According to www.retaildive.com, Amazon will apply a 3.5% fuel and logistics surcharge on Fulfillment by Amazon (FBA) services for third-party sellers in the U.S. and Canada, effective April 17, 2026. The surcharge will also extend to Remote Fulfillment with FBA shipping from the U.S. to Canada, Mexico, and Brazil. Starting May 2, 2026, it will cover Buy with Prime in the U.S. and Multi-Channel Fulfillment services in the U.S. and Canada.
Surcharge Structure and Impact
The levy is calculated as a percentage of seller fulfillment fees—not the item’s sale price—and averages 17 cents per unit for U.S. FBA services, though actual amounts vary based on item size and dimensions. Amazon did not specify an end date for the surcharge. In its announcement, the company stated:
“We have absorbed these increased costs so far. However, similar to other major carriers, when costs remain elevated, we implement temporary surcharges on our fulfillment fees to recover a portion of the actual cost increases we are experiencing.”
Broader Industry Context
This move follows sharp fuel-related cost pressures linked to the Iran war, which has disrupted regional energy markets and driven up global freight expenses. UPS and FedEx continue to raise their fuel surcharge rates, while the U.S. Postal Service will enact an 8% temporary price hike on package shipping services starting April 26, 2026. Amazon emphasized that its 3.5% rate is “meaningfully lower than other major carriers”, citing prior operational improvements—including overhauled inbound fulfillment processes, order consolidation initiatives, and a shift from a national to a regional network model in the U.S.
Historical Precedent and Market Reaction
This is not Amazon’s first fuel-related surcharge: in 2022, it applied a 5% fuel and inflation surcharge on FBA services. Earlier in 2026, Amazon raised FBA fees in January by an average of 8 cents per unit sold. Skepticism about the surcharge’s temporality exists among practitioners: Noah Wickham, VP of sales and marketing at Amazon seller agency My Amazon Guy, stated on LinkedIn that he expects Amazon will “keep it regardless” even if fuel prices stabilize.
Source: Retail Dive
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.









