Everyone has their favorite Amazon pricing strategy, but in today’s post I will be going over the two main pricing strategies that I use for the items that I sell on amazon. This post will cover the strategies that I use for the majority of the items that I sell on amazon, but there are going to be one off instances where these are not used. This post I wrote last year about how to price items on Amazon when selling via Amazon FBA covers a couple of specific examples of how I price items when amazon is a seller.

The Amazon pricing strategies that I am outlining in this post can be applied whether you are using a repricer or whether you are doing all of your repricing manually. Personally, I am using a repricer as it allows me to set the prices of items once, and then the repricer will do the rest. If you want to see the repricer I am using, you can find it on my resources page, but the point of this post is to share my strategies and not be promotional.

The first Amazon pricing strategy that I will share is my default pricing / repricing strategy. This is what I estimate I use on 70-75% of my inventory. The basics of this strategy are that I set my price based on the other FBA sellers on a product detail page. I then set my price 1.5% ABOVE the lowest FBA seller. I have found that pricing at this level above the competition will allow me to obtain buy box rotation, and also avoids prices spiraling downward as sellers continually adjust their prices to be the lowest. Another fairly obvious benefit is that I will be selling my item for a higher price than if I am pricing at or below the competition. My goal is to maximize the value I receive for every item, and this strategy helps me to do that.

Here’s a quick example to illustrate this point further. If I was to sell on this KDC200 Bluetooth Scanner Amazon Detail Page I can see that the current low FBA seller is price at $248.88 at the time of this writing. I would set my price at $252.61, which is 1.5% above the low FBA seller.

My default strategy is really as simple as pricing 1.5% above the lowest FBA competition. I use this on the majority of items, and it works well for me, and sales keep rolling in despite me not being the lowest price. I price items this way when I initially list them on amazon, and set up these rules with my repricer on the majority of items as well. This often leads to items selling for quite a bit more than I initially listed them for.

My second Amazon pricing strategy, which I use on around 20% of my items, is to match the current low FBA competition. Some of the main reasons that I use this strategy include: items have been on the default strategy for 2 to 3 months and haven’t been selling, I have a consistent supply of the item, or the window to sell the item is shorter than usual.

To elaborate on these points, I generally don’t like items to sit in my inventory for more than 3 months, so if this is happening I will begin to move to a my second Amazon pricing strategy. If I have a consistent supply of the item from a wholesale source or a retail store, I will often use this strategy as well. The reason for this is that I find I generally get at least a few more sales when I am matching the low price versus being 1.5% above the low. With that said, I do test to see which strategy will make the most sense on replenishable items, but I generally find I get at least a few more sales when I am matching the low. If the window to sell an item is short due to an upcoming holiday, an expiration date approaching, or any other time restriction, I look to move items to this matching strategy as well to give myself a better chance of making a sale in time.

Here’s an example of an item I would use this strategy on. Amazon doesn’t allow “meltable” items in their fulfillment warehouses after April 30th, so if I bough a meltable item to resell now, or had some left in inventory, I would start looking to move them quickly. This M&Ms listing would be a good example, if I had them in my inventory, I would most likely look to match the low FBA price to try to make a quick sale so I don’t have to get the item sent back to me.

That’s the “matching” pricing strategy that I use in a nutshell. It’s really as simple as matching the low FBA competition.

The default strategy is my preferred Amazon seller pricing strategy as it avoids the “race to the bottom” altogether, and keeps me above the low prices. With the matching strategy, you only run into trouble if you have a seller than continually undercuts you, and you continue to follow them lower and lower. This matters more with a repricer than if you are manually repricing, so be sure to setup your minimum prices at a comfortable level if using this strategy with a repricer.

Those are my 2 preferred pricing strategies, and are used on about 90% of my inventory, and I find that they work very well for me. As I mentioned at the beginning, I prefer to use a repricer, as it speeds things up, and follows the rules that I set for it. Having it definitely saves me a lot of time, and in some cases makes me more for items than I originally list them for.

That’s all I have for today. Any questions for me on this post? What Amazon pricing strategies do you use? What pricing strategies have produced the best results for you? Let me know in the comments below!