US “Made in USA” Is Trending on Amazon — But Is It Worth Leaning Into?
There’s been a surge in Amazon searches like: “made in USA products only” (+220%), “made in America” (+130%), “American flag made in America” (+250%)
Clearly, shoppers are curious. But curiosity doesn’t equal conversion — at least not yet.
We work with dozens of brands across categories. And while some are seeing upticks in sales when leaning into the “Made in USA” narrative, it’s not consistent enough to call this a universal trend.
What’s Really Driving This?
Two things seem to be colliding:
- Tariffs + geopolitical tension → making imported goods more expensive
- Cultural and consumer shift → shoppers showing more interest in local, ethical, traceable products
But here’s the catch: Amazon is still Amazon. The average customer shops for price and convenience, not patriotism. That’s why the search intent is rising, but the conversion behavior isn’t yet tracking the same way.
So what does that mean for sellers?
What Brands Are Testing
Some smart things we’re seeing (and advising):
- Hero image updates → moving “Made in USA” visuals up to image 1 or 2
- SEO experiments → testing keywords like “Made in America” or even “Not Made in China”
- A/B creative tests → subtle flag visuals vs. bold patriot branding
- Pricing adjustments → seeing if a small premium can hold when paired with domestic manufacturing messaging
For brands that are made in the U.S., this might be the time to test visibility-focused updates. Not to replace your strategy, but to add a layer of relevance to current cultural trends.
But Don’t Build Your Strategy on Sentiment Alone
Here’s where I’d be cautious.
We’ve seen brands rush to reframe their positioning around “Made in USA” only to find that the pricing and margin model can’t support it. Just because shoppers search for it doesn’t mean they’ll pay more for it.
The SmartScout data is exciting — but early. And Amazon still doesn’t make it easy to surface domestic goods (no origin badge, no clear filtering). Until they do, much of this visibility still has to be manually created through image slots, copy, and SEO.
So yes — lean into it if it fits your identity. But don’t build a marketing story that can’t be backed by your unit economics.
My Advice to Brands Right Now:
If you’re already Made in USA, now’s the time to test image updates, titles, and tailored keyword targeting.
If you’re not, don’t fake it, but you can highlight things like ethical sourcing, small-batch production, or regional impact.
Don’t expect patriotism to replace pricing. Even shoppers who love the flag still love Prime and a deal.
We’ll keep watching this space. But like all trends on Amazon: Don’t just react. Test. Track. Decide based on data, not headlines.

