Amazon Merch on Demand Royalties: The Complete Guide
How Merch on Demand Royalties Actually Work
Amazon Merch on Demand is a print-on-demand program where you upload artwork, set a price, and Amazon handles printing, shipping, and customer service. In return, you earn a royalty — your cut of each sale.
The formula is straightforward:
Royalty = List Price × 0.70 − Production Cost
Amazon keeps 30% of the list price as their marketplace and fulfillment fee. Then they subtract their cost to actually produce the item. Whatever is left is yours.
Key insight: Because Amazon's cut is a flat 30%, you keep 70 cents of every extra dollar you add to your price. Pricing from $19.99 to $21.99 adds $1.40 to your royalty, not $2.00 — but it's still linear and predictable.
This matters because it means there's no "magic tier" where your royalty rate suddenly jumps. The more you charge (within reason), the more you earn per sale. The constraint is market competition — price too high and buyers click away.
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By the Numbers: Real Royalty Examples
Here's what a Standard Fit T-Shirt actually earns across a range of US prices. Amazon's production cost for this product is approximately $10.00.
| List Price | Amazon's Cut (30%) | Production Cost | Your Royalty | Margin |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $14.99 | $4.50 | $10.00 | $0.49 | 3.3% |
| $16.99 | $5.10 | $10.00 | $1.89 | 11.1% |
| $19.99 | $6.00 | $10.00 | $3.99 | 20.0% |
| $22.99 | $6.90 | $10.00 | $6.09 | 26.5% |
| $24.99 | $7.50 | $10.00 | $7.49 | 30.0% |
| $27.99 | $8.40 | $10.00 | $9.59 | 34.3% |
The takeaway: pricing at $13.99 almost always leaves money on the table. Moving from $13.99 to $19.99 adds $4.20 to your royalty without a dramatic effect on conversion — for the right design.
Pricing Strategy That Actually Converts
There's no single right price — it depends on your niche, design quality, and the competition on the product's detail page. But there are some proven rules of thumb.
The $19.99–$24.99 sweet spot for T-shirts
Most experienced Merch sellers price standard t-shirts between $19.99 and $24.99. At $19.99, you earn roughly $4.00 per shirt. At $24.99, you earn about $7.50. The psychological price anchor of "under $20" or "under $25" tends to keep conversion rates healthy in both ranges.
Price lower for niche audiences, higher for trending designs
If you're targeting a very specific interest group (hobbyists, local communities, inside jokes), buyers are often less price-sensitive — they want that shirt and can't find it anywhere else. If you're in a competitive trend, price slightly below the median to capture BSR faster and earn through volume.
Round numbers vs. .99 pricing
Amazon shoppers are used to .99 pricing. Prices like $19.99, $22.99, and $24.99 feel "normal." Round prices like $20 or $25 can sometimes read as premium — use this if your design has that quality.
Pro tip: A/B testing isn't easy on Merch — Amazon doesn't surface price history on your dashboard. Instead, start higher ($22.99–$24.99) and lower the price if you don't see sales after 60 days. Going the other direction (raising price after traction) can hurt your BSR temporarily.
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Use the Price Optimizer tab to see royalties at every price point.
Which Products Earn the Most Per Sale
Not all Merch products are created equal. Here's how to think about product selection from a pure margin standpoint.
T-shirts: high volume, decent margin
Standard t-shirts are the workhorse of Merch. Production costs are around $10.00, and the price range most buyers accept ($16.99–$24.99) gives you $1.89–$7.49 per sale. Volume makes this product category worth mastering even at lower per-unit margins.
Hoodies and sweatshirts: higher price tolerance, bigger royalties
A pullover hoodie has a higher production cost (~$22.27), but buyers regularly pay $34.99–$44.99 for a hoodie they love. At $39.99, your royalty is approximately $5.72. Not as high per dollar as shirts, but buyers are more committed — fewer returns, stronger word of mouth.
PopSockets: small but efficient
With a production cost of about $5.30 and a typical listing price of $12.99–$14.99, PopSockets offer royalties of $3.79–$5.19 — on a very low-cost item. Buyers don't haggle over a $12 PopSocket the way they might a $25 shirt.
Phone cases and tote bags: niche-first products
These sell well when the design directly matches the buyer's identity or community. A generic funny quote won't move many phone cases, but a design built around a hyper-specific fandom can dominate its subcategory.
The Tier System: Why It Matters More Than You Think
Merch operates on a tiered publishing system. When you join, you're limited to Tier 10 — meaning you can have at most 10 active designs live at one time. Sell consistently and Amazon promotes you to the next tier.
The tiers are: 10, 25, 100, 500, 1000, 2000, 4000, and 8000. Each tier roughly represents a design slot limit. Here's why this matters for your earnings math:
- More designs = more chances to be found. Each design is an independent traffic source via search. Going from 10 to 100 designs is a 10x increase in your discoverability surface area.
- Tier progression is not automatic. Amazon reviews your account before upgrading you. Sales volume is the primary signal, but they also look at quality — designs that get flagged or removed slow your progression.
- The jump from Tier 10 to Tier 25 is the hardest. New accounts are limited by their ability to test niches. Focus on variety and research in your first 10 slots. One strong seller can be enough to push you to Tier 25.
Reality check: Tier 10 is genuinely limiting. If you're serious about Merch as a side income, your goal in the first 90 days should be getting to Tier 100. That's when the catalog is large enough to build meaningful passive income.
Common Mistakes That Hurt Your Royalties
Pricing at Amazon's minimum
Amazon sets a floor price for each product below which royalties go negative. Many new sellers price right at the minimum thinking it will increase sales. It won't — it just means you're giving Amazon your shirt (literally). Price for profit.
Ignoring marketplace differences
Your US listing doesn't automatically appear in UK, DE, or JP marketplaces — you have to enable them. International markets can add 30–50% to your total sales with minimal extra work. Each market has slightly different production costs and consumer price expectations.
Designing for yourself instead of buyers
This isn't a royalty mistake per se, but it's the #1 reason sellers plateau. Research what's actually selling before designing. Use tools like Merch Informer or simply browse Amazon's bestseller lists by category. Passion projects are fine for a few slots — but research-driven designs fill the rest.
Setting and forgetting
Trends change, competitors undercut, and Amazon's algorithm shifts. Check your slow movers every 60–90 days. A price adjustment or description tweak can sometimes revive a stalled listing without replacing the design entirely.
Project your monthly earnings
See how your royalty per sale compounds with volume and tier progression.
MerchMargin is an independent tool and is not affiliated with or endorsed by Amazon.com, Inc. Royalty estimates are based on publicly documented formula data and community research. Actual royalties may vary. Always confirm current rates in your Merch dashboard.