Running Amazon Ads today is less about media buying and more about managing complexity. Between fragmented buyer journeys, B2B vs. B2C targeting mismatches, and limited data visibility, campaign managers are often flying blind despite rising spend.
You’re likely wasting impressions on the wrong shoppers, bidding blind without lifecycle data, or missing market expansion opportunities simply because your tools don’t talk to your goals. Worse?
Many sellers still operate as if Amazon advertising is static, while Amazon continues to evolve at an aggressive pace. Specifically, layering in incredible precision tools that most advertisers don’t even realize exist.
May 2025 marks a pivotal shift. Amazon rolled out sharper segmentation, deeper purchase insights, and smarter automation giving brands more surgical control across Sponsored Products, Brands, AMC, and even logistics. Ultimately, these updates can help you move from managing campaigns to scaling outcomes.
Let’s break them down.
Amazon Ads in May were all about precision.
Whether you’re targeting high-value business buyers, trying to win over new customers, or making every ad dollar work harder, this month provided campaign managers better control where it matters most.
With Smarter segmentation, deeper purchase insights, and more flexible bidding tools, Amazon launched upgrades that can help marketers shift from managing campaigns to actively steering growth.
Let’s break it down:
On May 5th, 2025, Amazon rolled out one of its most focused tools for B2B advertisers: Amazon Business exclusive campaigns.
For the first time, you can run Sponsored Products campaigns that appear only on the Amazon Business store (excluding regular retail placements and off-Amazon sites).
It’s a dedicated lane for reaching high-intent business buyers with greater control over how and where your ads appear.
With this update, you can:
Here’s why this matters:
Where it’s live
Who gets access
Where to run it
This is a clean, strategic way to stop wasting B2B ad dollars on B2C impressions and get down to business. This feature is best for B2B-focused sellers, bulk suppliers, and office product brands.
The war for attention just got a little more precision-guided. On May 6th 2025, Amazon is introducing a new-to-brand (NTB) audience for Sponsored Brands campaigns, letting you boost bids specifically for shoppers who haven’t bought from your brand in the past 12 months.
Whether you’re setting up a new campaign or modifying an existing one, you’ll now see:
And it’s incredibly effective. Advertisers who increased their bids by 100%+ saw 2x more NTB orders than those who didn’t. This feature is best for brands focused on customer acquisition and market expansion.
Where it’s live:
Who gets access
Growth isn’t just about ROAS anymore. These days, it’s specifically about who you’re acquiring. NTB targeting lets you prioritize quality over clicks.
Amazon Marketing Cloud just got a serious upgrade. On May 23, 2025, Amazon rolled out the Amazon Retail Purchases dataset, giving advertisers access to five full years of detailed retail purchase history, up from the previous 13-month limit.
Part of the AMC Paid Features suite (with a 60-day free trial, then $500/month for measurement), this dataset unlocks deeper insights into customer behavior, lets you model lifetime value with more accuracy, and helps you build smarter, high-impact audiences.
So what’s in the dataset?
For custom audiences: It’s free.
For measurement and advanced analytics, you’ll need to subscribe.
Why it matters:
Where is it live?
Who gets access?
This feature is perfect for Analysts, data-driven advertisers, and brands selling durable/replenishable goods. Ultimately, it’s for advertisers who think in terms of cohorts, not campaigns.
Ireland just became a lot more interesting for advertisers. As of May 28, 2025, Amazon.ie, now supports Sponsored Products, Sponsored Brands, and Stores. This essentially enables sellers and vendors access to a brand-new audience in Western Europe.
It’s especially useful for brands already operating in the UK or looking to expand across the EU. You can now:
Ireland may be small in population, but it’s strategically placed—and underserved. For many brands, this rollout opens up an entirely new pocket of ROI with very little lift.
Where it’s live:
Who gets access?
Where to run it?
Ireland may be small in population, but it’s strategic for EU growth and for many brands, this unlocks a whole new layer of advertising ROI.
Amazon has gone all out in May with new tools launches, policy shifts, and optimization tips to help prep your account for Q3 and Q4.
Between compliance migrations and changes to buyer communication, May’s updates are less about bells and whistles and more about foundational clarity. Think of it as Amazon tightening the screws so you don’t come loose when volumes spike later in the year.
Now, here’s a list of what’s changing and how to use it to your advantage:
If you’ve been bouncing between dashboards to manage product or food safety compliance, that’s about to get easier. Well, eventually.
On May 29th, Amazon officially began migrating all product and food safety requirements to the Account Health dashboard, phasing out the separate Manage Your Compliance page.
What this means:
Transition period: During the migration (expected to wrap by July), you’ll need to check both dashboards to stay fully compliant. Amazon plans to roll out tutorials and help guides once the switch is in full effect.
Amazon has quietly rolled back your ability to flag buyer messages as “[Important]”. This change, which was rolled out in mid-May, affects how (and when) you can reach opted-out customers.
The update tightens up Buyer-Seller Messaging to protect buyer inbox preferences.
Here’s what changed:
What does this mean exactly?
Your only path through is utility. Meaning, if your message is essential to the order, it gets delivered. If not, it gets filtered.
What still works:
Use Amazon’s message templates. These templates:
We recommend you get reacquainted with what qualifies as critical comms. Check Amazon’s Communication Guidelines.
If you’ve been phoning it in with your A+ Content, it time to up your game. Amazon just released a new wave of A+ Content best practices and tied them directly to sales lift metrics.
Some highlights worth reworking your listings for:
Here’s a tip from the trenches: If your ASIN is showing signs of ad fatigue or declining conversion, check your A+ visuals. Chances are, it’s time for an overall. You can always reach out to our listing optimization specialists for an audit.
Amazon has upgraded the Send to Amazon workflow with two key changes designed to reduce friction and improve cost control during shipment creation:
1) Real-Time Eligibility for Optimized Splits
As you create domestic or international shipments, the system will now indicate whether your shipment qualifies for Amazon-optimized splits. Visibility includes requirements for individual units, case packs, and pallet templates. This upgrade will now allow for better planning and compliance.
2) Upfront Cost Transparency
Step 2 now shows estimated inbound costs, including FBA placement service fees and shipping estimates via Partnered Carrier Program (PCP) or SEND. These are comparison-only estimates and carry no obligation unless you proceed with PCP.
Additionally, for domestic shipments, the system auto-compares small parcel vs. less-than-truckload rates and preselects the lower-cost option. Ultimately, this helps you avoid manual guesswork and improve logistics efficiency.
It’s important to note that rates shown may differ from what non-PCP carriers charge. Use this workflow as a strategic benchmark, not a final quote.
As of May 2025. you can now define minimum and maximum inventory thresholds for FBA replenishment directly through Amazon Warehousing & Distribution (AWD). This gives you precision control over how much stock flows into FBA, aligned with sales patterns and cash flow priorities.
Once thresholds are set per SKU, AWD auto-initiates replenishment shipments to maintain stock levels, considering both on-hand and in-transit inventory.
This is particularly beneficial for:
Caution: It’s important to note that SKUs with minimum thresholds set become ineligible for storage fee waivers for 90 days. You take full ownership of inventory planning and associated FBA costs.
To update thresholds:
Go to Inventory > Warehousing and Distribution (AWD) → View or Move inventory → Select SKUs → Set thresholds under FBA replenishment.
From June 12th 2025, Amazon will issue fee adjustments based on discrepancies between the weight and dimensions you submit during shipment creation and the actual measurements recorded by the partnered carrier.
What does this? Well:
You’ll be notified of these differences within the Inbound Performance dashboard, where you can review specific discrepancies under the “Inaccurate transportation weight/dims” defect category.
This change encourages more accurate prep and labeling from the start, reducing future disputes and improving cost accuracy at scale.
As of June 29th 2025, Amazon will tighten the eligibility criteria and performance standards for Seller Fulfilled Prime (SFP) and Premium Shipping to ensure these programs consistently deliver the Prime-level experience buyers expect.
Key changes include:
Even if you’re not using these tools, Amazon may exempt OTDR penalties during wide-scale disruption events that affect a region.
This update improves fairness while ensuring seller performance aligns with evolving buyer expectations. For sellers who prioritize fast, reliable fulfillment without outsourcing to FBA, understanding and aligning with these standards will be critical to retain program benefits.
Amazon has launched a free AI-based brand name generator to support you with brand building from day one. This tool essentially generates name suggestions tailored to your product category, audience, and brand positioning. Most importantly, there is rationale behind each name.
While the tool is a powerful starting point, always consult a trademark attorney before finalizing a brand name.
To try it: Head to Create a brand name in Seller Central.
Amazon did more that simply launch a couple of new features in May 2025, they’ve empowered sellers to become more strategic direction. Amazon is rewarding advertisers and sellers who operate with precision, think in cohorts, and treat ad dollars as strategic levers, not blunt instruments.
Whether it’s targeting only business buyers, scaling new-to-brand acquisition, or mapping five years of purchase cycles—your competitive advantage now lies in who you target, how often, and with what level of insight.
This is Amazon signaling that the era of “set-it-and-forget-it” is over. The winners? Those who build systems, not just campaigns.