Prime Day 2026 should not be planned as a revenue sprint. It should be planned as a margin-controlled demand event. Big difference. One produces a useful profit story; the other produces a warehouse full of heroic chaos and a finance team blinking slowly.
30 days out: choose the SKU list
Start with products that have healthy contribution margin, enough stock, strong content and a realistic return profile. Do not push every product. Prime Day is not a group hug for the catalog.
21 days out: set margin guardrails
| Input | Why it matters | Guardrail |
|---|---|---|
| COGS + fees | Defines break-even ACOS | SKU-level calculation |
| Coupons | Reduces kept revenue | Pre-approved discount cap |
| Returns | Hits post-event profit | Use category return rate |
| Stock cover | Protects rank and delivery | Hold spend below risk level |
14 days out: clean campaigns
Separate branded, category, competitor and product-defense campaigns. Set target ACOS from SKU margin, not from last year’s optimism. Use Amazon P&L data to decide which products deserve aggressive bids.
7 days out: lock the operating room
Assign owners for inventory, bids, coupons, content, pricing and reporting. Review Buy Box, delivery promise, listing quality and budget pacing daily. The goal is boring execution. Boring is underrated and frankly quite attractive during peak events.
Event days: monitor profit signals
| Signal | Check | Action |
|---|---|---|
| TACoS | Spend versus total sales | Prevent paid dependency |
| Conversion | Listing and price quality | Fix content or pause waste |
| Stock | Days of cover | Throttle campaigns |
| Margin | Contribution after ads | Move budget to winners |
After Prime Day: do the margin wash-up
Compare forecast versus actual revenue, ad spend, fees, coupon cost, returns, stockouts and contribution margin. A post-event review should decide which SKUs earned more budget, which need content fixes and which should not be invited to the next party.
Budget allocation by SKU role
Not every SKU should behave the same during Prime Day. Hero products can defend demand and harvest high-intent traffic. Launch products may accept higher ACOS if ranking and total sales improve. Clearance products need strict discount math because low price plus high ad spend is a tiny bonfire for margin. Build campaign groups around those roles instead of forcing every product into one target.
Coupon discipline
Coupons look small in the ad console and large in the P&L. Review coupon cost together with referral fees, fulfillment, returns and ad spend. A 15% coupon on a product with 28% pre-ad contribution margin leaves very little room for aggressive Sponsored Products bidding. Cute orange badge, dangerous little thing.
Post-event cohort review
After the event, split orders into new-to-brand, repeat, discounted, full-price and high-return cohorts where possible. This helps separate profitable customer acquisition from subsidized demand that disappears the moment the discount ends. The best Prime Day review is not “what did we sell?” It is “which demand should we buy again?”
FAQ
When should Prime Day planning start?
At least 30 days before the event for assortment, inventory and campaign structure.
Which products should get budget?
Products with enough margin, stock and conversion quality to absorb demand profitably.
Should ACOS targets be relaxed?
Sometimes, but only when TACoS, rank, stock and contribution margin support the decision.
What is the biggest Prime Day mistake?
Optimizing for revenue while ignoring coupon cost, returns and post-event margin.
How does FiveX help?
FiveX connects advertising, profit analytics, stock and Amazon reporting so peak events stay tied to profit.
Want a calmer Prime Day? FiveX gives your team the operating view to scale what pays and stop what only looks shiny.