Setting up Amazon repricing correctly is the difference between a tool that makes you money and one that loses it. Too aggressive, and you'll destroy your margins. Too conservative, and you'll lose the Buy Box to competitors.
This guide walks you through every repricing setting, explains the optimal values for different scenarios, and shows you how to configure Ecommerce Ops Suite for maximum profit.
Understanding Repricing Settings
Before diving into specific settings, it's crucial to understand the relationship between them. Amazon repricing settings work as a systemβchange one, and it affects how others perform.
Core Setting Categories
Floor and Ceiling Prices
The floor and ceiling prices are your most critical settings. They define the boundaries within which all repricing occurs. Get these wrong, and no amount of strategy will save your profit margins.
Price Range Visualization
How to Calculate Your Floor Price
Minimum Viable Floor Price
Example calculation for a product with $12 cost:
| Cost Component | Amount |
|---|---|
| Product Cost | $12.00 |
| Referral Fee (15%) | $4.50 |
| FBA Fulfillment | $3.22 |
| Storage (estimated) | $0.40 |
| Total Cost Basis | $20.12 |
| Minimum Margin (10%) | $2.01 |
| Minimum Floor Price | $22.13 |
β οΈ Common Mistake: Floor Too Low
Many sellers set their floor based on competitor prices rather than their actual costs. This leads to winning the Buy Box on products you literally lose money on. Always calculate your floor based on costs first, then consider competitors.
How to Set Your Ceiling Price
The ceiling price is your "price ceiling" that prevents repricing from going too high. Set it strategically, not just as a safety measure.
| Strategy | Ceiling Formula | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Aggressive | Current Price Γ 1.05 | High-volume commodities |
| Balanced | Current Price Γ 1.15 | Most standard products |
| Conservative | Current Price Γ 1.25 | Specialty products, low competition |
| Dynamic | Based on competitor ceiling | Highly volatile categories |
Repricing Strategy Types
Different strategies work better for different product types and competitive situations. Here's how to choose and configure the right one:
π― Competitive Matching
Automatically matches the lowest competitor price plus a small buffer. Prioritizes Buy Box share over margin.
β Maximum Buy Box share
β Lower margins in competitive markets
π‘οΈ Floor Protection
Matches competitors but never goes below your floor price. Guarantees margin but may lose Buy Box.
β Guaranteed minimum profit
β May lose Buy Box to lower-priced competitors
π Tiered Pricing
Different strategies based on number of competitors. Conservative when few rivals, aggressive when many.
β Balances margin and competitiveness
β More complex configuration
β° Time-Based
Different prices at different times of day/week. More aggressive during peak hours.
β Optimize for buyer activity peaks
β Requires understanding of market patterns
Configuration Rules
Update Frequency Settings
| Frequency | Pros | Cons | Recommended For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Every 5 minutes | Most competitive | High API usage, price fluctuation | Fast-moving, highly competitive |
| Every 15 minutes | Good balance | May miss rapid changes | Standard products (recommended) |
| Every 30 minutes | Stable prices | Slow to react | Less competitive categories |
| Every hour | Minimal fluctuation | Likely to lose Buy Box | Low-competition niche products |
Competitor Filters
Rating Filter
Exclude competitors with poor ratings from your repricing calculations. Low-rated sellers are often unreliable.
Fulfillment Filter
Decide how to treat FBM sellers vs FBA sellers. FBA gives you an advantage, but FBM can undercut you significantly.
Volume Filter
Consider competitor sales volume. High-volume sellers are more serious threats than occasional sellers.
Pre-Launch Configuration Checklist
Before You Enable Repricing
- Calculate accurate floor prices for every SKU based on actual costs, not competitor prices
- Set strategic ceiling prices based on market research and value perception
- Choose the right repricing strategy for each product category
- Configure competitor filters (rating minimum, fulfillment type)
- Set appropriate update frequency based on product velocity
- Enable floor price protection to prevent unprofitable sales
- Test in "shadow mode" before going live to verify settings
- Set up price change alerts to notify you of significant adjustments
- Review first-week performance daily to catch any misconfigurations
- Document all settings so you can replicate success on new products
Common Configuration Mistakes
Mistake #1: Floor Set Below Cost
This is the most dangerous mistake. When floor prices are set below your cost, repricing can cause you to sell at a loss. Always calculate floor based on costs first.
π΄ Red Flag
If you ever see a sale that makes you wonder "why did we reprice to that price?", your floor is set too low.
Mistake #2: Ceiling Too Close to Floor
When the range between floor and ceiling is too narrow, you have no flexibility to compete. Aim for at least a 30% range between floor and ceiling.
Mistake #3: Ignoring Update Frequency
Selling fast-moving products with hourly updates is a recipe for losing the Buy Box. Match your update frequency to your product's competitive environment.
Mistake #4: No Exception Handling
Some products need special treatment: bundle deals, products near PPC campaigns, or items with MAP (Minimum Advertised Price) requirements.
Mistake #5: Forgetting to Review
Markets change. What worked 6 months ago may not work today. Review your repricing settings monthly and after any major market changes.