How Amazon Vendors Can Negotiate Cost Increases and Protect Margins
Overview
In the Amazon vendor world, rising supply costs and razor-thin margins have become the new normal. But when vendors try to pass those costs to Amazon – their biggest customer – they often hit a brick wall. If you’re an Amazon agency professional guiding brands through this challenge, you know the stakes: how do you secure a cost price increase on Amazon Vendor Central without jeopardising the relationship or losing the Buy Box? In a recent Marketplace Masters webinar, former Amazon vendor manager and now Sales Director & Sr. Account Manager Josh Cowan of Intero Digital shared insider strategies on “Winning the Price Game.” This article distills those insights into a step-by-step playbook for getting your cost increases approved and protecting your profitability on Amazon.
Why Amazon Is Pushing Back on Cost Increases (and Why Now?)
Amazon’s pushback on vendor cost increases has been consistent for years – what’s changed is the sheer volume of requests in recent times. With inflation and tariffs squeezing margins, Amazon expects vendors to justify every cost increase with data. They’ll check if you’ve already raised prices with other retailers and whether your category peers face the same cost pressures. If not, your request is likely to be denied. As Josh notes, Amazon views itself as the last retailer that should absorb higher costs.
“If you give Amazon a blanket percentage increase across your catalogue, they’ll immediately reject it,”
he warns. Only truly necessary, well-supported requests stand a chance.
Building a Bulletproof Case for a Cost Increase
Successful Amazon vendor negotiations hinge on one core principle: Amazon will only approve your cost increase if it ultimately benefits them (or at least doesn’t hurt them). To meet that bar, you need a bulletproof, data-driven case:
- Ground your case in real cost data: Detail the specific cost drivers for each ASIN (e.g. materials up 10%, new tariffs, labour wage hikes) and provide proof for each.
- Raise prices everywhere first: Increase your MSRPs or list prices across all other retailers before asking Amazon. Amazon will verify that they’re not the only ones being asked to pay more.
- Demonstrate healthy margins: Show Amazon that even with the cost increase, their margins remain reasonable. Calculate the impact on their percentage margin and highlight that your Net PPM (net pure product margin) is strong (ideally at or above the category average).
- Cite market trends: Bolster your case with industry data or competitor moves. For example, note if key raw materials are up 15% this year, or if competing brands have all raised their wholesale prices similarly.
In short, come prepared with a granular, ASIN-by-ASIN breakdown of why you must increase costs, backed by evidence. The more homework you do, the harder it is for Amazon to flat-out refuse.
With a Vendor Manager vs. Self-Service: Two Paths to Approval
If you have a vendor manager: Leverage that person. Present your data directly and have an open conversation. It’s not necessarily easy, but an Amazon vendor manager can champion your case internally or negotiate on your behalf. Be ready for give-and-take – they might request concessions (more on that below) in exchange for approving your increase.
If you don’t have a vendor manager: You’ll submit the cost increase via Vendor Central and often wait up to 60 days for a response. Many requests get auto-rejected or ignored. In this case, persistence is key. Open support cases, follow up regularly, and escalate politely. Josh’s advice: “be relentless – keep opening cases, keep pushing until you find someone who will help.” It may take multiple attempts with different support reps before you get traction.
“If you come to Amazon with a blanket percentage increase across your catalogue, they’re going to reject it.” — Josh Cowan, Sales Director & Sr. Account Manager
Timing Is Everything: Choose Your Moment
Timing can make or break your request. Avoid peak seasons like Q4 – Amazon is busy with holiday orders and won’t welcome cost hikes then. The best time to ask is typically during Annual Vendor Negotiations (AVN) season (around Q1), when Amazon is already reviewing terms. If you bundle your cost increase proposal into your AVN discussion, Amazon may be more receptive (since you can negotiate it alongside other terms). Also, avoid asking right before major sales events (Prime Day, for example). If a cost surge hits mid-year, consider waiting until just after a quarter ends or a quieter sales period to submit your request.
Sweetening the Deal: Incentives to Offer Amazon
Even with a solid case, you might need to give Amazon a reason to say yes. Consider these sweeteners to make your proposal more enticing:
- Invest in growth: Offer Amazon something in return for the cost increase, such as committing extra budget to Amazon advertising, coupons, or promotions that will drive sales volume. This can help offset the margin impact for Amazon.
- One-time bulk buy: Give Amazon a chance to place a big purchase order at the old cost before the increase takes effect. They can stock up at the lower price, which makes them more willing to accept the change.
- Margin guarantee: If feasible, consider a deal where you guarantee Amazon a certain profit margin per unit (or agree to rebate them if margins fall short). This assures Amazon they won’t lose money and can significantly smooth the negotiation.
- Terms trade-off: If you’re in AVN negotiations, be open to adjusting other terms (like slightly higher co-op fees or freight allowances) as a trade-off. Showing flexibility on other contract points can make Amazon more comfortable granting your cost increase.
The goal is to show Amazon that you’re partnering with them, not just demanding more money. If Amazon sees that you’re willing to invest in the relationship (or give them safeguards), they’re more likely to meet you halfway.
When Amazon Still Says No: Plan B Strategies
Sometimes, despite your best efforts, Amazon won’t budge. Here are Plan B options to consider if your cost increase is denied:
- Switch to 3P (Seller Central): Consider moving the product to your third-party seller account, where you control the retail price and margin. This way, you can set a higher consumer price if needed (though you’ll take on fulfillment and other responsibilities).
- Re-launch a new ASIN: If a product is unprofitable and Amazon won’t accept a cost increase, you could discontinue that ASIN and introduce a new version at a higher wholesale cost. It’s essentially a reboot – you lose the reviews and sales history on the old ASIN, but you reset the economics with the new one.
- Wait and revisit: Sometimes the answer is “not now.” Raise your prices in other channels and work on improving Amazon profitability through other means (e.g. reducing chargebacks or optimising ads) for a few months. If Amazon’s margin on your line improves, or the market clearly shifts (say, every competitor has raised prices), try your request again later. Patience can pay off when conditions are more in your favour.
Throughout, maintain a cordial dialogue with Amazon. If they say no, you can ask (politely) what conditions might make a cost increase possible in the future. You might get valuable feedback – perhaps they need to see a certain sales volume or category margin improve first – which gives you a target to work toward.
Handling Amazon’s Push for Cost Decreases
Don’t be surprised if, while you’re trying to raise costs, Amazon is simultaneously asking you for cost decreases. Amazon’s systems regularly send vendors requests to lower costs on certain ASINs to improve Amazon’s margins. Here’s how to handle it:
- Don’t jump at automated emails: Amazon often sends form-letter emails asking for cost reductions. Unless a real Amazon buyer or manager is personally reaching out, you can usually ignore these automated requests – they’re fishing for margin, but they’re not mandates.
- Only give when it makes sense: If Amazon (or your vendor manager) presses for a cost decrease in a negotiation, evaluate your own margins first. Agree only if you can afford it and try to get something in return (for example, Amazon commits to a large purchase order, or you tie the concession to getting another ask approved).
- Beware Price Protection: When you do lower a cost, Amazon might attempt a Price Protection Agreement to claw back the difference on inventory they already bought at the higher price. You are not obligated to accept this. Many vendors decline those agreements to avoid a retroactive hit on revenue (Amazon essentially asking for a refund on past orders). Unless it was part of a negotiated deal, it’s wise to politely reject any surprise price protection claims.
In short, hold your ground on unwanted cost decreases. Amazon’s goal is to improve their profitability, but it shouldn’t come at the expense of putting you underwater. Any cost concessions on your part should be strategic and, whenever possible, conditional on something in return.
Beyond Cost Increases: Controlling Retail Price (Sneak Peek)
Controlling Amazon’s retail pricing is the next piece of the puzzle once your costs are in line. Josh hinted that vendors should enforce strong MAP policies and police their distribution channels to prevent anyone from undercutting your Amazon price. Tactics like offering unique bundles or exclusive SKUs to Amazon (so products aren’t directly comparable on price) and closely monitoring Amazon’s pricing behaviour on your items are crucial. These strategies deserve their own discussion, which is coming in a future article. Stay tuned for Part 2 on mastering retail price control on Amazon.
Conclusion: Winning the Price Game
Negotiating a cost price increase with Amazon is challenging, but it can be done with the right approach. The key is to frame your request in a way that aligns with Amazon’s interests: data-backed, margin-conscious, and growth-oriented. By being thorough in your preparation, persistent in your follow-ups, and flexible in finding win-win solutions, you can successfully protect your margins without souring the partnership.
As an Amazon agency professional, guiding brands through these tough negotiations showcases your expertise and value. It’s about translating your client’s needs into Amazon’s language. And remember, the work doesn’t stop at securing the cost increase – continuing to manage retail pricing and profitability is just as critical.
Be sure to watch the full webinar replay with Josh Cowan for more examples and nuanced tips from an Amazon insider. If you need better visibility and data to support your negotiations, consider using MerchantSpring’s platform – book a demo to see how our Vendor Profitability Tracker and other tools can help. And don’t forget to subscribe to our newsletter for the latest Amazon vendor best practices and Marketplace Masters updates.
By applying these strategies and leveraging the right tools, you’ll be well on your way to winning the price game on Amazon – turning “no” into “yes” and safeguarding your brand’s profitability.
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