Cardboard box on a warehouse conveyor belt with a subtle rising cost symbol, representing increasing Amazon fulfilment costs.

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Amazon’s new Fuel Surcharge: A Small Fee with Bigger Implications

Why April’s 1.5% uplift is another signal on rising cost pressure for brands…

Amazon’s new 1.5% fuel and logistics surcharge on FBA fulfilment fees is live, with plans to extend it to Multi-Channel Fulfilment (MCF) in May.

On paper, it’s a relatively modest increase, averaging around £0.05 per unit for many EU FBA products.

But for brands already managing tightening margins?

It’s another incremental cost in a marketplace where these kinds of increments quickly add up.

What’s changed?

A new 1.5% surcharge has been applied across multiple European marketplaces, including the UK, France, Germany, Italy and Spain, with:

  • FBA fees impacted from 17 April 2026.
  • And MCF fees set to follow in May.

Importantly, the charge is applied to fulfilment fees, not product price, so it directly affects brand’s operational costs and, ultimately, their profitability.

Amazon has positioned the move as a response to sustained increases in fuel and logistics costs, aligning with similar surcharges introduced by other carriers.

Why it matters

In isolation, a 1.5% surcharge might not seem significant – but, as we all know, Amazon economics don’t operate in isolation.

When you layer them alongside:

  • Referral fees.
  • Storage costs.
  • Advertising spend.
  • Promotional pressure.
  • And wider operational costs…

Even small increases like these have the potential to erode margin in a meaningful way – adding to the cumulative impact of cost pressures across the entire Amazon model.

The bigger picture: Margin pressure is structural

This update ties directly into a wider trend we’re seeing across Amazon as margins tighten and costs rise.

The thing is that brands are absorbing more of the pressure while still delivering:

  • Competitive pricing.
  • Strong availability.
  • And ongoing growth.

The result is that profitability is becoming harder and harder to sustain, even when a brand’s revenues are increasing.

What brands should be doing now

While this particular surcharge is already in effect, our experts strongly advise that brands take the opportunity now to reassess just how resilient your margin structure really is.

That means:

  • Reviewing per-unit profitability across your whole catalogue.
  • Understanding how fee changes impact your Net PPM.
  • Stress-testing your margins against further cost increases.
  • And identifying where efficiencies can be improved.

Because this is an environment where margin needs to be actively managed – and protected – right at the very core of your strategy.

The Bottom Line

Amazon’s fuel surcharge may be small in percentage terms, but it’s another signal of a broader shift that means brands need to be more commercially disciplined than ever in how they manage their whole whole account.

Because when margins are under pressure, it’s not just about growth – it’s about how much of that growth you can actually keep hold of.

If you’d like support to understand the true profitability of your Amazon business – and to protect your margin however the Amazon landscape shifts – our expert team is here to help.

To get started, click here to book a call today.

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