Every dollar lost to an Amazon restocking fee is a dollar off your margin, but most sellers never fight back.
Unchallenged fees accumulate across hundreds of orders, quietly eroding profitability. Multiply that across a typical month of returns, and you are looking at thousands left on the table each year.
This guide breaks down exactly how to dispute restocking fees, what evidence Amazon accepts, and how to make the process nearly automatic. You will learn which disputes are winnable, how to organize your evidence, and when to escalate.
Let us turn disputes from a headache into a profit protection strategy.
Every unchallenged restocking fee cuts directly into your bottom line.
Consider this scenario: A seller processing 500 orders monthly with a 3% return rate faces roughly 15 returned items. If just half incur a 20% restocking fee on $50 items, that equals $75 per month. Over a year, that is $900 in potential losses, before accounting for higher-value items or increased order volume.
Here is how unchallenged fees compound based on typical return volumes:
|
Monthly returns |
Average fee |
Monthly loss |
Annual impact |
|
15 items |
$10 |
$150 |
$1,800 |
|
15 items |
$25 |
$375 |
$4,500 |
|
50 items |
$25 |
$1,250 |
$15,000 |
Table 1: Amazon restocking fees and their impact
Automated fee tracking surfaces discrepancies before they become costly surprises.
To protect your margins, you first need to know when a restocking fee is actually eligible for dispute.
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Most successful disputes fall into five clear categories.
Knowing these triggers helps you focus your effort where you are most likely to win. Choose your battles based on these proven scenarios.
Amazon's policy states that fees cannot be charged when buyers return items unopened and on time. Yet this happens frequently due to system errors.
Example: A buyer purchases a $40 desk lamp and returns it unopened within 30 days. You receive it undamaged in original packaging, but Amazon charges a $5 fee anyway. This is fully eligible for dispute.
Amazon permits specific maximum fees by category
Example: A 30% fee is charged on a $200 laptop when policy caps electronics at 20%. The $20 overage is eligible for dispute.
Fees are strictly prohibited when returns stem from seller error, such as defective products, damaged shipments, or wrong items sent. However, if your evidence shows the item was shipped correctly and in new condition, you can challenge the fee.
Example: A buyer claims an item is defective, but your photos and records show it was shipped new and undamaged.
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Amazon's system occasionally misapplies fees through inventory sync issues, refund processing errors, or incorrect category assignment.
Example: A book is charged an electronics restocking fee due to an ASIN mapping error.
Sometimes fees target returns that fall outside policy scope, such as unopened media, Prime member returns, or items within extended holiday windows.
Example: A Prime member returns an item within the allowed window, but a restocking fee is still charged.
Not every fee is worth disputing; focus on those with clear policy violations or significant dollar amounts. Centralized transaction records make it easier to identify these triggers at scale.
Once you spot a fee that is eligible for dispute, the next step is gathering the right evidence.
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Amazon requires specific, well-documented proof to overturn a restocking fee.
Well-organized, policy-aligned evidence is the difference between a denied and an approved dispute. Incomplete documentation or vague claims are rejected immediately.
Evidence types Amazon accepts:
Supporting evidence:
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Go to Orders > Manage Returns. Export the return reason, dates, and fee amounts. Screenshot the full return request.
Export settlement reports for the relevant period. Cross-reference the order ID to confirm the fee amount and date.
Download all buyer-seller messages from Your Account > Messages from Customers. Export the entire thread with timestamps.
Photograph the item upon return, noting the date, order ID, and condition. If you have not received the return, note this in your claim.
Centralize your documentation to save hours on every dispute. Webgility automatically syncs and stores order, refund, and fee records so you are always audit-ready.
With your evidence in hand, here is how to present your case for maximum impact.
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A clear, professional template saves time and avoids costly miscommunication.
Subject: Restocking Fee Dispute – Order #[Order Number]
Hello Amazon Seller Support,
I am disputing the restocking fee charged on Order #[Order Number] for [Product Name/ASIN]. The item was returned in [describe condition: unopened/original packaging/within return window], which, per Amazon’s policy, does not qualify for a restocking fee.
Please review the attached documentation and refund the restocking fee.
Thank you,
[Your Name/Store Name]
You can also use this internal tracker worksheet template:
|
Order ID |
Return date |
Fee charged |
Dispute reason |
Evidence status |
Date submitted |
Outcome |
|
123-456 |
2024-05-01 |
$10 |
Item unopened |
Complete |
2024-05-02 |
Approved |
Why this works: Referencing Amazon’s policy shows you know the rules. Summarizing evidence up front makes it easy for support to review your case. Tracking disputes ensures nothing falls through.
Pre-fill these templates with data from your accounting automation platform for even faster submission.
Even with the right templates, sellers often make avoidable mistakes. Here is how to sidestep them.
Suggested read: Amazon Seller Accounting Software Guide
Most failed disputes come down to three preventable mistakes.
Risk: Claims are denied for lack of proof
How to avoid: Gather and organize all evidence before submitting
Risk: Support teams may misunderstand your claim
How to avoid: Use clear, factual statements and reference policy directly
Risk: Claims filed after Amazon’s 60-day window are automatically rejected
How to avoid: Track deadlines and submit disputes promptly
When NOT to dispute:
Automated reminders and centralized records help you avoid missed deadlines and lost evidence.
Streamlining all of this is easier with the right tools. Here is how accounting automation can help.
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Webgility automates the evidence-gathering and reconciliation that make disputes easier to win.
Webgility captures every Amazon fee at the transaction level, including referral fees, FBA costs, storage charges, and refund adjustments.
This means when Amazon processes a refund or chargeback, the platform logs it immediately and maps it to the original order. You can pull a complete fee history for any transaction in seconds.
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Every order from Amazon, Shopify, Walmart, and other channels flows into a single dashboard with complete transaction details.
You see order dates, fulfillment status, payment confirmations, and fee breakdowns in one place. When a dispute arises, you access all supporting documentation without hunting through multiple platforms.
Webgility maintains a permanent record of every sync, post, and adjustment with timestamps and system logs.
If Amazon claims a refund was processed incorrectly or a fee was never charged, you have timestamped proof of what actually happened.
When you can prove your case with clean, timestamped records, you win more disputes and recover revenue that would otherwise disappear. Strong documentation also helps you identify patterns in chargebacks or refund abuse, allowing you to tighten policies and increase Amazon sales by reducing avoidable losses.
Book a demo with Webgility today.
You can dispute a fee if it violates Amazon’s policy, such as being charged for unopened returns, exceeding category limits, or due to system errors. Always review the latest policy before submitting a claim.
Most disputes are resolved within a couple of weeks, but timelines can vary depending on the complexity and completeness of your documentation.
Include order details, refund records, communication logs, and photos of the item’s condition. Referencing Amazon’s policy directly in your claim strengthens your case.
Amazon typically requires disputes to be submitted within a specific window after the refund date, so act quickly and check the current policy.