Sellers Say Amazon Charged Ad Fees throughout Thursday’s Outage

Amazon's March 5, 2026 outage caused widespread listing errors, checkout failures, and blocked sales for hours — while ad clicks continued to be charged even when customers landed on error pages instead of live listings.
Sellers eating ad spend during a platform outage is a silent margin killer with no automatic refund — Amazon won't proactively credit you. Pull your Sponsored Products Search Term Report and Campaign Performance Report for March 5th, flag the outage window (estimated 5+ hours), and file a formal ad credit dispute through Seller Support with timestamps.
Seller dependency on a single platform creates asymmetric risk — Amazon collects fees even when its infrastructure fails, reinforcing the margin compression pressure sellers face with zero recourse built into standard policy.
Pull Campaign Performance Report in Amazon Ads Console for March 5 -- if ACOS spiked or CVR dropped to near zero during the outage window, document it and submit a credit request via Seller Support with the report as evidence.
Set up hourly sales alerts in Seller Central or a third-party tool like Helium 10 or DataDive so future outages trigger an immediate pause on ad spend before budget burns on dead pages.
Bottom Line
Amazon outage billed sellers for ads that sent buyers to error pages.
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Impact Level
medium
Amazon outage billed sellers for ads that sent buyers to error pages.
Key Stat / Trigger
5+ hours of zero sales reported by sellers with daily revenue exceeding $2,000
Focus on the operational implication, not just the headline.
Full Coverage
customers took to industry boards when they found they were unable to shop or checkout due to an outage on Thursday. Many people said they encountered Amazon’s classic error page that shows dogs with the message, “UH-Oh. Something went wrong on our end.” (See update below.) One frustrated shopper reported, “I met A LOT of Amazon’s dogs today.
Let’s see… there was Bailey, Barkley (& Emma), Barney, Bowser, Brandi, Butters (& Marge), Cannoli, Clancy, Corbin, Duke, Frank, Hunter, Jaja, Jax, Kodak, Lola, Lucy, Maddie, Mae, Martini, Meela, Milly, Miss Chief (lol), Muffin, Oliver, Peek, Phoebe, Ranger & Remi, Robin, Rocket, RoRo, Rufus, Rupert, Shadow, Sheriff, Soju, Talula, Tanq, and Thomas.
Oh, and Waffles.” Amazon told media outlets in a statement that “some customers may have temporarily experienced issues while shopping” due to an issue related to a software code deployment” and apologized. But the issue impacted more than people shopping on the app and desktop.
A customer reported on Down Detector that they were unable to pick up the item they had already purchased when they went to an Amazon locker, which was essentially holding their item hostage: “When I try to pickup from locker, app just shows spinning wheel on page.
Called and was told it would be fixed in ten minutes, and 35 minutes later it still didn’t work. It’s been hours now and back home, still no connection. Don’t know what to do.” Members of the Amazon Vine Review program were unable to post reviews.
And the outage even impacted Amazon’s Kindle ebook program – “I can’t view any of the descriptions and there are no options to download or even get a new book so what the heck,” one customer wrote in part. Sellers were impacted not only by the loss in sales when customers were unable to complete their purchase.
Sellers also encountered issues trying to access their own listings. “All of my listings are 404 error, not showing the buy box, currently unavailable or shows an error when added to the cart,” one seller posted on the Amazon seller discussion boards on March 5th. “Same,” another seller reported.
“I thought sales are slow today, but I checked the inventory and saw many of the listings not showing any image and on the listing page there is not buybox, seller info or even product info is missing. Seems AWS is impacted badly.”
Some shoppers had reported on DownDetector that they couldn’t see item prices, such as a one who wrote in part, “Prices are also not showing up …just “Options” then when I click on that, I get a “Suspenseful Music” message and it goes back to the item page with no additional info. Lots of Product Unavailable and 404 Dogs.”
Another seller who said they usually have daily sales exceeding $2,000 posted during the outage, “We did not sell anything for the last 5 hours.” A seller reported in another thread that when they tried replying to messages, “it says it’s being processed, and then it appears as if we never replied.”
And a seller whose listings suddenly became unsearchable wrote, “it seems Amazon seller support is out of reach too. Anyone on the same boat?”
The problem of lost sales was not the only issue for sellers – those who advertise their listings were concerned Amazon was charging ad fees during the outage when customers might have been able to click on an ad but end up on an error page.
On Friday, a seller posted the following in a thread on the Amazon discussion boards: Amazon Outage Today Caused Significant Ad Spend Without Ability for Customers to Checkout – Request for Clarification I’m hoping someone from the Amazon Ads or Seller Support team can seek clarification regarding the Amazon site outage that occurred earlier today.
For approximately three hours today, Amazon experienced a widespread outage where many customers were encountering “Dog Page” errors, dead-end product pages, and checkout failures. During this period, customers were clearly unable to complete purchases or navigate the platform normally.
However, Amazon Advertising campaigns continued to run normally during the outage, and ads continued receiving clicks. From what we observed on our account: Our ad spend volume increased significantly during the outage window. We received hundreds of clicks with virtually no conversions.
Customers appeared to be frantically clicking and attempting to access product pages, likely refreshing or retrying pages due to the site errors. Many of these clicks were likely occurring while customers were encountering broken pages or checkout failures. Because the site infrastructure itself was failing, these clicks did not represent nor
Original Source
This briefing is based on reporting from eCommerce Bytes. Use the original post for full primary-source context.
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