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Reduce Amazon FBA Shipping Costs: 7 Proven Tricks

Ekaterina Rubtcova 6 min read

FBA shipping fees are the line item most sellers optimize the least, even though they eat 12-18% of gross revenue on hard-goods products. Here are the seven levers I actually used at Daniks to save roughly $0.50-$1.40 per unit over the years.

No theoretical tips. Everything is from real experience with real margin impact. If you are not doing any of this yet, you have 30-90 days of optimization potential ahead of you.

1. Push One Dimension Below the Size Tier Threshold

Amazon’s size tiers have hard cutoffs, and exceeding a threshold by a single millimeter often costs you $1.50+ per unit. The 2026 tiers on Amazon:

  • Small Standard: up to 15 x 12 x 0.75 in, up to 6 oz
  • Standard: up to 18 x 14 x 8 in, up to 20 lb
  • Large Standard: up to 24 x 18 x 18 in, up to 40 lb
  • Oversize: everything above

Real example from Daniks: a cookware set with outer box dimensions of 18.5 x 14 x 5.5 in fell into “Large Standard” — FBA fee $8.70. By redesigning the inner padding and shrinking the box to 17.3 x 14 x 4.3 in (without changing the product itself), it dropped to “Standard” — FBA fee $5.80. Savings: $2.90 per unit. At 8,000 units per year, that is $23,200.

What you should do: take every one of your products and measure the outer box dimensions against the size tier thresholds. If you are only 1-2 inches above a threshold, ask your packaging supplier for more compact inner tray designs.

2. Enable SIOC (Ship-In-Own-Container)

SIOC means your product ships in its retail packaging without Amazon wrapping another box around it. Benefits:

  • No additional Amazon packaging fee
  • Lower size tier classification (no box-in-box layering)
  • Faster inbound processing at the FBA warehouse

Requirement: your retail packaging must be ship-ready, meaning it can survive a drop test and has no open voids.

Realistic savings: $0.30-$0.90 per unit, depending on size tier.

What you should do: check in Seller Central under “FBA Packaging Types” and certify for SIOC. For many products it is a matter of 2-4 weeks of packaging updates with your supplier.

3. Distribute Inbound Shipments Across 4-6 Warehouses

Amazon charges Inbound Placement Fees when you send inventory to only 1-2 warehouses. With 4-6 warehouses, these fees largely disappear.

Realistic impact: $0.30-$0.70 per unit saved on smaller shipments (under 500 units).

What you should do: in Seller Central, go to “Manage Inventory” and create a shipment. Choose “Distributed” instead of “Optimized” (single location). Amazon then distributes your inventory across 4-6 warehouses automatically. The freight effort may be slightly higher, but the margin math clearly favors it.

4. Avoid Long-Term Storage After Day 181

Amazon charges Aged Inventory Surcharges for inventory sitting in FBA warehouses longer than 181 days. After 365 days, the fees explode.

My Daniks example: a seasonal set we shipped too late for the season sat in the warehouse for 8 months. Long-term storage surcharges: $2.60 per unit. At 1,500 units that was $3,900 from a single planning mistake.

What you should do: in Seller Central, go to “Inventory” and download the “Inventory Age” report. If you have stock older than 150 days, plan now:

  • Price reduction of 10-20% to sell through faster
  • PPC sprint on these products to accelerate sales
  • Removal order if the product is clearly underperforming (costs $0.15-$0.55 per unit for removal)

Even a 15% price cut is almost always cheaper than 6 more months of long-term storage fees.

5. Optimize Multi-Item Bundles

If you sell bundles (multiple products as one FBA SKU), make sure they ship as a physical set in one package, not as a virtual bundle that Amazon picks and packs separately.

Real example: a 3-pack of pot trivets that we initially listed as a virtual bundle effectively cost $7.80 in FBA fees per set (3x standard shipping). As a physical bundle packed in a polybag: $4.70 FBA fee.

What you should do: review all your bundle listings. If they are virtual, plan to switch to physical bundles with your next inventory shipment. Savings corridor: $1.50-$3.50 per set.

6. Qualify Low-Price Products for Low-Price FBA

Since 2026, the Low-Price FBA program covers products up to $20 sale price (previously $10). Reduced FBA fees in this tier average $0.45 less per unit.

Details are in the Amazon fee changes 2026 article.

What you should do: check all products between $10-$20 sale price for Low-Price FBA eligibility. In Seller Central under “FBA Fee Preview” you can see this per SKU.

7. Print Shipping Labels in Bulk, Not One at a Time

Sounds small, but it adds up: when you send inventory to Amazon, you print FBA shipping labels. With manual single prints per box, a label is easily missed, and Amazon then charges a labeling fee of $0.30 per unit.

My setup: an affordable Brother QL-820NWB label printer (around $250) plus Amazon’s bulk label generation in Seller Central. A one-time setup that saves 30-60 minutes per inventory shipment and eliminates labeling fees entirely.

What you should do: if you do not have a label printer yet, get one. The investment pays for itself after 1-2 inventory shipments if you send more than 200 units per shipment.

What These 7 Levers Add Up To

At Daniks, over 4 years, combining these optimizations saved roughly $0.80-$1.40 per unit in FBA shipping fees. On a product with a $39.99 sale price, that is 2-3 additional margin percentage points, more than most sellers ever recover through PPC optimization alone.

Priority order by effort vs. impact:

  1. Avoid long-term storage (immediate effect, no investment)
  2. Enable SIOC (1-2 weeks setup, permanent savings)
  3. Check size tiers (one packaging update at next shipment)
  4. Distribute inbound to 4-6 warehouses (a single setting change, 5 minutes)
  5. Check Low-Price FBA eligibility (5-minute audit)
  6. Switch bundles to physical (adjust at next shipment)
  7. Label printer ($250 investment, one-time)

For the full context on all FBA costs, see the Amazon FBA startup costs 2026 article.

If you have questions about a specific optimization, reach out through my contact form.

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Ekaterina Rubtcova — Amazon seller, founder of the Daniks cookware brand and Daniks.AI

Ekaterina Rubtcova

Amazon seller since 2018 · Founder of Daniks cookware · Founder of Daniks.AI

My Daniks cookware reached Top-1 in Germany and is currently Top-20 in the USA. To run its PPC I built Daniks.AI — now used by hundreds of Amazon brands. On this blog I share how I actually operate, no courses, no upsells.

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