
15 Jun 2026
ANavigator Weekly Amazon Digest — Week 24
A busy week on Amazon and beyond. Title character limits are changing, a new AI disclosure law is now in effect, Sponsored Product Video was auto-enabled without warning, and Amazon shared data on Alexa for Shopping that points to where advertising is heading next. Here is what happened and what it means.
📌 Contents:
- Amazon product titles cut to 75 characters — new global policy incoming
- New York’s AI performer disclosure law is live — and it affects your ads
- Sponsored Product Video is auto-enabled across accounts
- Amazon AI content disclosure is now required in A+ Content
- Amazon’s Alexa for Shopping is becoming an ads channel
- Amazon expands return options — exchanges before the item is received back
- OpenAI adds product feeds to ChatGPT Ads Manager
- New bulk sheet feature for off-Amazon spend control
- Amazon Coupon Dashboard gets a redesign
1. Amazon product titles cut to 75 characters — new global policy incoming
Amazon’s new global title policy takes effect June 15, 2026, limiting product titles to 75 characters across marketplaces, including the EU. A new “Item Highlights” field will appear below the title in search results and will accept up to 125 characters. Total indexable content stays at 200 characters — split into two fields rather than reduced. New listings must comply with the rules from June 15. Existing listings have a grace period until July 18, 2026. After that, Amazon will generate AI-recommended titles for non-compliant listings, with a 14-day window to review, edit, or accept them. CDQ score penalties may follow a 60-90-day grace period. For large catalogs, the immediate priority is deciding what belongs in the first 75 characters and what moves to Item Highlights.
Read more here by Trutz Fries

2. New York’s AI performer disclosure law is live — and it affects your ads
New York’s synthetic performer law went into effect on June 9, 2026. Any ad showing an AI-generated person requires a disclosure if someone in New York can see it. Jurisdiction is based on viewer location, not brand location. Sponsored Brands video, DSP, and streaming ads are all covered. Liability sits with the brand, not Amazon or the agency. If a creative vendor used an AI model without flagging it, the brand is still responsible. Fines start at $1,000 for a first violation and $5,000 after that. AI backgrounds, AI product images, and AI-written copy are not covered — only AI-generated humans trigger the requirement. The immediate step is to pull active creatives and check for AI-generated people.
Read more here by Oleksandr Kovalov

3. Sponsored Product Video auto-enabled across accounts
Amazon automatically enabled Sponsored Product Video over the weekend for any account with an existing video creative. SPV is mobile-only, and Amazon’s 2025 data puts its average CTR around 9% higher than static images. The format is worth using — the problem is what came with it. Amazon auto-filled titles and descriptions, and much of that copy does not meet spec. Title requirements are 3 words / 15 characters. Descriptions are 6 words / 55 characters. Video must be silent, at least 7 seconds, with the product filling more than 50% of the frame. Check your account for auto-enabled SPV campaigns, rewrite the auto-copy, validate your video clips, and submit for approval — it takes 48-72 hours.
Read more here by Andrew Bailiff

4. Amazon AI content disclosure is now required in A+ Content
Amazon has introduced a mandatory disclosure step when uploading media to A+ Content and Brand Stories. Sellers must now identify whether an image is AI-generated or features photorealistic AI-generated people. At this stage, Amazon appears to be collecting this as metadata — no visible label to shoppers has been confirmed on published content. Standard product images are not yet affected. Two AI disclosure updates in one week suggest that Amazon is building the infrastructure for a marketplace where AI-generated content is the norm. More requirements in this area are likely to follow.
Read more here by Yassine E.

5. Amazon’s Alexa for Shopping is becoming an ads channel
Amazon has published data showing that nearly 20% of shoppers who interact with an Alexa prompt continue the conversation about that brand. That retention rate matters because Amazon is surfacing the prompts itself — shoppers do not need to initiate the conversation from scratch. The structural advantage Amazon has in this space is its history as an ads platform first: years of purchase behavior data across devices, streaming, voice, and the marketplace. Building a personalized prompt experience through Alexa for Shopping is a different problem than building a personalized ads experience from scratch across multiple surfaces. The next development to watch is how paid and organic prompts begin to work together within the Alexa for Shopping experience.
Read more here by Christian Rich

6. Amazon expands return options — exchanges before the item is received back
Amazon now allows customers to exchange a returned item for a completely different product, with the replacement shipping before the original is received back. Previously, exchanges were limited to the same product. The change in positions returns as a revenue retention channel rather than a pure logistics cost. Brands that currently treat returns as a back-office process may want to revisit how return resolution options affect conversion rates, customer loyalty, and lifetime value metrics.
Read more here by Joseph Wyatt

7. OpenAI adds product feeds to ChatGPT Ads Manager
Products can now appear inside ChatGPT answers when users ask what to buy. The feed format is not a direct export from Google Shopping — it requires specific fields that Google never asks for, including seller identity and per-product discovery and purchase permissions. Product titles get cut short in display, so the words that drive purchase decisions need to come first. Currently, the full catalog is replaced on each update rather than syncing only changes. The experience is still early, but sellers of physical products whose customers are beginning to research on ChatGPT have a reason to set up a feed now.
Read more here by Matjaz Brumen

8. New bulk sheet feature for off-Amazon spend control
Amazon Ads has introduced a new bulk sheet feature for controlling off-Amazon spend. The update brings off-Amazon spend into the same bulk management workflow used for standard campaigns, allowing advertisers to adjust and control budgets at scale without manually editing individual campaign settings. For teams managing larger catalogs or multi-channel strategies, this reduces the manual effort required to keep off-Amazon spend aligned with overall campaign goals. Check the bulk sheet section in your Amazon Ads console for the new options.
Read more here by Alexander Swade

9. Amazon Coupon Dashboard gets a redesign
Amazon has updated the Coupon Dashboard in Seller Central. The redesign is described as cleaner and easier to navigate. No functional changes have been confirmed — this appears to be a UI update consistent with Amazon’s ongoing improvements to the seller experience. If you use coupons as part of your promotions strategy, log in to review the new interface.
Read more here by Abdul Hasib

Week 24 covered a wide range of topics, from title policy deadlines and a new legal requirement to auto-enabled ad formats and the early shape of Amazon’s agentic advertising future. Subscribe to the ANavigator Weekly Amazon Digest to stay on top of what changes each week before it affects your account.
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