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Published: February 27, 2017
Last updated: April 06, 2026
Marissa Incitti leads research and content at Feedvisor focused on Amazon, Walmart, and the broader e-commerce marketplace ecosystem. Her work covers retail media performance, pricing strategy, and how AI-driven discovery is reshaping how brands compete across marketplaces. Prior to Feedvisor, she worked in content leadership roles at a Fortune Global 500 omnichannel commerce technology company.
Most sellers log into Seller Central, check their orders, glance at sales, and log out. They’re using a command center like a cash register. The sections that actually move margin - Account Health, inventory planning, advertising reports, the data hiding in Business Reports - go untouched for weeks at a time. That’s the gap between sellers who react and sellers who optimize.
Seller Central is Amazon’s web portal for third-party (3P) sellers. Every pricing decision, inventory adjustment, ad campaign, and performance metric runs through it. But knowing what the portal contains matters less than knowing where to look when revenue stalls or costs creep up.
Before anything else - your selling plan. The Individual plan charges $0.99 per item sold. The Professional plan charges $39.99 per month, flat. The math here is simple: at 40 units per month, you hit $39.60 on Individual. Above 40, Professional saves you money on every additional sale.
But cost isn’t the whole picture. Individual sellers can’t run advertising, can’t use bulk upload tools, can’t access the Selling Partner API (SP-API), and have limited Buy Box eligibility. If you’re selling fewer than 30 units monthly and don’t need Ads or restricted category access, Individual works. Everyone else should be on Professional - the per-item savings are the least important reason.
| Feature | Individual ($0.99/item) | Professional ($39.99/mo) |
|---|---|---|
| Advertising | No | Full Amazon Ads access |
| Bulk tools & API | No | Yes (SP-API) |
| Buy Box eligibility | Limited | Full |
| Restricted categories | No | Can apply |
| Business reports | Limited | Full |
| Break-even | Under ~30-35 units/mo | 40+ units/mo |
Seller Central uses a left-side hamburger menu with these main sections: Catalog, Inventory, Orders, Advertising, Reports, Performance, Payments, Settings, and Brands (for Brand Registry sellers).
Not all sections deserve equal attention.
Check daily: Performance (Account Health, any new notifications), Orders (pending and returns), and the main dashboard.
Check weekly: Advertising (campaign performance, ACoS trends, wasted spend), Reports (Business Reports for conversion rates by ASIN, inventory reports for stranded or aging stock).
Check monthly: Settings (shipping templates, return policies), Catalog (listing quality, suppressed ASINs), Payments (settlement reports for fee reconciliation).
The sections you probably skip - Reports and Performance - are the ones where the most actionable data lives. A seller who reviews their Business Reports weekly catches conversion drops before they show up in revenue. One who ignores them finds out too late.
Three access methods: desktop at sellercentral.amazon.com, the Amazon Seller App (iOS/Android) for approvals and quick checks on the go, and SP-API for automated integrations with third-party tools. Use the app for buyer messages and price monitoring. Don’t build shipments or edit listings on mobile - you’ll miss errors you won’t catch until they’re live.
The Seller Central homepage is a customizable dashboard. You can rearrange, add, or remove widgets. Most sellers leave it at default. Don’t.
Pin three things where you’ll see them first:
Buy Box Percentage - If this drops, your sales are about to follow. A dip from 85% to 70% on your top ASINs should trigger an immediate pricing review. This is the earliest signal that something is wrong.
Account Health Rating - Amazon’s formalized score for your account standing. It tracks policy compliance, shipping performance (late shipment rate, order defect rate), and customer feedback. Above 200, you’re in the green. Between 100 and 200, Amazon flags you “at risk” - yellow warnings, restricted visibility. Below 100, deactivation is on the table. By the time you notice in a weekly check, the damage may already be done.
Performance Alerts - Policy violations, listing suppressions, metric warnings. These are time-sensitive. A suppressed ASIN doesn’t generate revenue, and Amazon’s notification emails get buried. The dashboard widget surfaces them faster.
Everything else - sales summary, order status, news headlines - is informational. Useful, not urgent. The three above are the ones that protect revenue.
Most sellers check the sales dashboard and stop there. The reports that actually diagnose problems sit one level deeper.
Business Reports → Detail Page Sales and Traffic breaks down sessions, page views, Buy Box percentage, and conversion rate by ASIN. When a product’s sales decline, this report tells you whether the problem is traffic (fewer sessions), conversion (sessions aren’t converting), or Buy Box loss. Each demands a different response: traffic problems are an advertising or SEO issue, conversion problems point to listing quality or reviews, and Buy Box loss is a pricing problem. Without this report, you’re guessing.
Inventory Reports flag stranded inventory (products in FBA that aren’t linked to active listings) and aging stock approaching long-term storage fees. The Inventory Performance Index (IPI) score - visible under Inventory Planning - directly affects your FBA storage limits. An IPI above 400 keeps your storage limits intact. Drop below 400, and Amazon restricts how much inventory you can send in - no exceptions, no appeals. If you don’t monitor this, you’ll get blindsided by capacity limits right before Q4.
Payment Reports → Settlement Reports show exactly what Amazon charged you per order - referral fees, FBA fees, advertising costs, reimbursements. If you’ve never reconciled a settlement report against your expected margins, you’re likely leaving money on the table through unnoticed fee increases or missing reimbursements.
Your Account Health Rating lives under Performance. It’s not a vanity metric - it’s the single number that determines whether Amazon lets you keep selling. The rating factors in:
The trap: most sellers only check Account Health when they receive a warning. By then, you’re already in a hole. A single spike in order defect rate above 1% can trigger a review. The sellers who maintain clean accounts check Performance weekly and address issues before they compound.
Amazon also sends Performance Notifications - alerts about policy violations, metric warnings, or required actions. These are time-bound. Missing the response window on a policy complaint can escalate a minor issue into account suspension.
If you own a registered trademark, Brand Registry unlocks tools that non-registered sellers can’t access:
Is it worth it? If you have the trademark, yes - the advertising data from Brand Analytics alone justifies enrollment. If you don’t have a trademark, the question is whether your catalog and margin justify the cost and time of registering one. For private-label sellers, it’s almost always yes. For resellers and arbitrage sellers, usually not.
Your Seller Central Data Is Only as Good as Your Decisions
Feedvisor’s AI-powered platform connects to your Seller Central data to optimize pricing, advertising, and inventory - turning the metrics you already have into margin you’re currently missing.
See How Feedvisor Works →Seller Central serves third-party (3P) sellers who sell directly to customers. Vendor Central serves first-party (1P) vendors who sell wholesale to Amazon. The differences between 1P and 3P come down to one thing: control.
| Aspect | Seller Central (3P) | Vendor Central (1P) |
|---|---|---|
| Access | Open registration | Invite-only |
| Pricing control | You set prices | Amazon sets prices |
| Fulfillment | FBA, FBM, or SFP | Amazon handles it |
| Payment terms | 14-day disbursement cycle | 60-90 day terms |
| Customer data | Full access | Limited |
| Margin visibility | You see everything | Amazon controls the math |
Amazon has been steering brands toward Seller Central and scaling back Vendor Central invitations. If you’re currently on Vendor Central debating a switch, the pricing control and faster payment terms on Seller Central are usually worth the operational overhead of managing fulfillment yourself. That said, brands moving high volume through Vendor Central with stable margins should think twice - the transition isn’t painless, and losing “Ships from and sold by Amazon” badging can affect conversion temporarily.
Register at sellercentral.amazon.com with your business information, bank account, and tax details. Amazon verifies your identity - expect 1-3 business days for approval. For a full walkthrough, see our guide on setting up a seller account.
Individual costs $0.99 per sale, Professional costs $39.99/month. At 40 units monthly, the cost is nearly identical. Professional unlocks advertising, bulk tools, API access, and full Buy Box eligibility - which matters more than the per-unit savings for most sellers.
Yes. Under Settings → User Permissions, you can grant role-based access to specific sections. Each team member gets their own login. Don’t share credentials - if something goes wrong, you’ll want the audit trail.
SP-API is Amazon’s current API for programmatic access to Seller Central - inventory, orders, reports, pricing. It replaced the older Marketplace Web Service (MWS), which is now deprecated. If you’re integrating with repricers, inventory tools, or analytics platforms, they’ll use SP-API.
Amazon Webstore was discontinued in 2015. The closest replacement is Brand Store within Brand Registry - a dedicated multi-page storefront on Amazon, not a standalone e-commerce site.
Stop Leaving Revenue in Your Seller Central Data