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40% of new FBA sellers in 2026 are based outside the US. And 45% of existing US sellers already operate in at least one international marketplace. The global Amazon opportunity has never been bigger — or better supported. Here's the complete playbook.
Amazon's global infrastructure has matured significantly over the last three years. The company is now investing $200 billion in capital expenditure in 2026 — the largest annual investment in company history — a significant portion of which is going into international logistics hubs, regional fulfilment networks, and marketplace expansion in UAE, Poland, and Singapore.
That last statistic deserves emphasis. While US FBA fees rose by $0.08/unit in 2026, Amazon cut European FBA fees by an average of £0.26/€0.32 per unit — one of the largest-ever European fee reductions. This makes 2026 uniquely favourable for expanding into UK, Germany, France, Spain, and Italy. The margin arithmetic for EU expansion has never looked better.
Cross-border e-commerce is growing at double-digit rates in Europe, MENA, and APAC. Shoppers in Germany, India, Japan, and the UAE are buying more international brands than ever before. And Amazon is the infrastructure that makes it possible with minimal operational overhead for sellers.
International expansion amplifies what's already working — it doesn't rescue a struggling business. Before targeting a new marketplace, run through these five questions honestly.
1. Is your primary marketplace profitable? You need consistent, positive margins on your existing marketplace before splitting your attention internationally. Expanding while still struggling at home is a recipe for losing both.
2. Do you have at least 25+ reviews and stable Page 1 ranking? Your listing's performance data is proof your product works. Without it, you're guessing in a new language.
3. Can your supplier handle 30–50% more volume? International expansion requires additional inventory. Confirm your supplier can scale before you commit.
4. Have you validated demand in the target marketplace using data? Not assumptions — real keyword search volume and competitor sales data. This is where SellerSprite's multi-marketplace research is invaluable.
5. Do you have budget for 60–90 days of inventory before the first sale? International FBA launches take time. You need runway for shipping, customs, and the PPC launch phase.
Canada shares your Amazon account — it's under the North America unified account along with the US and Mexico. You don't even need separate inventory initially, because NARF (North America Remote Fulfillment) lets Amazon ship to Canadian customers directly from your US FBA inventory. This makes Canada the easiest possible entry point for international expansion.
The UK is the most natural international expansion for US sellers after Canada. English language, strong Amazon Prime penetration, and $40B+ in annual Amazon revenue make it a highly validated market. The 2026 EU fee reductions — including an average of £0.26 per unit lower FBA fees across the UK — make the margin arithmetic even more compelling this year.
Germany is Amazon's largest marketplace outside the US, generating €40.9 billion in revenue in 2024 and growing in 2026. Crucially, registering on Amazon.de gives you automatic access to all other European marketplaces — France, Italy, Spain, Netherlands, Poland, Sweden, Belgium, and Turkey — through the unified European account structure. Germany is the Pan-EU hub.
Amazon India has overtaken the UK and Germany to become the third-largest Amazon marketplace globally by seller count. It's experiencing double-digit annual growth and represents an enormous opportunity — particularly for sellers offering global brands that aren't yet well-distributed in India. The audience is price-sensitive but enormous, and English is widely understood.
Australia's Amazon marketplace is growing rapidly but remains less saturated than the UK or Germany in most categories. Australian consumers have high purchasing power and a strong preference for international brands. For sellers looking for an English-speaking market with less competition, Australia offers a compelling early-mover advantage in 2026.
SellerSprite covers all major Amazon marketplaces — US, UK, Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Japan, Australia, and India. Run Keyword Research, Product Finder, Reverse ASIN, and Market Research on any marketplace from one dashboard. Don't expand blind.
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One of the most common reasons sellers delay international expansion is confusion about fulfilment. Amazon actually offers several options that make it much simpler than most sellers realise — especially for initial market testing.
Pan-EU FBA is the single most powerful fulfilment option for sellers targeting multiple European markets simultaneously. Understanding how it works — and when to use it — is critical for any seller considering the EU.
The fee economics of Pan-EU FBA are compelling. An average FBA fee of €2.81 in Germany for standard-size products — versus paying European fulfilment fees from a UK base using EFN, which incurs a cross-border surcharge — makes the cost difference significant at volume. The trade-off is VAT complexity: Pan-EU FBA requires VAT registration in each country where Amazon stores your inventory, typically 7–9 countries.
The practical solution most sellers use in 2026 is a VAT agent — services like Avalara, Taxually, or Hellotax — who handle all EU VAT registrations, filing, and compliance for a monthly fee of €50–€200/month. This unlocks full Pan-EU FBA without needing to understand the intricacies of each country's VAT requirements.
This is the step most sellers skip — and the primary reason international expansions fail. Taking a product that sells well in the US and assuming identical demand exists in Germany or Japan is a dangerous assumption. Consumer preferences, search behaviour, and competitive landscapes differ significantly between markets.
The correct approach is to validate demand in each target marketplace before shipping a single unit of inventory. Here's exactly how to do it using SellerSprite's multi-marketplace research capabilities:
Switch SellerSprite's marketplace selector to your target country (UK, DE, JP, AU etc.) and run your primary product keywords. Check monthly search volume, search trend (growing or declining), and top 10 search result pages.
If your main keyword has fewer than 1,000 monthly searches in the target marketplace, demand is likely insufficient to build a profitable business around that single product. Look for keywords with 3,000+ monthly searches as a minimum threshold for expansion viability.
Run SellerSprite's Market Research tool in the target marketplace for your product category. Check the dominant price band (what price range are the top sellers in?), average monthly revenue of the top 10 sellers, and new entrant ratio (are new sellers successfully entering this niche, or is it locked by established brands?).
A healthy international expansion target shows: price band that works with your landed cost and margins, $10,000+ monthly revenue in top 10 sellers, and at least 20–30% of top sellers with fewer than 100 reviews.
Find the top 3 selling ASINs in your category in the target marketplace and run a Reverse ASIN lookup in SellerSprite. This reveals every keyword they rank for organically — showing you the keyword landscape you're entering and giving you the foundation of your launch keyword strategy.
Critically, this also tells you whether the top sellers are well-established local brands (harder to displace) or smaller sellers with thin review counts and weak listings (opportunity).
Tax compliance is the single most anxiety-inducing aspect of international expansion for most sellers. Here's the practical reality: it's not as complex as it sounds, and there are well-established services that handle it for you.
Here's the step-by-step playbook for a US seller expanding to the UK as a first international market — the most common and successful expansion path in 2026. Adapt the timeline for other markets.
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