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For Sellers
A guide to appealing Amazon account suspensions
Don’t panic over an Amazon suspension. Here are some solutions to try.
Your Amazon business was humming along perfectly. Sales were steady, reviews were coming in, and then—BAM. You wake up to that dreaded email: your account has been suspended.
The good news? Amazon suspensions aren’t death sentences for most sellers. Understanding how to navigate the appeal process, write compelling Plans of Action, and prevent future issues can get you back to selling quickly.
Here’s everything you need to know about fighting Amazon suspensions and winning.
Understanding Amazon suspensions vs. deactivations
Amazon uses two main enforcement actions: suspensions and deactivations. The difference matters more than you might think.
Suspensions are temporary restrictions on your selling privileges. Your account remains active, but you can’t list new products or fulfill orders. Think of it as being benched until you address the issue.
Permanent deactivations are the nuclear option. Amazon closes your account entirely, typically for serious violations like fraud, selling counterfeit goods, or repeatedly ignoring policy warnings. Recovery from permanent deactivation is much harder and sometimes impossible.
When Amazon suspends your account, several things happen immediately:
- You lose access to list new products
- Existing listings may be removed or suppressed
- Your funds get frozen for up to 90 days
- Customer orders stop flowing to your account
- You can’t access certain Seller Central features
The Account Health Rating system tracks your compliance risk using a color-coded score from 0 to 1,000.
- Green (200-1,000 points) means you’re healthy and not at risk.
- Yellow (100-199 points) puts you in the danger zone.
- Red (99 or lower) means you’re either suspended or about to be.
Amazon assigns point deductions based on violation severity: critical, high, medium, and low. Critical violations can trigger immediate suspension, while lower-level issues gradually chip away at your score.
Identifying why your Amazon account was suspended
The first step to fixing any problem is understanding what went wrong. Amazon tells you exactly where to look.
Head to Performance > Account Health in Seller Central. This dashboard shows your current Account Health Rating and lists any policy violations dragging down your score. Each violation includes details about the specific policy you allegedly broke and the products or actions involved.
Reading violation notices correctly requires understanding severity levels. Critical violations address issues like selling dangerous products or manipulating reviews. High-severity issues might include intellectual property complaints or product safety concerns. Medium and low-severity violations cover things like listing policy violations or communication guideline breaches.
Here are some of the most common triggers that lead to suspension:
- Anti-counterfeiting policy violations
- Intellectual property complaints from rights owners
- Product safety and compliance issues
- Review manipulation or incentivized reviews
- Communication guideline violations with customers
- Restricted product policy breaches
- Product condition guideline violations
Repeat violations hurt you twice. First, the point deductions increase each time you violate the same policy. Second, Amazon may suspend accounts that hit the maximum number of repeat violations within 180 days—sometimes as few as two violations for serious policy breaches.
The official Amazon appeal process
Amazon provides a structured appeal process through Seller Central.
Step 1: Navigate to Performance > Account Health in your Seller Central dashboard.
Step 2: Click the “Reactivate your account” button at the top of the Account Health page.
Step 3: Follow the instructions provided. This might involve:
- Completing a questionnaire about the violation
- Acknowledging specific policy violations
- Taking a quiz about Amazon policies
- Submitting supporting documents
- Writing a Plan of Action
Step 4: Click “Submit” to send your completed appeal.
Amazon promises to respond within two days of receiving your appeal. Monitor your email closely for their decision or requests for additional information.
If Amazon asks for more details, return to Performance > Account Health and click “View Appeal” to submit additional documentation. Don’t ignore these requests—they’re usually your last chance to provide the evidence needed for reinstatement.
How to write an effective Plan of Action (POA)
Your Plan of Action is your legal brief, business proposal, and apology letter rolled into one. Get it right, and you’re back in business. Get it wrong, and you might be permanently banned.
Amazon requires three specific elements in every Plan of Action:
- Root cause analysis: Explain exactly what went wrong and why
- Immediate corrective actions: Detail the steps you’ve already taken to fix the problem
- Preventive measures: Outline your plan to ensure this never happens again
Common POA mistakes that lead to automatic rejection include:
- Denying responsibility or blaming Amazon’s systems
- Providing generic templates that don’t address your specific violation
- Making promises you can’t keep or implement
- Failing to demonstrate understanding of the violated policy
- Submitting emotional appeals instead of factual responses
Use this template approach for structuring your POA:
Opening paragraph: Acknowledge the specific policy violation and take full responsibility without making excuses.
Root cause section: Dig deep into what went wrong. Was it a supplier issue? Training gap? System error? Be specific and honest.
Immediate actions taken: List concrete steps you’ve already implemented, with dates and evidence where possible.
Long-term prevention plan: Describe new processes, training programs, or systems you’re putting in place to prevent recurrence.
Supporting documentation strengthens your appeal significantly. Include invoices proving product authenticity, training records showing employee education, or process flowcharts demonstrating new quality control measures.
Alternative options and last resorts
Sometimes appeals fail. Here are your remaining options, along with realistic expectations about each.
Creating new seller accounts violates Amazon’s terms of service.
Amazon tracks connections between accounts through various methods, including IP addresses, bank accounts, and personal information. Getting caught operating multiple accounts after a suspension typically results in permanent bans across all accounts.
Arbitration with Amazon
This is expensive and time-consuming, but sometimes necessary for high-stakes cases. The process costs around $1,400 in filing fees, plus legal representation costs. Success rates vary widely depending on the violation type and the strength of your case.
Most arbitration cases involve disputes over suspended accounts worth significant money or situations where Amazon’s decision seems clearly erroneous. Small sellers rarely find arbitration cost-effective unless their suspended account represents substantial ongoing revenue.
Legal representation makes sense for complex cases involving intellectual property disputes, significant financial damages, or situations where you believe Amazon made clear procedural errors. Employment attorneys specializing in platform disputes understand Amazon’s policies and appeal processes better than general business lawyers.
Preventing future suspensions
The best suspension appeal is the one you never have to write. Proactive account management keeps you out of trouble.
Monitor your Account Health Rating weekly.
Set a calendar reminder to check your dashboard every Monday morning. Small violations are easier to address before they snowball into suspension-worthy problems.
The repeat violation penalty system gets more severe with each offense. Your first violation might cost 10 points, but your third violation of the same policy could cost 50 points or trigger immediate suspension. Track your violation history and implement stronger preventive measures for policies you’ve violated before.
Policy compliance best practices include:
- Reading Amazon’s policy updates in your Account Health News feed
- Training team members on current policy requirements
- Implementing quality control checks for new product listings
- Responding quickly to customer complaints and policy violation notices
- Maintaining detailed records of your compliance efforts
Update your Emergency Contact information in Seller Central under Notifications preferences. Amazon sometimes calls sellers before suspending accounts to offer personalized support. Make sure they can reach you when it matters most.
Using tools to make operations more efficient reduces the manual errors that often lead to policy violations. Tools like the ones included in the software bundle Seller 365 automate many compliance-critical processes, from prep and ship to review requests and repricing. When you’re not rushing to manually update hundreds of listings, you’re less likely to make the mistakes that trigger violations.
Your path back to selling success
Facing an Amazon suspension feels overwhelming, but most sellers who approach appeals systematically get reinstated. Start by thoroughly understanding your violations, write a detailed Plan of Action addressing each issue, and implement strong preventive measures for the future.
Immediate next steps depend on your current situation. If you’re suspended, focus entirely on crafting a compelling Plan of Action. If you’re still selling but seeing Account Health Rating decline, address violations immediately before they trigger suspension.
Your long-term account health strategy should include regular policy review, team training on current requirements, and proactive monitoring of your Account Health dashboard. Consider implementing tools and processes that automate compliance-critical activities to reduce human error.
The sellers who thrive on Amazon long-term aren’t necessarily the ones who never make mistakes. They’re the ones who learn from violations, implement strong systems, and stay ahead of policy changes. Your suspension might feel like a setback, but it can also be the wake-up call that transforms your business operations for the better.
Ready to strengthen your Amazon operations and reduce suspension risk? Try Seller 365 free for up to 14 days and access tools that help maintain policy compliance across your entire selling workflow.