
10 Jun 2026
Amazon Just Confirmed 75-Character Title Limit. The Deadline Is June 18 — and the Real Work Starts Now.
Last week, we wrote that Amazon may be moving to a 75-character title cap. Now it is confirmed.
Amazon’s official Seller Central policy page, under “Policies for writing listings”, now reads: “Product titles must not have more than 75 characters, including spaces. To add more descriptive features of the product, use Item Highlights (maximum 125 characters).”
That is not a rumor from Vendor Support. That is live policy language on Amazon’s help pages.

What Changed and When
The structure is straightforward. The old single title field — which allowed up to 200 characters in most categories — is being split into two customer-facing fields:
A primary title capped at 75 characters, and a new “Item Highlights” field below the title in search results and on the product detail page, accepting up to 125 characters. Total indexable content stays at 200 — just distributed across two fields rather than one.
The timeline being reported is based on Amazon help pages and Vendor Support responses:
New listings must comply with the requirements from June 15, 2026. Existing listings have a grace period until July 18. After that, Amazon may provide AI-generated title suggestions for listings that still exceed 75 characters. Sellers get 14 days to review, edit, or accept those suggestions. No immediate suppressions are planned — but CDQ score penalties are expected to follow within 60 to 90 days for non-compliant listings.
The June 18 date circulating in seller communities appears to be the practical compliance target for existing listings, with July 18 as the outer boundary before AI-assisted enforcement begins.
Why Amazon Is Making This Change
This did not come from nowhere. Amazon has been signaling this direction for over a year.
Mobile shoppers only see the first 70 to 80 characters of any title, regardless of category. Most brands have been writing titles of 150 to 200 characters, the majority of which were invisible to most shoppers on the device most of them use. The keyword stuffing that filled those extra characters was optimized for an algorithm, not a person.

The second driver is AI. Alexa for Shopping, Cosmo, and Amazon’s recommendation systems need to understand what a product is quickly and clearly. A title that reads “Brand | Supplement Type | Key Benefit | Secondary Benefit | Tertiary Benefit | Count | Flavor | Subscription Option” is not easy for an AI to parse as a clean product identifier. A 75-character title that says “Brand Magnesium Glycinate 400mg – 120 Capsules” is.
The Item Highlights field handles the rest — features, differentiators, use cases — in structured form below the title. The architecture is cleaner for both human shoppers and AI-mediated discovery.
The Real Problem Is Not the Character Count
Editing a title from 150 characters to 75 sounds like a formatting task. For one ASIN it is. For a catalog of hundreds or thousands of ASINs, it is an operational project that requires a decision framework before anyone opens a spreadsheet.
The decision is: what belongs in those first 75 characters?
A working framework that holds across most categories: brand name if it carries search weight, primary product type in plain language, and the single most important differentiator — count, size, key ingredient, compatibility, or use case, depending on what actually drives purchase decisions in your category. Everything else moves to Item Highlights.
The Item Highlights field is not overflow storage. It is a customer-facing content slot that appears below the title in search results. Think of the two fields as answering two different questions: the title answers “what is this,” and Item Highlights answers “why this one.” Both matter for conversion. Both matter for AI-mediated discovery.
Amazon has been enforcing updated title standards since January 2026, pushing sellers toward shorter, cleaner titles and restricting special characters and word repetition. The 75-character cap is the next step in a direction that has been visible for some time. The brands treating it as a surprise are the ones that were not watching.
What to Do Before July 18
Three priorities, in order.
First, pull your full title list by ASIN and flag everything over 75 characters. For most brands with established catalogs, this will be a significant portion of their listings — especially in categories that previously allowed 200 characters. Knowing the scope of the work is the starting point.
Second, build your prioritization framework at the category level before anyone starts editing. Decide what the primary title structure is for each product family — which elements are non-negotiable in 75 characters and which move to Item Highlights. Doing this at the framework level first prevents inconsistent decisions across a large catalog.
Third, draft Item Highlights for your top-traffic ASINs before the field is widely available. The content exists in your current long titles — it just needs to be separated and written as a clear, benefit-focused 125-character statement rather than a string of keywords. Getting that content ready now means you can publish it the moment the field goes live in Seller Central.
For brands with very large catalogs, this is a bulk catalog task that benefits from AI-assisted drafting. Amazon’s own AI will generate title suggestions for non-compliant listings after July 18 — but accepting Amazon’s AI suggestions without review means giving up control over one of the most important ranking and conversion signals on your listings. Better to generate your own versions in advance.
The Bigger Picture
The 75-character title limit, the reference pricing update, the A+ Content Quality Analysis tool, Premium A+ access, and Alexa for Shopping operating inside the main search bar are all part of the same structural shift. Amazon is building a platform where AI mediates more of the shopping journey — and that AI needs clean, structured, accurate listing data to function well.
Keyword-stuffed titles were a workaround for a keyword-matching algorithm. That algorithm is being replaced. Brands that are now restructuring their listing content for clarity and AI-readability are not just complying with a new rule —they are building for the version of Amazon that is already being built.
June 18 is the near-term deadline. July 18 is the enforcement boundary. The content work needed for both starts today.
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Author: Oleksandr Kovalov
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