
If you ship your own orders (FBM) to avoid FBA fees, you likely enjoyed the control it gave you over returns—especially for expensive products.Amazon has decided that "Customer Consistency" matters more than "Seller Control."Effective February 8, 2026, the High-Value Return Exemption is eliminated.Combined with a tighter refund window starting January 26, 2026, FBM sellers are about to face the same "Auto-Return" reality that FBA sellers have dealt with for years.
Previously, if an item was over ~$100, you could handle the return manually. You could send your own insured FedEx label.Now, Amazon generates a UPS or USPS label automatically.
Amazon's PR says they are "reducing the refund cycle to 7 days."But the rule that affects you is the 4 Calendar Day processing window (formerly 2 business days).
Note: "Calendar Days" includes weekends. If a return arrives on Friday, your deadline is Tuesday.
Check your catalog. If you sell in these categories, you can breathe a sigh of relief (for now):
You can no longer prevent the return. You can only defend your money after it arrives.
Create a specific area in your warehouse for FBM returns. Do not mix them with general inventory.
You need Proof of Condition.
Pro Tip: If the serial number doesn't match what you shipped, DO NOT REFUND. File a SAFE-T claim immediately for "Materially Different Item."
If the item is opened, used, or damaged, you are entitled to charge a restocking fee (usually 20-50%). You must apply this within the 4-day window. If you wait for the auto-refund, you lose this right.
Control is gone. Compliance is everything.Book a 20-min session with Big Internet Ecommerce (BIE) today!Follow Big Internet Ecommerce (BIE) on Instagram&LinkedIn to stay updated with the latest trends in Amazon selling.