When setting up a discount on Amazon, the platform automatically checks your pricing history to ensure compliance with its Minimum and Reference Price rules. If your discount causes the final sale price to drop below your lowest historical price, Amazon flags it as a potential “pricing error” or rejects the promotion altogether. This safeguard exists to protect both the marketplace and customers from misleading or extreme discounts that could trigger policy violations or appear suspicious to the algorithm.
For example, if your product’s lowest historical price over the past 90 days was $15, and you try to offer 30% off your current $18 price, Amazon will calculate the discounted total as $12.6, lower than the historical threshold, and block the deal.
To fix this, you can slightly raise your list (reference) price before applying the discount or reduce the percentage to stay within acceptable limits. Just be careful not to inflate the list price excessively, as Amazon cross-verifies it with external pricing data. Maintaining realistic, compliant pricing ensures your discounts go live smoothly and prevents suppression in search results, Buy Box loss, or account warnings related to pricing manipulation.
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