Amazon’s Reference Pricing Crackdown: The Strike-Through Era Is Getting Harder to Game
Amazon is closing one of the most widely used conversion tactics on the platform. Starting April 23, 2026, the rules around reference pricing are changing in ways that will force many sellers to rethink how they display discounts — and for some, that change will hit hard.
This is not a minor policy clarification. It is a structural shift in how Amazon validates the prices that appear crossed out on product pages. If your listings rely on strike-through pricing to communicate value to shoppers, the window to get this right is already open.
What Amazon Is Actually Changing
There are two separate updates, rolling out at different times.
The first takes effect on April 23, 2026, and targets the List Price — what most sellers know as the Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Price. To meet Amazon's updated requirements, a List Price must fulfill one of two conditions: either the product must have been sold at that price by another retailer within a recent timeframe, or it must have been purchased on Amazon as the Featured Offer at the same price.
What that rules out is a List Price that exists only on paper. A figure you entered into Seller Central months ago and never actually sold at — or that no other retailer has ever charged — will no longer qualify. If Amazon cannot verify it, it will not display it.
The second update lands on May 18, 2026, and changes how Typical Price is calculated. Under current rules, Typical Price reflects the median non-promotional price customers paid for a product over the past 90 days, excluding promotional sales. Starting May 18, this exclusion will no longer apply automatically. If a product's Featured Offer price is below its non-promotional median for more than half of a 90-day period, Amazon will include all sales — promotional and non-promotional — in its Typical Price calculation.
In practical terms, sellers running prolonged discounts or price campaigns for more than 45 days within the 90-day window may see their Typical Price recalibrated downward, potentially eliminating the strike-through pricing used to attract customers.
Why Amazon Is Doing This
Amazon has linked these reference pricing updates to its Price History Graph, which is visible on product detail pages. The graph records the lowest Featured Offer price each day, offering shoppers a transparent view of a product's pricing history. The message is clear: reference prices need to reflect reality, not just support a discount narrative.
Under previous conventions, sellers could submit a List Price that served primarily as a reference point for discount percentages rather than as a price at which actual transactions occurred. That approach is now being closed off directly.
This also fits a broader pattern. Amazon ended FBA commingling on March 31, restructuring inventory accountability across its fulfillment network. Each of these changes moves in a consistent direction: greater specificity, more granular accountability, and less operational latitude for sellers who have relied on platform flexibility.
What This Means for Conversions and Advertising
Strike-through pricing works because it gives shoppers a reference point. When the crossed-out number disappears, the perceived value of the deal weakens with it. For listings that have been built around a prominent discount display, this is a conversion problem — not just a compliance one.
From the advertising side, campaigns built around promoted product listings that display meaningful savings percentages will need re-evaluation if the underlying reference prices are invalidated. A Sponsored Products campaign driving traffic to a product that no longer shows a reference price will convert at a lower rate, increasing effective cost per acquisition without any change to bid strategy or keyword targeting.
That is a real cost that does not show up in your bid data — but will show up in your ACOS.
What Brands Should Review Now
There are several things worth auditing before April 23 arrives.
Check which of your ASINs currently display a List Price or strike-through, and verify whether that List Price is substantiated — either by real Amazon sales history at that price or by verifiable pricing at another retailer. If neither exists, the display will be removed.
Review your promotional calendar against the 90-day pricing window. Amazon will only display a suggested List Price if it follows Amazon pricing policies and meets the necessary savings threshold. If Amazon identifies an inflated List Price, not only will the display be disabled, but your account may be flagged for a violation of Amazon policy.
Think carefully about how long your discounts run. Under the new Typical Price rules, a deal that runs for more than half of any 90-day window effectively becomes your new baseline. Running a permanent promotion is no longer a way to show savings — it becomes the price itself.
The Bigger Point
For years, inflated reference prices were a relatively low-risk way to make a discount look more meaningful than it was. That approach is not going away entirely, but it is getting much harder to sustain without real pricing evidence behind it.
The brands that will navigate this best are the ones that build a genuine pricing strategy — not just promotion mechanics. That means understanding your price history by ASIN, being deliberate about when and how long you run discounts, and ensuring your List Price reflects something a customer could actually verify if they checked.
Amazon is not just enforcing a policy here. It is changing what a discount means on its platform.
For sellers who have relied on strike-through pricing to drive conversions, this is one of the more important operational changes of the year. The deadlines are closing, and the review work needs to start now.
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Author: Oleksandr Kovalov
Founder & CEO @ ANavigator
— The ANavigator Team
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