Amazon Is Cutting Fees in Europe for 2026. Here’s What Sellers Should Actually Pay Attention To.
Every year around this time, Amazon releases its annual fee update.
Most sellers skim the headline, look for whether fees are up or down, and move on.
That is usually a mistake.
The 2026 European Referral and Fulfillment by Amazon fee update is one of those changes that looks straightforward on the surface, but carries much bigger implications depending on how you sell, what categories you operate in, and whether you understand how Amazon is shaping seller behavior long term.
Yes, fees are going down on average. But the details matter more than the headline.
The headline everyone will repeat
Amazon is reducing fees by an average of £0.15 or €0.17 per unit sold across Europe in 2026.
That is meaningful at scale, especially for high-volume sellers.
But averages hide tradeoffs. Some sellers will benefit significantly. Others may see only marginal gains or even small increases depending on their category mix, pricing strategy, and inventory profile.
This update is less about generosity and more about optimization.
Why Amazon is doing this now
Amazon is framing this as the result of years of operational improvements, lower cost to serve, and fulfillment network optimization.
That is partly true.
But there is another layer here. Amazon is continuing a pattern we have seen globally, including in the U.S.: Lower fees where they want sellers to grow, higher fees where they want sellers to be more disciplined.
This is not random.

Where sellers actually win in 2026
Parcel FBA fee reductions in major EU markets
Amazon is further reducing FBA fulfillment fees for parcels in the UK, Germany, France, Italy, and Spain by an average of £0.26 or €0.32 per unit.
For sellers operating at scale in these countries, especially with small to medium parcel sizes, this is real margin relief.
If your business is sensitive to per-unit fulfillment costs, this change alone can materially improve contribution margin without changing pricing.
Low-price FBA just became far more interesting
Amazon is extending reduced Low-price FBA rates to products priced at or below £20 or €20 across most categories.
The average reduction for newly eligible products is £0.40 or €0.45 per unit.
This is not subtle.
Amazon is clearly incentivizing sellers to compete aggressively in the low-price band while keeping fulfillment inside FBA. If you operate in replenishable, impulse, or consumable categories, this should immediately trigger pricing and pack-size discussions.
This is Amazon saying: If you can win under £20 or €20, we will help you do it profitably.

