Amazon just changed how it charges sellers – again! New fulfillment price tiers, stricter low-inventory penalties, and new oversize handling fees mean many sellers will start paying more per unit without changing anything in their business.
If your margins already feel tight, these updates make cost control more important than ever.
Summary Table (Before vs After)
Fee Component
Before 2026
After 2026
Fulfillment fees
Based on size/weight only
Price tier + size/weight; average +$0.08/unit
Overmax Handling
Not separate
New surcharge for XXL items (cutoff dimensions + weight)
Low-Inventory Fee
Assessed by parent ASIN
Assessed per individual FNSKU
Size Tiers
Standard sets of tiers
More granular tiers (e.g., Small/Large Bulky)
1. FBA Fulfillment Fees – New Tiered Table (Price-based)
What’s changing: Amazon updated how fulfillment fees are calculated based on product price brackets, not just size/weight. This new structure applies starting January 15, 2026 for the US.
Key highlights (from official Amazon announcement): ✔ For products in the $10–$50 price range, the fulfillment fee will increase by about $0.08 per unit on average. ✔ Smaller and larger items will have slightly different adjustments, often higher for smaller products under $10 or high-price items over $50.
Why it matters:
Sellers of low- to mid-priced items will see a modest fee increase per sale.
Because Fulfillment-by-Amazon (FBA) fees are charged per unit, the increased cost compounds quickly at scale.
💡 This is not a new fee type, it’s a restructuring and general increase to reflect actual handling and shipping cost differences across price ranges.
What it is: The Overmax Handling Fee applies to extra-large or irregularly shaped products that exceed certain dimensional limits.
When it applies:
If an extra-large product (up to ~150 lb) has a longest side > 96 inchesor its length + girth > 130 inches, Amazon flags it as “Overmax.”
Impact for sellers:
If you sell tall, long, oddly shaped, or irregular products (tubing, poles, equipment), these new surcharges hit you where previously you just paid the standard oversized fulfillment fee.
The new “Overmax Handling Fee” means an extra per-unit surcharge for these awkward shipments, on top of standard FBA fees.
What’s changing: Amazon will calculate Low-Inventory-Level Fees at the FNSKU level instead of the parent ASIN level.
What that means:
Previously: Amazon looked at inventory for a whole parent product (all variations combined) to decide if you’re “low.”
Now: Each individual FNSKU (variation or unit level) is assessed separately.
Why this matters:
Some child SKUs that were balanced by other child SKUs in stock may now incur fees on their own.
Sellers need granular inventory planning – avoid situations where one variation falls below the supply threshold while others are fine.
Reminder – what the fee is: Amazon charges this when your stock is insufficient relative to demand (based on historical data), encouraging sellers to keep enough inventory on hand.