Amazon Seller Central Reports: Reading the Data - Seller Bookkeeping
Seller Bookkeeping

Amazon Seller Central Reports: Reading the Data

How to read and interpret Amazon's powerful analytics to make data-driven decisions

Understanding Amazon Seller Central Reports

Amazon Seller Central provides one of the most powerful free analytics platforms available to sellers—yet most sellers barely use it beyond checking their daily sales. The reports section contains buried goldmines of data: which products are converting, which keywords drive traffic, why your Buy Box percentage dropped, and exactly where your profits (or losses) come from. Understanding how to read and interpret these reports separates successful sellers from those running blind.

Critical Insight: Amazon reports use different calculation methods and reporting periods. A metric on your dashboard might differ from the same metric in detailed reports due to timing (real-time vs daily snapshot), methodology (gross vs net), and data aggregation. Always drill down into detailed reports to verify dashboard numbers.

Essential Seller Central Reports

Business Reports

Sales, traffic, page views, conversion rates, and Buy Box percentage. The most critical report for overall performance analysis.

Payments Reports

Detailed payout information including fees, refunds, and adjustments. Reconcile with your 1099-K here.

Fulfillment Reports

Inventory levels, shipments, customer returns, and FBA performance metrics. Critical for inventory management.

Advertising Reports

Sponsored Products, Display, Brand Analytics. Track impressions, clicks, ACoS, ROAS, and ad spend ROI.

Customer Reviews

Review counts, ratings, feedback trends. Monitor brand reputation and identify product issues early.

Account Health

Order defect rate, on-time delivery, pre-fulfillment cancel rate. Track metrics that impact account standing.

Sales and Traffic Reports: Deep Dive

The Sales and Traffic report is your primary source for understanding business performance. Here's what each metric means:

MetricDefinitionWhat It Tells YouAction
SessionsTotal customer site visits (including your product)Overall traffic volume to your listingsIncrease via marketing/advertising if trending down
Page ViewsNumber of times your product detail page was viewedDirect interest in your specific productLow views = visibility issue; high views = conversion issue
Buy Box %Percentage of time you won the Buy Box (if multi-seller)Your competitiveness for Prime/fastest shippingBelow 50% = Fix price, shipping speed, or reviews
Units OrderedTotal units sold (before returns)Raw sales volumeCompare to historical to identify trends
Ordered Product SalesRevenue before Amazon feesGross sales (before fulfillment, referral, etc.)Track for profitability analysis
Conversion Rate(Units Ordered / Sessions) × 100% of visitors who purchasedIndustry avg 2-5%; below 2% = listing optimization issue
ReturnsUnits returned by customersProduct quality or expectation mismatchHigh returns = Fix title, images, description, or product
Return Rate(Returns / Units Ordered) × 100% of sales that become returnsIndustry avg 2-3%; above 5% = Serious problem

Finding Your Top Performers

Amazon's new 2025 feature "Deep Dive Your ASIN Performance" segments your products into four categories:

  • ASINs with Increasing Sales: Your rising stars. Allocate more inventory and marketing budget. Analyze what's working (price, keywords, ads) and replicate it.
  • ASINs with Declining Sales: Investigate immediately. Is it a review drop, price increase by competitors, or seasonal? Action needed to reverse the trend.
  • ASINs with Declining Traffic: Visibility problem. Check keyword rankings, search volume, and advertising performance. May need PPC boost or title/keyword optimization.
  • ASINs Performing Below Market Average: This is critical data—Amazon shows you how your product performs vs similar products. If below average, you have a competitive disadvantage in price, reviews, or keywords.

Payments Reports: Track Your Money

The Payments report shows exactly where your money goes. This is essential for:

  • Profit Calculation: Ordered Product Sales - Fees - Refunds = Your Income
  • Fee Analysis: See referral fees, fulfillment fees, storage fees, returns credits broken down
  • Tax Reconciliation: Match the Payments report to your 1099-K (they often differ due to timing)
  • Detecting Errors: Duplicate fees, miscalculated refunds, or system errors appear here first

Key Metrics in Payments Report:

  • Orders: Number of orders processed
  • Order Total: Gross customer payment amount
  • Referral Fee: Amazon's commission (% varies by category)
  • Fulfillment Fee: FBA or other fulfillment costs
  • Returns Credit: Refund issued to customer (reduces your revenue)
  • Net Proceeds: What you actually receive in your bank account

Account Health Metrics: Don't Ignore These

Amazon monitors four key seller metrics that can suspend your account if they fall below thresholds:

MetricAmazon StandardWhat Hurts ItFix It By
Order Defect Rate< 1% (0.99% max)A-to-Z claims, chargebacks, poor feedbackResolve buyer issues immediately; respond to claims
Late Shipment Rate< 4% for FBMDelayed shipments, handling time too longReduce processing time; use FBA for instant shipping
Pre-Fulfillment Cancel %< 1%Canceling orders after customer paymentKeep inventory accurate; never oversell
Feedback Rating> 4.5 stars (FBM), > 3.5 (FBA)Negative reviews and feedbackFollow-up emails, product quality, fast shipping

Common Report Reading Mistakes

Sellers often misinterpret Amazon reports. Here are the biggest pitfalls:

  • Confusing "Orders" with "Units Ordered": Orders = # of orders. Units = total items. 1 order with 3 units = 1 order, 3 units. Check the metric carefully!
  • Assuming Dashboard = Reality: The dashboard is a snapshot, often 24-48 hours delayed. Detailed reports show transactions processed on specific dates. Always verify in detailed reports.
  • Not Accounting for Returns in Profit: Ordered Product Sales doesn't subtract returns automatically. You must deduct refund amounts to get net sales.
  • Ignoring Buy Box %: If you're losing the Buy Box, visibility and sales drop 70-80%. Fix price, reviews, or shipping speed immediately.
  • Treating Gross Sales as Net Income: Business Reports show "Ordered Product Sales" which is GROSS. You must deduct all fees and returns manually to calculate true income.

Converting Reports to Business Insights

Raw numbers are useless without interpretation. Here's how to turn data into action:

Scenario: Sales Dropped 30% Month-Over-Month

Check These Reports in Order:

  1. Sales & Traffic Report: Did sessions drop or conversion rate drop? (Traffic vs conversion problem)
  2. Deep Dive ASIN Performance: Is it all products or specific ones?
  3. Account Health: Did metrics drop (triggering Buy Box loss)?
  4. Advertising Report: Did ad impressions/clicks drop (visibility issue)?
  5. Business Report by Search Term: Did search volume for your keywords drop (seasonal)?

Possible Root Causes & Fixes:

  • Dropped sessions + stable conversion = Fix advertising (reactivate ads, increase budget)
  • Stable sessions + dropped conversion = Fix listing (title, images, reviews, price)
  • Both dropped + Buy Box % dropped = Competitors out-priced you or got better reviews
  • All products affected + seasonality = Natural seasonal downturn (normal)

Amazon Reports Facts

2-5%

Average Amazon conversion rate benchmark

1-2%

Max order defect rate before warnings

4.5

Minimum FBM feedback rating required

4%

Maximum late shipment rate for FBM

48hrs

Typical delay in dashboard data reporting

70%+

Sales impact of losing Buy Box

Seller Central Reports FAQ

Why does my dashboard sales differ from detailed reports?

The dashboard is a real-time snapshot updated every 24 hours and sometimes shows transactions pending settlement. Detailed reports show finalized transactions processed on specific dates. This 1-2 day lag explains discrepancies. Always trust detailed reports for financial decisions.

How do I calculate my actual profit from reports?

Formula: Ordered Product Sales - Referral Fees - Fulfillment Fees - Storage Fees - Returns Credit - COGS - Business Expenses = Net Profit. Most sellers calculate this from the Payments report. But you must manually add COGS (not on Amazon reports) and business expenses (not Amazon fees).

What's the difference between Buy Box % and conversion rate?

Buy Box % = If multi-seller, what % of time YOUR listing won the Buy Box. Conversion Rate = (Units Sold / Sessions) × 100. You can have 100% Buy Box but 2% conversion (visitors see your offer but don't buy). Both metrics matter—Buy Box for visibility, conversion for appeal.

How often should I check my reports?

Daily: Check Account Health metrics to catch issues early. Weekly: Sales & Traffic trends. Monthly: Deep dive all reports for optimization opportunities. Also check immediately after changes (price adjustments, advertising, promotions) to measure impact.

Which report matters most for tax filing?

The Payments report is most important for tax—it shows Net Proceeds (your actual income). Use it to reconcile with your 1099-K and verify amounts reported to the IRS. But also track business expenses and COGS separately (not in Amazon reports) for a complete picture of taxable income.

What if my metrics are below Amazon's thresholds?

You receive warnings first (Performance Notifications in Seller Central). Act immediately: ODR above 1%? Resolve A-to-Z claims and respond to feedback. Late shipment rate above 4%? Switch to FBA or reduce handling time. These metrics determine account health and can trigger suspension if ignored for 60+ days.

Can I export and analyze reports outside Seller Central?

Yes! All reports download as Excel/CSV files. Many sellers import into accounting software (QuickBooks, FreshBooks) or BI tools (Tableau, Google Data Studio) for custom analysis. This enables trend analysis, forecasting, and integration with other platforms like Shopify or Etsy.

Should I hire someone to analyze these reports?

If sales exceed $100K annually, yes. A data analyst or bookkeeper ($500-1,000/month) can identify patterns, forecast demand, spot profitability issues, and optimize pricing—often paying for themselves within months. For smaller sellers, learn reports yourself or use software that automates analysis.