Uncertainty as Amazon Sellers Brace for Expected Cashflow Crunch from DD+7 (Updated)

Amazon's DD+7 policy (funds held 7 days post-delivery) began rolling out March 12, 2026, affecting the 5% of sellers still on pre-2016 legacy disbursement schedules. Rollout is staggered through month-end, causing confusion as some sellers haven't been migrated yet while others now have an on-demand 'Disburse Now' button.
The real risk isn't the 7-day hold itself — it's the one-time cash flow gap during migration week, which could trigger missed supplier payments or inventory stockouts for undercapitalized sellers. Check your Payments Dashboard for the 'Disburse Now' button; if absent, contact Amazon's dedicated transition support before assuming your cash flow is unaffected.
Amazon standardizing disbursement policy compresses working capital flexibility for smaller sellers, accelerating the competitive advantage of well-capitalized brands and aggregators who can absorb holds without disrupting inventory cycles.
Check Seller Central > Payments Dashboard -- if no 'Disburse Now' button appears by March 31, open a case with Amazon's dedicated DD+7 support team to confirm your migration status and avoid surprise disbursement delays.
Set up a 30-day cash buffer or a credit line (e.g., Amazon Lending, Clearco, or a business LOC) before April 1 to cover the one-time overlap gap when held funds and new sales both fall under DD+7 simultaneously.
Bottom Line
DD+7 migration means a one-time cash gap for legacy Amazon sellers in March.
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DD+7 migration means a one-time cash gap for legacy Amazon sellers in March.
Key Stat / Trigger
5% of sellers remaining on pre-2016 legacy disbursement policy
Focus on the operational implication, not just the headline.
Full Coverage
had months to prepare for the new DD+7 policy that Amazon warned would cause a cashflow crunch when implemented on March 12, but now that the date has come and gone, many sellers are filled with uncertainty and are asking colleagues what changes they’ve seen. (Update added to the bottom of the article on March 19th.
) In early February, Amazon reminded sellers it would be updating account reserves to a standard reserve period of 7 days after delivery, known as DD+7 (Delivery Date plus 7 days), warning them: “You may experience a one-time cash flow impact and temporarily limited ability to disburse funds on or around your migration date.”
We expected to find posts from sellers explaining how they were impacted on March 12, but instead, we found sellers asking questions, such as this thread started on March 15th on the Amazon seller discussion boards where the original poster asked: How do we know how much $ will be disbursed and held with DD+7? So I am still confused.
How do we see what funds are held and those going to be disbursed? My sales are still all going to Funds Available scheduled to initiate on March 23. My account level reserve has not changed. No Reserved area is on my payments dashboard. The Deferred area is for B to B invoiced orders. There should be a better system. Anyone know?
Some sellers said they didn’t think they had been migrated yet. Other sellers said they had been migrated and shared that they now had a “disburse on demand button” they could use daily rather than having to wait a set amount of time, such as one who reported they had been on a 2-week payout schedule.
That was seen as a change that would help ease the pain of longer payment holds. As recently as yesterday (March 16), a seller wrote on that thread, “DD+7 was supposed to start on March 12 for me, but it didn’t. I got my full payout even for orders placed and shipped after March 12.”
“Where are the mods on this,” one seller asked yesterday, echoing other sellers’ sentiments. “I’ve just browsed more than half a dozen threads on the same topic, many of them several days old, and not once has a mod stepped in to clarify what the???? is even going on?” Today, a seller wrote in part, “I’m in the EXACT same boat!
No Disburse Now button, conflicting answers from Amazon support (first said technical issue, then claimed I wasn’t transitioned to DD+7 – total lies).” Sellers also shared the same questions along with their own experiences on the Sellers Ask Sellers discussion board.
Update 3/19/2026: Amazon told EcommerceBytes that it put in place a new disbursement policy in 2016 and that the small percentage of sellers who remained on its pre-2016 legacy disbursement policy would be transitioned to its standard practice by the end of this month.
Amazon provided the following statement: “Earlier this month, we began transitioning the small percentage of sellers who remain on a pre-2016 legacy disbursement policy to our current standard practice. 95% of sellers already operate under this standard policy, where funds become available seven days after delivery.
The seven-day period ensures customers have adequate time to receive and review their purchases, initiate returns, and submit any claims. We provided those sellers with six months’ notice and support through the transition.”
Amazon also said sellers could connect with one of its dedicated support specialists who would work with them to evaluate options if they anticipated any difficulties.
Original Source
This briefing is based on reporting from eCommerce Bytes. Use the original post for full primary-source context.
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