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Amazon quietly rewrote its seller contract to govern every automated tool touching your account. If you use even one AI tool, repricer, or automation script, this policy already applies to you — whether you read the email or not.
On February 17, 2026, Amazon posted a notice to the Seller Central forums announcing updates to the Amazon Services Business Solutions Agreement — the 40-plus-page contract every seller agrees to the moment they open an account, whether they've ever actually read it or not. Buried inside a routine-sounding "legal refresh" was something genuinely structural: a brand-new Section 19, formally defining and restricting the use of "automated software or AI agents" that access Amazon Services.
This isn't a vague gesture toward AI safety. It's a specific, binding contractual term that introduces a new defined category — "Agent" — into the agreement, sitting alongside other newly defined terms like "Applicable Government Authority" and "Our Materials."
Alongside Section 19, Amazon also added a new subsection under Section 4 that explicitly prohibits using Amazon's materials or services to develop or improve AI and machine learning models — with reinforced restrictions on data mining, reverse engineering, and attempting to derive source code or model components from Amazon's systems.
What makes this policy genuinely notable isn't just its content — it's how quietly it arrived. Most sellers who received Amazon's notification email skimmed it, assumed it was routine legal housekeeping, and deleted it. That assumption is the mistake.
The policy's language — "automated software or AI agents" — is deliberately broad. According to guidance circulating among Amazon seller attorneys and agencies, the categories most directly implicated include:
One important clarification that surfaced in seller forum discussion: there is no minimum-usage threshold. The misconception many newer sellers hold is "I only use one tool, so this doesn't really apply to me." The reality is that the Agent Policy applies whether you use one automated tool or twenty — even something as modest as a profit calculator that pulls live data from your Amazon account technically falls within scope.
The single most concrete, recurring guidance across legal and seller-agency commentary on this policy is this: a compliant tool's API integration should be identifying itself as an automated system at the protocol level — not a stealth scraper dressed up to look like ordinary browser traffic.
In practical terms, this means legitimate software providers connecting to Amazon through the Selling Partner API (SP-API) — Amazon's official, sanctioned channel for programmatic access to orders, payments, inventory, and account data — are generally already operating in a self-identifying way, because SP-API access requires registered developer credentials and authenticated, traceable API calls.
Tools relying on browser automation or scraping techniques that mimic human interaction to extract data Amazon doesn't expose through SP-API sit in considerably riskier territory under the new policy — this is precisely the kind of "covert AI agent access" that triggered Amazon's lawsuit against Perplexity in November 2025, a case widely seen as the precursor to this BSA update.
You can't verify compliance for tools you've forgotten you're even using. The first practical step recommended across nearly every expert guide on this policy is the same: build a complete inventory before you do anything else.
List every tool, script, or automated system connected to your Seller Central account or Amazon APIs in any way — repricers, PPC automation, listing tools, feed managers, reimbursement services, profit calculators, browser extensions, and anything a contractor or VA might be running that you've forgotten about. Many sellers discover stale, still-running tools during this exercise that nobody remembers setting up.
Contact every vendor on your list with a direct, specific question: "Are you compliant with the Amazon Agent Policy effective March 4, 2026, specifically the Agent Policy under Section 19?" A reputable vendor should have a clear, public compliance statement and be able to confirm their self-identification approach without hedging.
You need the practical ability to immediately revoke any tool's access if Amazon requests it. That means knowing how to rotate SP-API tokens, revoke OAuth grants from the Solution Provider Portal (the renamed "Developer Site"), and disable browser sessions on demand — not figuring this out for the first time under pressure.
Contractors or VAs logging into your account using your own Seller Central credentials is a common, easily-overlooked compliance gap. Give every contractor their own limited-permission user account instead — both for Agent Policy compliance and basic account security hygiene.
The practical consequence chain matters more than the legal language. If a tool you depend on gets flagged as non-compliant and cut off without warning, the effects cascade quickly: your automation stops working, your repricer goes silent, your rankings can drift, your Buy Box share can erode, and your sales can drop — all from a contract dispute you may not have even known was happening.
Choosing research and AI tools built with transparency in mind isn't just good practice — under the new Agent Policy, it's a meaningful risk-reduction decision. SellerSprite's data and AI-powered features are built around Amazon's officially sanctioned access channels, the same kind of authenticated, traceable integration approach that sits on the low-risk side of the compliance table above.
As Amazon tightens its AI and automation policy, the tools you rely on matter more than ever. SellerSprite gives you powerful research without the compliance guesswork. Free 3-day trial, no credit card required.
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Whether March 4 has already passed quietly for you or you're catching up now, run through this list before your next tool renewal or vendor contract.
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