulfillment by merchant) on the Seller Central side until you can restore FBA or 1P.
Shift to Seller Central (3P) if Needed: In more severe cases, vendors might decide to permanently migrate a product from 1P to 3P. This often makes sense if the item simply can’t be profitable under Amazon’s retail model but can succeed with you as the seller. On Seller Central, you control the retail price, and you only pay Amazon fees when the item sells – there’s no risk of Amazon unilaterally cutting the price on you. Many brands have used this approach to “liberate” products from CRaP jail. For example, if Amazon insisted on selling a widget at $9.99 (matching Walmart) and losing money, as a 3P seller, you might set it at $12.99 and find consumers are still willing to buy, thereby restoring your margin. Keep in mind, if you do this, you should request Amazon to completely delist or “retire” the old 1P ASIN (or merge it with your new 3P listing) to avoid competing with a ghost listing. Also, coordinate with any retail partners – if you promised exclusivity to Amazon on that SKU, negotiate a change or consider a slightly different SKU/pack for 3P. Going 3P isn’t failure; it’s about choosing the channel where your product can thrive.
Reengineer the Offer: Sometimes the only way out of CRaP status is to come back with a new offer that makes financial sense. This could mean creating a new bundle or multi-pack, as mentioned earlier, and selling that to Amazon instead of the single unit. Or perhaps launching a new version of the product with a higher MSRP to improve margin. One creative tactic is to create Amazon-specific pack sizes that aren’t directly comparable to what’s sold elsewhere, so Amazon isn’t forced into price matching. For instance, if your 1P product was a 2-pack that became CRaP due to Walmart selling a single cheaper, you might introduce a 3-pack on Amazon only. By the time a competitor lists a 3-pack, you’ve ideally built enough momentum or can adjust. The goal is to reset the item’s economics.
Tighten Up Logistics: If high freight or handling costs are an issue, look at logistics programs like Amazon Vendor Flex or revising your freight shipping terms. Vendor Flex involves Amazon setting up an operation in your own warehouse, which can cut down on transportation and storage inefficiencies. It’s not available to everyone, but some larger vendors use it to great effect. Even simpler, ensure you’re using Amazon’s preferred carriers, shipping in full truckloads when possible, and meeting prep requirements to avoid chargebacks. Every saved penny in logistics is the margin Amazon gets back, which could tip an item back into the black.
Re-launch Marketing (Carefully): Once you’ve addressed the core profitability issues, work on rebuilding the product’s momentum. When an item was CRaP, Amazon likely stopped advertising it, and maybe it lost the Buy Box to other sellers. As you recover, consider running some advertising or deals on Seller Central (if you went 3P) to regain sales velocity. If back on Vendor, you might negotiate inclusion in Subscribe & Save again or modest AMS campaigns – but be mindful: you don’t want to spend Amazon’s money (co-op) in ways that put it back in CRaP! The focus should be on sustainable, organic profitability first, then scaling up volume second.
Recovering from CRaP can be labour-intensive, and not every item will be worth the effort. Part of the strategy is knowing when to cut bait. If, after all changes, the economics still don’t work, you may decide to discontinue that product on Amazon and focus on more profitable lines. As an agency advising brands, be ready to have that candid conversation. It’s better to redeploy resources to winners than to continually chase a fundamentally unprofitable SKU.
Amazon’s new era of efficiency (spearheaded by CEO Andy Jassy’s cost-cutting focus) means the CRaP policy is not going away – if anything, Amazon is likely to enforce profitability requirements more strictly in 2024 and beyond. The retail teams are now intensely metrics-driven and under pressure to improve margins. We’ve seen Amazon raise fees on sellers, and on the vendor side, they’re scrutinising vendor terms and unprofitable items more than ever.
What does this mean for vendors and agencies? Simply put, you must build profitability monitoring into your day-to-day Amazon operations. It’s no longer just about top-line sales growth; Amazon cares about profitable growth. Vendors who proactively align with that goal will have an easier partnership with Amazon. That could mean offering more efficient assortments (fewer low-price single units, more value packs), collaborating with Amazon on programs that reduce cost-to-serve, and being ready to adjust pricing or costs when inflation or other factors hit.
On the flip side, Amazon is also working on its side to lower operational costs (e.g. optimising warehouse processes, expanding warehouse distribution, etc.). If they succeed, some items that were once CRaP may become viable. Stay informed about Amazon’s initiatives – for instance, if Amazon expands a program that lowers shipping costs for certain categories, that might allow you to revisit items you previously held back. In the webinar, Will Haire pointed out that Amazon’s drive to cut cost-to-serve has already allowed them to expand the selection of low-priced products. So, the picture isn’t all doom and gloom: it’s about meeting Amazon in the middle, with you managing your side of the profit equation.
Finally, as an Amazon agency professional, use CRaP prevention as a value-add for your clients. By implementing the strategies above, you’re not just troubleshooting – you’re actively safeguarding your client’s revenue and ensuring long-term success. Make profitability reviews a standard part of your account management cadence. Educate clients that sometimes fewer, healthier SKUs on Amazon beat a “list everything” approach that could lead to CRaP problems. In the evolving Amazon landscape, smarter selling is the only way to continue thriving.
Amazon’s CRaP policy may sound crass, but it carries a vital message: profitability matters. For vendors and the agencies that support them, the ability to stay agile and maintain healthy margins is now a core competency. We’ve covered how to identify at-risk products, proactive steps to avoid CRaP, and recovery tactics from real-world experiences. By enforcing pricing discipline, bundling wisely, leveraging hybrid channels, and continuously monitoring performance, you can keep Amazon happy and your products profitable.
In essence, avoiding the CRaP list means running a tight ship – controlling distribution, optimising logistics, and partnering smartly with Amazon. Do that, and you’ll not only steer clear of nasty surprises but also set your Amazon business up for sustainable growth.
Ready to dive deeper or need help implementing these strategies? As our experts emphasised in the webinar, knowledge is power – but action is the game-changer. If you found these insights useful, consider taking the next step:
Keep innovating, keep optimising, and here’s to turning potential CRaP into pure gold on Amazon’s marketplace! 🚀