Amazon agencies charge between $1,500 and $25,000+ per month in 2026. The range is wide because the work is not the same at different revenue levels.
This guide breaks down what agencies actually charge, what's included at each price point, which pricing model matches incentives correctly, and when the math doesn't work.
How this was validated:
- Analysis of published agency pricing, contracts, and scope-of-work documents across 20+ Amazon agencies in 2026
- Review of seller community discussions on Reddit, Seller Central forums, and third-party agency review platforms
- Interviews and firsthand accounts from brand operators who have hired, switched, or exited Amazon agency relationships
Transparency note: one of the agencies referenced in this guide is our own. It's flagged where relevant so readers can weigh it accordingly.
Every section gives a number, a framework, or a specific decision rule. No hedging.
Amazon agency pricing at a glance
Tier | Monthly Range | Best For | Core Services Included |
Entry | $1,500–$3,000 | New brands, sub-$250K/year revenue | Basic listing optimization, light PPC management, monthly reporting |
Mid-Market | $3,000–$7,500 | Established brands, $250K–$2M/year | Dedicated account manager, full PPC, content updates, bi-weekly calls |
Full-Service | $7,500–$15,000 | Scaling brands, $2M–$10M/year | PPC + DSP, creative production, brand protection, supply chain support |
Enterprise | $15,000–$25,000+ | $10M+/year, multi-marketplace | Full team, custom strategy, international expansion, compliance, executive reporting |
When should you not hire an Amazon agency?
Most articles skip this part. Here it is: below certain revenue and margin thresholds, agency fees consume more than they generate. The math doesn't lie.
- Revenue under $100K/year: An entry-tier agency at $1,500/month costs $18,000/year, that's 18% of gross revenue before the agency has done anything
- Gross margin below 15%: Agency fees come from margin improvement or incremental revenue; if margin is already thin, there's no room for an agency to generate enough lift to justify the cost
- Single-SKU catalog: One product doesn't create the operational complexity agencies are built to solve, hire a consultant or fractional specialist instead
- Timeline under 90 days: Agencies need 3–6 months to show meaningful lift; if your window is shorter, the problem is cash flow or product-market fit, not channel management
If you're doing $500K+/year on Amazon with 20%+ gross margin and a multi-SKU catalog, an agency is worth the conversation.
What are the four Amazon agency pricing models?
The pricing model matters as much as the dollar amount. Each structure creates a different incentive, and some of those incentives work against you.
Model | How It Works | When It Makes Sense | The Catch |
Flat monthly retainer | Fixed fee regardless of spend or revenue | Stable revenue, predictable cost preference | No automatic incentive to grow your account once you're stable |
% of ad spend (10–20%) | Fee tied to monthly Amazon ad budget | Scaling ad spend, PPC-focused engagement | Agency earns more when you spend more, even on unprofitable spend |
% of revenue (3–10%) | Fee tied to total Amazon sales | Strong margin, want agency tied to top-line growth | Doesn't account for margin; growing revenue via unprofitable promotions still earns the agency more |
Hybrid (retainer + performance) | Lower base fee + % of revenue above a threshold | Want predictable base with growth tied to results | Most complex to structure and compare; confirm the threshold is realistic and tied to metrics the agency controls |
For most brands in the $500K–$3M range, flat retainer or hybrid pricing matches incentives better than percentage of ad spend, which rewards budget growth over efficiency.
What's actually included at each price point?
Tiers aren't just about how much you pay. They reflect how much operational complexity the agency is taking on, and what they'll bill you extra for.
$1,500–$3,000/month, Entry tier
This work is typically delivered by junior or offshore staff under light supervision, covering a narrow set of services focused on ad operations and basic content hygiene. Creative, advanced advertising, and proactive strategy are excluded by default.
What's included | What's NOT included |
Listing optimization (title, bullets, back-end keywords) | A+ Content or Brand Store design |
Basic PPC campaign setup (Sponsored Products, Sponsored Brands) | Product photography |
Monthly reporting via email | Amazon DSP |
Email support | Proactive account health monitoring |
Phone or Slack access to senior strategists |
$3,000–$7,500/month, Mid-market tier
This tier adds a dedicated account manager, weekly PPC optimization, and bi-weekly strategy calls. Creative production and DSP are still typically billed separately.
What's included | What's NOT included |
Dedicated account manager | Photography and video production |
Full PPC with weekly optimizations | Brand Store builds |
Listing updates based on keyword and competitive data | Amazon DSP |
Bi-weekly strategy calls | Supply chain or inventory support |
Account health monitoring | International marketplace management |
Performance reporting with analysis |
$7,500–$15,000/month, Full-service tier
At this level, the agency manages the full Amazon operation, not just ads and listings. Creative production, supply chain coordination, and brand protection become standard parts of the scope.
What's included | What's NOT included |
Full PPC + Amazon DSP | Large-scale photography shoots |
A+ Content and Brand Store production | International marketplace expansion |
Basic creative production (infographics, short video) | Advanced compliance work for regulated categories |
Supply chain coordination | |
Brand protection (MAP enforcement, unauthorized seller monitoring) | |
Promotions strategy | |
Weekly calls and Slack access |
$15,000–$25,000+/month, Enterprise tier
Enterprise engagements function as a full internal team replacement. Brands at this tier typically operate above $10M/year on Amazon across multiple marketplaces. Agencies field dedicated senior account strategists, PPC and DSP specialists, creative directors, and data analysts working as an integrated extension of the client's e-commerce organization. Services include multi-region marketplace management, custom reporting dashboards, compliance work for regulated categories, cross-border inventory coordination, and quarterly executive business reviews tied into broader omni-channel strategy.
What hidden costs inflate your agency bill?
Agencies advertise the retainer. They don't always surface the costs that stack on top, ask about all of these before signing.
Cost Item | Typical Range | When It Applies |
Onboarding / setup fee | $1,000–$5,000 (one-time) | Almost universal, sometimes waived on 12-month contracts |
Product photography | $200–$800 per ASIN | Entry and mid-market tiers, billed per project |
A+ Content design | $300–$1,000 per module set | Below full-service tier |
Brand Store build | $2,000–$8,000 | Any tier without creative bundle |
Video production | $1,000–$5,000 per video | All tiers unless explicitly included |
Tool / software pass-through | $200–$2,000/month | Varies, some agencies absorb, others pass through |
International marketplace add-on | +30–50% per marketplace | Any expansion beyond the primary market |
Early termination penalty | 1–3 months retainer | Common on 6- or 12-month contracts |
Before signing, request a complete list of what triggers additional invoicing. Any agency that hedges on this question is telling you something.
Agency vs. in-house team, the real cost comparison
The real comparison isn't agency cost vs. nothing. It's agency cost vs. the salary, benefits, tools, and ramp time of an internal team that can do the same work.
Resource | Annual Cost |
Amazon Account Manager (salary + benefits) | $78,000–$117,000 |
PPC Specialist (salary + benefits) | $65,000–$97,500 |
Tools and software | $6,000–$18,000 |
Creative (part-time or freelance) | $12,000–$36,000 |
Total: 2-person internal team | $161,000–$268,500/year ($13,400–$22,375/month) |
Comparable full-service agency | $90,000–$180,000/year ($7,500–$15,000/month) |
In-house makes sense above $15M/year when you can justify a three- to five-person dedicated team with category-specific expertise. Below that threshold, a full-service agency is almost always cheaper for the same depth, and carries no recruitment or retention risk.
Which contract clauses should you push back on?
Most brands skim contracts and sign. These specific clauses are the ones that cost money or limit access after the relationship ends.
Clause | What to Watch For | What to Negotiate Instead |
Creative ownership | "All creative assets remain the property of [Agency]" | "Client retains ownership upon full payment; agency retains portfolio usage rights only" |
Data access post-termination | 30-day window to export campaign data from proprietary dashboard | "Client retains full data access in portable format with no time limit upon termination" |
Performance guarantees | Specific revenue or ACoS guarantees in writing | Mutually agreed quarterly KPI targets based on category benchmarks, not outcome guarantees |
Exclusivity | "Client will not engage any other Amazon marketing provider during the term" | Right to engage specialists for services outside the agency's defined scope |
Reporting scope | No specified KPIs, format, or frequency | Named KPIs (revenue, ACoS, TACoS, CVR, organic rank), delivery frequency, and analysis requirement, not raw data only |
Auto-renewal | Renews unless cancelled 60–90 days before term end | 30-day cancellation notice after the first contract term |
How do you decide what to pay an Amazon agency?
Before evaluating individual agencies, anchor on the revenue tier your current scale actually justifies. That number becomes your filter, not the other way around.
Annual Amazon Revenue | Realistic Monthly Budget | Tier |
Under $100K | Don't hire an agency yet | N/A |
$100K–$250K | $1,500–$2,500 | Entry |
$250K–$1M | $2,500–$5,000 | Mid-market (lower |
$1M–$3M | $5,000–$8,000 | Mid-market (upper) |
$3M–$10M | $8,000–$15,000 | Full-service |
$10M+ | $15,000–$25,000+ | Enterprise |
A good agency should generate at least 3x its monthly fee in incremental gross profit, not revenue, profit, within the first six months. That's the benchmark worth tracking.
Agency fees should sit between 2–5% of your Amazon revenue. Above 5%, the math requires a strong case and a clear plan to get there.
Factors to consider when evaluating Amazon agency pricing
Does the pricing model match your incentives?
The model structure determines whether the agency benefits when you benefit. Percentage of ad spend directly incentivizes budget growth, the agency earns more when you spend more, regardless of whether that spend is profitable. Flat retainer and hybrid models are more neutral relative to your margin and don't automatically reward inefficiency. For Amazon Ads Management Services, understanding this distinction before signing matters more than haggling over the base fee.
What's bundled vs. billed separately?
Two agencies quoting the same monthly retainer can produce entirely different total costs depending on how creative production, DSP management, onboarding fees, and tool access are handled outside the base fee. Get the full scope in writing.
How many accounts does your account manager handle?
An account manager handling 30+ brands simultaneously delivers a different level of attention than one capped at seven to ten. Ask directly: how many active accounts does your account manager currently manage? If the agency hesitates to answer, that tells you something about what you're actually buying.
Does the agency have category-specific experience?
Regulated categories, supplements, beauty, electronics, food, require compliance expertise that standard agencies don't have. Paying mid-market rates for an agency without that background is a false economy if it leads to listing removals or policy violations.
Who owns your data and creative assets after the relationship ends?
If the agency owns your creative assets and controls your campaign data inside a proprietary dashboard, switching costs significantly more than the termination fee alone. Factor in the cost of rebuilding assets and reconstructing campaign history when comparing total cost of ownership across competing proposals.




