
3 Feb 2026
Amazon Moves FBA Removal and Disposal Fees to Unit-Level Billing
Amazon is adjusting how FBA removal and disposal fees appear on seller accounts, starting February 15, 2026.
The pricing itself is not changing.
What’s changing is how costs surface and when sellers see them.
Instead of billing removal or disposal fees only after an entire order is completed, Amazon will now apply fees unit by unit, as each item is processed inside the fulfillment network.
This update sits within Amazon’s broader FBA policy and compliance changes and has real implications for inventory visibility, cost attribution, and operational discipline.
What actually changes with FBA removals and disposals
Here’s the practical shift:
• Fees are applied per individual unit, not per completed order
• Charges appear as processing happens, not at the end
• Rate cards and fee amounts stay exactly the same
• Applies to all new removal and disposal orders created from February 15, 2026 onward
• Unit-level charges are visible in Payments → Transaction View
• No configuration or opt-in required
Previously, sellers often waited weeks—or longer—for a single consolidated charge once an order fully cleared Amazon’s systems. Now, charges arrive incrementally.
Why Amazon is changing the billing logic
Amazon frames this as a visibility and transparency update, not a pricing adjustment.
From an operational standpoint, the change aligns removals and disposals with how other FBA activities are already tracked:
• unit-level
• SKU-specific
• time-stamped
Removals have historically been difficult to reconcile, especially when:
• multiple SKUs are included in one order
• inventory sits across several fulfillment centers
• processing timelines stretch over months
Charging per unit reduces that lag and makes costs easier to attribute to the SKUs that caused them.
How removal and disposal fees now surface
The underlying calculation hasn’t changed.
Fees are still determined by:
• product size tier
• shipping weight
What’s different is the billing moment.
Billing mechanics
• Fee type: one-time per unit
• Trigger: when Amazon processes the individual unit
• Structure: per-unit, weight-based
This applies to both:
• removal orders
• disposal orders
Special handling items (such as apparel, shoes, jewelry, or dangerous goods) continue to follow their specific rate tiers.
What this means for inventory management
This update quietly shifts how sellers experience inventory costs.
More granular cost signals
• Fees are no longer delayed until order completion
• Problem SKUs become visible faster
• Cleanup decisions are easier to audit at the unit level
Different cash flow rhythm
• Charges arrive spread out over time
• Payment reports show higher transaction volume
• Finance teams need cleaner reconciliation workflows
For sellers running large catalogs or frequent cleanup cycles, this creates clearer cost attribution — but also removes the comfort of “out of sight” inventory fees.
Strategic implications for brands
This change fits a broader Amazon pattern:
less batching, more real-time accountability.
We’ve already seen this logic applied to:
• returns
• reimbursements
• inventory health metrics
Now removals and disposals follow the same philosophy.
For brands, that means:
• inventory mistakes surface sooner
• slow-moving SKUs get more expensive to ignore
• SKU-level profitability tracking becomes non-optional
The sellers who benefit most are those who already manage inventory as a living system, not as a quarterly cleanup task.
The bigger operational signal
Amazon isn’t just adjusting billing mechanics.
It reinforces a model in whichevery unit tells a story.
Removal and disposal costs are no longer something you review after the fact.
They show up as they happen.
That pushes sellers toward:
• earlier intervention on aging inventory
• tighter forecasting and replenishment logic
• stronger SKU-level accountability
The fees didn’t go up.
But the cost of poor inventory decisions is harder to hide.
If you want analysis focused on how these shifts affect Amazon’s performance, ads, and category dynamics, follow the ANavigator Weekly Amazon Digest or explore deeper breakdowns on anavigator.co.
If you need help with your product or brand,
Contact the ANavigator team by email: info@anavigator.co
We help Amazon brands with PPC, DSP, analytics, and long-term growth decisions.
— The ANavigator Team

