When Fees Become Friction: What Amazon India’s Zero Referral Fees Move Means for CX Leaders
Imagine a small seller in Hubballi.
She sources sarees from local weavers. Margins are thin. Ads are expensive. Logistics feels unpredictable. One fee tweak can decide survival.
Now imagine that 70% of her selling fees vanish overnight.
That is the strategic shift announced by Amazon India on March 2, 2026.
The marketplace expanded Zero Referral Fees from 1.2 crore products in 2025 to over 12.5 crore products in 2026. The benefit applies to products priced under ₹1,000 across 1,800+ categories. Easy Ship fees for products under ₹300 drop by over 20%. Multi-unit shipments unlock 90%+ savings on the second unit.
This is not just a seller story.
It is a CX and EX transformation play.
Let’s unpack why.
In short: It removes referral fees on low-priced products to unlock seller growth, pricing agility, and customer value.
This shift expands fee-free coverage more than 10x year-on-year. The revised structure goes live on March 16, 2026. Sellers can save up to 70% in fees depending on category and fulfilment mode.
But the deeper story sits beneath pricing.
It addresses three systemic CX challenges:
Amit Nanda, Director, Selling Partner Services at Amazon India, framed it clearly. The goal is to make selling “more lucrative and simpler,” especially for small businesses.
That language signals a shift from transactional marketplace to ecosystem enabler.
Short answer: Lower seller costs enable sharper pricing, better assortment, and reinvestment into visibility and service.
Consider the math:
Those numbers reshape behaviour.
Ashish Agarwal, Co-Founder of Earthen Story, called last year’s fee cuts “rocket fuel.” His business saw 50% growth after low-priced SKUs became profitable.
For CX leaders, this proves a critical lesson:
When sellers breathe easier, customers feel it in price, availability, and service consistency.
Let’s apply a structured lens useful for CX/EX leaders.
| Layer | What Amazon Did | CX Impact | EX Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cost Structure | Eliminated referral fees under ₹1,000 | Lower end-price | Higher profitability |
| Logistics | Reduced Easy Ship fees under ₹300 | Faster, local fulfilment | Lower upfront risk |
| Incentives | 90%+ second-unit savings | Basket expansion | Margin leverage |
| Category Breadth | 1,800+ categories covered | Greater assortment | Reduced experimentation fear |
This aligns three stakeholders:
Most marketplaces optimize for two. Amazon is optimizing all three.
Because entry barriers shape experience outcomes.
India’s e-commerce growth is no longer metro-led. Smaller cities drive the next demand wave.
When sellers in Jaipur or Coimbatore can:
They can experiment safely.
That experimentation increases hyperlocal inventory depth. More depth means higher findability. Higher findability drives customer trust.
This explains the reported 50% YoY growth in new sellers joining Amazon.in.
More sellers mean more supply diversity. More diversity strengthens customer stickiness.
Low-margin sellers often exit marketplaces. That causes assortment gaps. Gaps break the customer journey.
Fee relief stabilizes SKU continuity.
Lower fees allow sellers to reinvest in ads. Better ad spend fuels AI-driven recommendations.
Better recommendations improve search-to-cart journeys.
Often, finance and CX operate separately. Fee strategy sits in finance. Experience sits in CX.
Amazon merges both.
That alignment is what advanced CX organizations must emulate.
Here’s the strategic translation.
Even strong strategies can misfire.
Pitfall 1: Over-indexing on price alone.
Lower fees must not degrade quality screening.
Pitfall 2: Ignoring operational scalability.
Seller surge without logistics readiness hurts delivery SLAs.
Pitfall 3: Not measuring downstream outcomes.
Track repeat purchase rate, not just seller sign-ups.
This move reflects a mature marketplace strategy.
It is not a discount campaign. It is structural realignment.
Platforms sacrifice short-term fee revenue but gain higher GMV, seller retention, and basket expansion.
Not automatically. It depends on seller behaviour and competitive pressure.
Track price perception, repeat purchase rate, seller retention, and category depth.
Only if operational efficiencies offset lost fees.
Flexible fulfilment lowers seller risk and improves delivery reliability.
Amazon India removed referral fees on over 12.5 crore products under ₹1,000 across 1,800+ categories to Zero Referral Fees. Sellers can save up to 70% in fees. Easy Ship costs fall 20% for products under ₹300. Multi-unit shipments unlock 90%+ savings on second units. The move aims to empower Tier 2 and Tier 3 sellers and strengthen price competitiveness.
Amazon India’s fee reset signals a deeper truth.
In modern marketplaces, experience begins with economics.
And the platforms that understand that will win the next growth decade.
The post Zero Referral Fees: How Amazon India’s 2026 Move Reshapes CX, Seller Economics & Marketplace Growth appeared first on CX Quest.


