Web-based software suite to start & grow your Amazon business
Analyze marketplace data while browsing Amazon
A SaaS platform for global voice of customer and product research
IPアドレスとブラウザの特徴から、日本でご利用されていると判断をし、「セラースプライト-日本語版」をご利用ください。
TL;DR: Amazon seller fees are not one cost. They include referral fees, FBA fulfillment fees, storage fees, removal fees, disposal fees, return-related costs, and optional service fees. Unfulfillable inventory matters because it can keep creating costs unless you decide whether to refurbish, return, dispose, liquidate, or request reimbursement. The safest workflow is to diagnose the inventory status first, estimate the true cost, then take action in Seller Central before storage and aged inventory fees compound.
The main question is not whether Amazon charges fees. The real question is which fees apply to your ASIN, when they are triggered, and whether you can avoid them.
Amazon seller fees can come from selling activity, fulfillment activity, storage activity, returns, and inventory cleanup. For FBA sellers, the most common mistake is treating these as separate problems. In reality, they are connected. A slow moving product can create storage fees, become aged inventory, receive returns, turn unfulfillable, and finally require removal or disposal.
Before you remove inventory, make sure you are solving the right problem.
Unfulfillable inventory, stranded inventory, and slow moving inventory can look similar because all three reduce profit. But they need different actions.
The goal is to move from inventory status to economic decision as quickly as possible.
Use this step-by-step workflow when you see unfulfillable inventory in your FBA account.
In Seller Central, go to your inventory area and open the unfulfillable inventory view. Review the affected ASINs, FNSKUs, quantities, and disposition status.
Look for clues such as customer damaged, carrier damaged, warehouse damaged, defective, expired, or packaging damage. The reason matters because a damaged product, damaged packaging, and Amazon's causing damage can lead to different decisions.
Before clicking return or dispose, estimate the value of the unit after all costs. Include removal fee, inspection labor, repacking, relabeling, inbound shipping, expected selling price, expected return risk, and whether the item can legally and safely be resold as new.
Choose return if you need to inspect or rework the product. Choose disposal if the unit has a low value or recovery is not worth the cost. Choose liquidation if you prefer partial recovery without handling the unit yourself. Choose reimbursement review if the unit appears lost or damaged while under Amazon's responsibility.
If your account has repeat returns or a growing FBA catalog, configure automated unfulfillable settings. This can help Amazon refurbish, liquidate, return, or dispose of eligible unsellable inventory based on your selected preferences.
The right option is the one that protects the most net value, not the one that feels least painful.
A practical example makes the decision clearer than a definition.
Imagine you sell a standard-size kitchen accessory for $24.99. Your landed product cost is $6.20. After referral fee, FBA fulfillment fee, packaging, and advertising, your normal contribution margin is about $5.10 per unit.
After a customer return, Seller Central shows 18 units as unfulfillable. The return reason says "defective," but your experience shows many returned units only have damaged packaging.
The best unfulfillable inventory strategy starts before the product ever reaches Amazon.
Packaging affects FBA fulfillment fees, storage volume, return damage risk, and customer perception. Use realistic packaged dimensions when estimating FBA fees, not just the product's raw dimensions.
If one ASIN repeatedly becomes unfulfillable after customer returns, review product quality, listing accuracy, packaging strength, and customer expectations. A return problem is often a listing or product design signal.
Do not wait until long-term storage fees force a rushed decision. Create a monthly inventory review and flag ASINs with slow sell-through, weak conversion, or rising storage exposure.
Manual review works for a small catalog, but it breaks down as volume grows. Automated settings help prevent unsellable units from sitting too long without action.
A product that only looks profitable before returns is not truly profitable. Build a buffer for return-related losses, refund administration, removal, disposal, and occasional inspection costs.
Use SellerSprite to connect product research, demand validation, and profitability planning in one workflow.
Before launching an ASIN, use SellerSprite to study category demand, competing products, price ranges, estimated sales, and keyword opportunities. Then use a profit calculator workflow to test whether the product still works after referral fees, FBA fees, storage fees, discounts, and expected returns.
Ready for the next step? Open the SellerSprite Academy course directory to continue building your Amazon FBA skills chapter by chapter.
Open Course Directory
Unfulfillable inventory is FBA inventory that Amazon has determined cannot currently be sold as new. This may happen because of product damage, packaging damage, expiration, customer return condition, or another issue that makes the unit unsuitable for normal sale.
Unfulfillable inventory can continue to create inventory-related costs if it remains in Amazon's fulfillment network. Review the current Seller Central fee pages for your marketplace, because storage, removal, disposal, and aged inventory fees vary by marketplace, size tier, weight, and time period.
You usually cannot simply relist a unit that Amazon has marked unfulfillable as new. You need to understand the condition first. If the product is recoverable, you may return it, inspect it, repack it, and send it back to FBA if it meets Amazon's requirements.
Return inventory when the expected resale value is higher than removal, inspection, repacking, and inbound shipping costs. Dispose of inventory when the item has low value, serious damage, safety risk, expiration risk, or poor recovery economics.
Review reimbursement eligibility when inventory appears lost or damaged while under Amazon's responsibility. Do not assume every damaged or returned unit qualifies. Check the official FBA inventory reimbursement policy and the actual return disposition.
Improve packaging, reduce listing mismatch, monitor review complaints, inspect supplier quality, track return reasons, and use automated unfulfillable settings. Also, avoid overstocking products with weak conversion or high return sensitivity.
Start with referral fee, FBA fulfillment fee, monthly storage fee, expected return cost, promotion cost, and removal or disposal risk. These fees have the most direct impact on whether a product is truly profitable.
Join the SellerSprite community on the Facebook Group to share your sourcing journey, ask questions, and get support from fellow Amazon sellers.
Join SellerSprite Facebook Group
This guide was prepared by the SellerSprite Success Team for FBA sellers who need practical, margin-focused workflows. SellerSprite helps Amazon sellers research products, estimate sales, analyze competitors, track keywords, and evaluate profitability before and after launch.
Editorial note: Amazon fees, inventory rules, and program eligibility can vary by marketplace, product category, size tier, shipping weight, and account status. Always confirm the latest fee details and workflow availability inside your own Seller Central account before making inventory decisions.
Back to Top
Content is loading. Please wait
There are no comments at this moment.
You are trying too often, please try again later!
Deleted comments cannot be recovered.