According to Supply Chain Dive, Amazon has announced its 2026 holiday fulfillment fee structure, with peak-season charges taking effect on October 15, 2026 and remaining in place through January 14, 2027. The fees apply across Fulfillment by Amazon (FBA), Remote Fulfillment with FBA, Multi-Channel Fulfillment, and Buy with Prime services.
Fee timing and surcharge integration
Fulfillment fees are calculated and charged when shipments physically leave Amazon’s fulfillment centers — meaning any product shipped on or after October 15, 2026 will incur the higher holiday rates. Amazon confirmed that its ongoing 3.5% fuel and logistics surcharge will be applied on top of the peak season fees. This layered pricing reflects sustained cost pressures in transportation and energy markets, as noted in the company’s internal seller communications.
Strategic inventory guidance for sellers
To ensure Prime delivery speeds during high-demand periods — including Black Friday and Cyber Monday — Amazon is advising third-party sellers to deliver inventory into its U.S. fulfillment network by early October. As Max Garland, Lead Reporter at Supply Chain Dive, reported, the recommendation aligns with historical patterns where late inbound shipments risk missing cutoffs for expedited holiday processing. A photo accompanying the article shows packages moving on a conveyor belt at an Amazon facility in Orlando, Florida, dated December 2, 2024, underscoring the scale of operations during prior peak seasons.
Operational implications for supply chain professionals
For supply chain practitioners, the announcement signals a tightening window for holiday readiness. Sellers must now account for both the 3.5% surcharge and the seasonal fee uplift when modeling landed costs and margin forecasts for Q4 2026. According to the report, this marks Amazon’s third consecutive year of implementing holiday-specific fulfillment pricing — a practice first introduced in 2024 amid labor shortages and port congestion. The October 15–January 14, 2027 fee period spans 91 days, matching the duration of the prior two peak seasons. Industry analysts note that competitors such as Walmart and Target have maintained flat fulfillment fees for their marketplace sellers over the same timeframe, highlighting divergent cost-pass-through strategies.
Historical context and market response
Amazon’s holiday fee adjustments follow broader industry trends: in 2025, major carriers including UPS and FedEx implemented 4.9% general rate increases effective January 1, while DHL raised international express rates by 5.2%. These external cost escalations reinforce Amazon’s rationale for layered surcharges. The company’s seller-facing announcement was published on July 13, 2026, giving vendors approximately three months to adjust inventory planning and financial models. No new fee percentages were disclosed beyond the confirmed 3.5% fuel and logistics surcharge, though Amazon stated that base FBA fee changes would remain consistent with its annual spring 2026 update.
Source: Supply Chain Dive
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










