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Active sellers on Amazon dropped 31% in four years. New registrations hit a decade low. Yet 100,000+ sellers now earn over $1M annually and there is 31% more traffic per seller than in 2021. The platform isn't saturated — it's professionalising. Here's exactly what that means for you.
Ask almost any aspiring Amazon seller what's holding them back and you'll hear a version of the same answer: "Isn't it too crowded now?" The data — the real, sourced, 2026 data — tells a decisively different story. Not the story you'd expect.
The Amazon Marketplace Trends Report 2026 coined the term "competition paradox" to describe a pattern that runs counter to almost everyone's intuition: the platform has fewer sellers, yet higher revenue concentration, higher traffic per seller, and dramatically more million-dollar businesses than at any point in its history.
Understanding this paradox is important not just as a market curiosity, but because it directly changes how you should think about launching or scaling an Amazon business in 2026. The old frame — "too many sellers, too little opportunity" — is simply wrong. The right frame is: higher entry bar, bigger reward for those who clear it.
The drop in active sellers is real and significant. But understanding why it happened is more useful than the headline number alone.
Marketplace Pulse analysts and industry commentators consistently describe the same phenomenon: this isn't sellers quitting out of boredom. It's the exit of low-commitment, poorly capitalised, or under-prepared operators who entered during 2020–2021 when the pandemic-era boom made Amazon selling appear deceptively easy.
The "Great Compression" of 2024–2025 — when multiple fee increases, rising ad costs, and tighter policy enforcement hit simultaneously — sorted the field. Sellers who treated Amazon as a side project with thin margins and no real differentiation strategy found the economics no longer worked. Operators who invested in data, brand, and product quality stayed — and captured the traffic the exits left behind.
Here is where the paradox becomes genuinely actionable. As sellers exited, Amazon's customer base didn't shrink — it grew. The result is a mathematical shift that every active seller is benefiting from right now, whether they realise it or not.
This isn't a rounding error — it represents hundreds of additional potential buyers landing on or near your listings every single month compared to four years ago. The demand has not left. The supply-side competition for it has thinned.
Think about what that means concretely. In 2021, you were competing for a fixed pool of monthly visits spread across 2.4 million sellers. In 2026, you're competing for a larger pool of visits — Amazon's third-party GMV hit an estimated $305 billion in the US in 2025, with third-party sellers accounting for 62% of all units sold — spread across 31% fewer sellers.
The flip side of the paradox — the part that demands honesty — is that revenue is concentrating sharply at the top. This isn't Amazon FBA being "saturated." It's the natural pattern of a maturing marketplace following what economists call a power-law distribution.
Fewer than 8,000 sellers — that's approximately 1.6% of the US active seller base — now drive roughly 50% of all US third-party gross merchandise volume. This number was around 15,000 sellers just three years ago. Revenue concentration is accelerating, not stabilising.
What the power-law tells you is not that the opportunity is gone — the $305B in US third-party GMV is real money being paid to real sellers. It tells you that the middle is being squeezed while the top is expanding. Sellers in the $500K–$2M range are the most exposed. Sellers who know how to operate like the top tier — data-driven product selection, efficient advertising, strong brand positioning — are the ones scaling into the $1M+ cohort that nearly doubled in size since 2021.
SellerSprite's Product Finder and Market Research tools show you exactly where active seller counts are thinning and demand is growing — so you can enter the right niche with the data advantage that separates winners from the sellers who quit. Free 3-day trial, no credit card required.
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The competition paradox creates specific, identifiable pockets of opportunity. These aren't theoretical — they're the structural gaps that the seller consolidation has opened up across the marketplace.
The competition paradox doesn't mean the bar is low — it means the rewards for clearing the bar have increased. Here is an honest breakdown of what separates the sellers who are scaling into the $1M+ cohort from those being squeezed out of the middle.
Understanding the competition paradox is one thing. Acting on it is another. Here is the specific sequence that turns this data into decisions.
Reframe your competitive reference point. You are not competing with 9 million accounts. You are competing with approximately 1.65 million active sellers, further filtered to the specific category you are entering. Start any product analysis with that number as your baseline, not the headline figure that includes millions of dormant accounts.
Not every niche benefited equally from the seller decline. Some categories — particularly those that attracted the largest wave of underprepared 2020–2021 pandemic sellers — shed the most competitors. These are the niches with the largest gap between historical listing count and current active-seller count. SellerSprite's competitor analysis surfaces these gaps with actual data rather than guesswork.
The sellers who are scaling in 2026 run the full margin model before committing to any product. That means total landed cost including tariffs and prep, all 2026 FBA fees including the fuel surcharge, realistic ad spend as a percentage of revenue based on current category CPC benchmarks, and a target net margin that still makes the investment worthwhile under a conservative scenario.
The concentration data makes one thing clear: the top tier is built on brand equity, not just product selection. Sellers with Brand Registry, A+ Content, and a coherent brand story convert at higher rates and require less ad spend to maintain position. Brand is not a nice-to-have in the professionalised 2026 marketplace — it is operational infrastructure.
With 69% of sellers still single-marketplace and UK/EU launches generating 15–25% incremental revenue for brands that localise properly, international expansion is the most underleveraged upside available to sellers who have their core US operation profitable and repeatable. Plan it as a month-6 initiative, not a "someday" goal.
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