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Amazon FBA Fees News: MCF and AWD Storage Just Went Up Mid-2026

Amazon FBA fees news: MCF small-order costs rose ~$0.30 and AWD West storage hit $0.57/cu ft. Recalculate your DTC margins now.

For anyone tracking amazon fba fees news, the mid-2026 update carries two increases that quietly raise the cost of fulfilling your Shopify and DTC orders through Amazon's network. Amazon's mid-2026 fee update includes a roughly USD 0.30 per-unit average increase on Multi-Channel Fulfillment (MCF) small orders, and an Amazon Warehousing and Distribution (AWD) storage bump in the West region to USD 0.57 per cubic foot, versus USD 0.48 in the East and South regions (Amazon Seller Central, July 1, 2026, older than 3 days). If you use Amazon to ship orders that originate off Amazon, this lands straight on your contribution margin.

Because this item is more than three days old and sourced to a single Seller Central notice, verify the exact numbers against your own fee schedule before you re-price anything. But the direction is clear, and the direction is up.

What MCF and AWD are, and why the increase matters

Multi-Channel Fulfillment lets you store inventory in Amazon's fulfillment centers and use that same pool to ship orders from your Shopify store, your own website, or other channels. It is popular because it turns one inventory position into fulfillment for every sales channel. The catch has always been cost: MCF fees are higher than FBA's, because you are paying for Amazon's logistics without contributing Amazon marketplace sales. A roughly USD 0.30 per-unit increase on small orders may sound trivial, but on a high-volume, low-price DTC catalog it compounds fast. Thirty cents across tens of thousands of small orders a month is real money pulled out of margin.

Amazon Warehousing and Distribution is the upstream storage-and-distribution layer that feeds inventory into FBA and MCF. The AWD change introduces a regional split: storage in the West now runs USD 0.57 per cubic foot against USD 0.48 in the East and South. That gap, nine cents per cubic foot, is the lever most sellers are overlooking. It means where you store inventory now has a direct, ongoing cost consequence.

The DTC margin problem in plain terms

If you built your Shopify unit economics around last year's MCF rates, your current per-order contribution is lower than your spreadsheet says. The fix is not complicated, but it does require actually doing the recalculation rather than assuming the old numbers hold. Pull your real MCF fee per order at current rates, subtract it along with product cost, payment fees, and ad cost, and see what is left. For a lot of brands the honest answer is that a slice of orders is now barely profitable or underwater once fulfillment is repriced.

That is the moment to make decisions instead of absorbing the hit silently. This is the same margin discipline the broader market is rewarding right now, protect contribution per order rather than chase volume that does not pay.

Two moves that recover margin

Route inventory to cheaper AWD regions. The East and South regions are nine cents per cubic foot cheaper than the West. For slow-turning or bulky inventory, where storage is the dominant cost, strategically placing stock in East and South AWD can meaningfully cut your holding costs without touching a single price. Model your storage footprint by region and shift what you can, weighing the storage saving against any added outbound transit time and cost to your customer base.

Re-price or re-mix the orders MCF is eating. If a segment of small DTC orders no longer clears margin through MCF, your options are to raise the price or shipping charge on those orders, bundle small items so the order value carries the fulfillment cost, or move that slice of fulfillment to a cheaper third-party logistics provider while keeping MCF for the orders where its speed and reliability earn their premium. Amazon awd and MCF are tools, not obligations. The goal is to use them where they win and route around them where they do not.

Do not forget the FBA side

While MCF and AWD are the headline, keep an eye on the wider amazon fba fee news cycle, because Amazon adjusts fulfillment and storage fees on a rolling basis and the increases rarely travel alone. A mid-year bump on MCF and AWD is often a signal of where the broader fee schedule is heading. Build a quarterly habit of re-pulling your actual per-unit fees and feeding them back into your pricing model, so you catch erosion when it is nine cents rather than after a quarter of quietly thinner margins.

Our ecommerce growth team runs this recalculation as a standing part of client margin reviews, because fee creep is the most predictable and most ignored threat to DTC profitability.

This week's action list

Verify the current MCF and AWD rates against your own Seller Central fee schedule. Recalculate contribution margin per order on your MCF-fulfilled DTC volume at the new rates. Map your AWD inventory by region and shift eligible stock to the cheaper East and South regions where it makes sense after transit costs. Identify the small-order segment that no longer clears margin and decide, for each, whether to re-price, bundle, or move fulfillment. Set a quarterly fee review so the next increase does not slip through.

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Shahryar Ali

Co-Founder and CEO of Shaazford, a full-service ecommerce growth agency led by senior Amazon agency directors. He has helped manage $50M+ in client revenue across Amazon, Walmart, TikTok Shop, and Shopify.

Frequently asked questions

What changed in Amazon's mid-2026 fee update?

A roughly USD 0.30 per-unit average increase on MCF small orders, and an AWD West-region storage rate of USD 0.57 per cubic foot versus USD 0.48 in East and South. Verify against your own fee schedule.

Why does the MCF increase hurt DTC brands specifically?

MCF fulfills your off-Amazon orders, so the fee comes straight out of your DTC contribution margin without any offsetting Amazon marketplace sale.

How do I use the AWD regional gap?

Store slow-turning or bulky inventory in the cheaper East and South regions rather than the West, weighing the nine-cents-per-cubic-foot saving against outbound transit time and cost.

Should I stop using MCF?

Not necessarily. Keep MCF where its speed and reliability justify the premium; move the small-order slice that no longer clears margin to a cheaper 3PL or re-price it.

How often should I review Amazon fees?

Quarterly at minimum. Re-pull actual per-unit fees and feed them into your pricing model to catch erosion early.