
18 Mar 2026
ANavigator Weekly Amazon Digest | Week 11
Each week, we break down the most important Amazon updates and explain what they mean for brands and sellers – across advertising, AI, operations, shipping, and platform strategy.
Week 11 shows how Amazon keeps moving toward a more automated and more connected commerce environment.
Here’s what changed.
Weekly Highlights
- Prime Day may move to June in 2026
- Sponsored Prompts go fully live in the U.S.
- Amazon expands Shop Direct beyond the marketplace
- SP-API metered fees are delayed until later in 2026
- Amazon ends price-banded shipping rates on March 24
- New AI campaign summaries arrive in Ads Console
1. Prime Day may move to June in 2026
Bloomberg reports that Amazon plans to move Prime Day from July to June in 2026.
If confirmed, this would shift one of Amazon’s biggest sales events earlier into Q2 and change the timing of summer promotions, inventory planning, and ad budgets.
This matters because Prime Day affects much more than one promotion window. Brands may need to prepare deals, stock, and campaigns earlier than usual.
It also shows rising pressure from Walmart and Target during the same period.
At the time of writing, there is still no formal confirmation from Amazon Retail teams. But for brands, this is already worth treating as a planning signal.
Read more here by Martin Heubel

2. Sponsored Prompts go fully live in the U.S.
Amazon Sponsored Prompts are moving out of beta, with general availability and billing starting March 25 in the U.S.
This turns AI-led shopper conversations into a paid ad placement inside Amazon’s ecosystem.
The feature is being rolled out by default, which makes it more than a limited test. It shows Amazon is starting to monetize visibility inside AI-driven shopping experiences.
For advertisers, this creates new questions around placement, control, budget, and performance measurement.
The bigger takeaway is clear: Amazon is building more ad inventory inside the decision-making layer, not only in search results.
Read more here by Andri Sadlak

3. Amazon expands Shop Direct beyond the marketplace
Amazon has officially launched Shop Direct, showing products not currently sold in Amazon’s own store when customers search.
This expands Amazon’s role from marketplaceoperator to a broader shopping discovery platform.
Instead of only showing marketplace listings, Amazon can now surface products from external merchant sites. That changes how product discovery works inside the Amazon ecosystem.
It also raises control questions, as some merchants were previously included without clear consent.
Amazon now says merchants can participate, optimize their presence, or opt out of the program.
For brands, the message is simple: product visibility is starting to matter beyond Amazon listings alone.
Read more here by Jon Derkits

4. SP-API metered fees are delayed until later in 2026
Amazon has delayed the new SP-API fee structure until later this year, tentatively Fall 2026.
This matters because the proposed pricing model could significantly increase costs for large-scale API users.
The issue is not only the fee itself. API limits, smaller data batches, and error-related retries can quickly increase total usage volume.
For agencies, software providers, and businesses managing large catalogs, this remains an important cost and infrastructure topic.
The delay gives more time, but it does not remove the underlying problem.
Read more here by Andrew Hamada

5. Amazon ends price-banded shipping rates on March 24
Starting March 24, 2026, Amazon sellers will no longer be able to use price-banded shipping rates.
Shipping templates will move to either per-item and weight-based rates or weight-tiered models.
For accounts that are not updated manually, Amazon will automatically migrate them and apply default rates.
This is a meaningful change for seller-fulfilled shipping setups. If default settings do not match real shipping costs, margins can be affected.
Brands using seller-fulfilled shipping should review their templates before the deadline.
Read more here by Daniel Sodkiewicz

6. New AI campaign summaries arrive in Ads Console
Amazon has launched AI-generated summaries inside campaigns in the Ads Console.
The feature reviews keyword and placement trends, visibility, and return, then generates a short conclusion with a suggested action.
This shows Amazon’s direction clearly: more built-in AI guidance inside daily ad management.
Early feedback suggests the summaries are still surface-level and do not replace real campaign analysis. They may help spot trends faster, but deeper optimization still needs human review.
For brands and agencies, this is useful as a quick signal, not as a final decision tool.
Read more here by Alexander Swade

Amazon continues to move toward a more automated, more AI-led, and more connected commerce environment.
Retail events may shift earlier.
AI placements are becoming monetized inventory.
Product discovery is moving beyond the marketplace.
And campaign management is getting more built-in AI support.
Brands that stay close to event timing, product data, operations, and advertising changes will be in a stronger position as these systems keep evolving.
If you want to stay updated on Amazon changes, subscribe to our blog.
If you need support with PPC, DSP, AMC, analytics, or a long-term growth strategy, contact the ANavigator team at info@anavigator.co
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Author: Oleksandr Kovalov
Role: Founder & CEO @ ANavigator
— The ANavigator Team


