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Items bought between November 1 and December 31 stay returnable until January 31, 2026 — a 92-day hold that pushes Q4 revenue certainty deep into Q1. Here's what that means for your cash flow, your reorder planning, and your next holiday season.
Every year, Amazon temporarily extends its standard 30-day return window to give holiday shoppers more breathing room. For the 2025 holiday season, items purchased between November 1 and December 31, 2025 remain returnable through January 31, 2026 — with one notable exception: Apple-branded products carry a shorter window, closing on January 15, 2026.
The policy applies uniformly across Fulfilment by Amazon, Fulfilled by Merchant, and Amazon retail orders, and Amazon has confirmed that return eligibility criteria themselves remain unchanged — only the timeline is extended. For a purchase made right at the start of the window, that's a 92-day hold between sale and the close of return eligibility.
Here's the part that catches sellers off guard every year: a sale isn't truly final until the return window closes on it. Revenue you recognised in November can still be unwound in late January — refunded, restocked (or written off if damaged), and removed from your actual profit for the season.
This isn't a hypothetical risk. It's a structural feature of how the extended window works, and it means your Q4 P&L looks meaningfully different on December 31st than it does once the dust settles on February 1st. Sellers who finalise their "holiday season results" too early are working from numbers that haven't fully matured yet.
The holiday return window doesn't operate in isolation. In 2026, Amazon also introduced DD+7 — a payout structure that delays seller disbursements until 7 days after delivery confirmation, rather than releasing funds immediately upon sale. Layer that on top of a 92-day return exposure window, and the cash flow picture for Q4 gets considerably more complex than in previous years.
The practical implication: even though funds are disbursed roughly a week after delivery under DD+7, that revenue still isn't fully "safe" until the return window closes nearly three months later. Sellers planning Q1 reorders, paying suppliers, or extending credit based on apparent Q4 performance need to build this lag into their planning — not just the payout delay, but the much longer return-risk tail behind it.
One specific mechanic makes the extended window riskier than it first appears: when a customer uses an Amazon-issued return label, the system can trigger the buyer's refund the moment the label is scanned by the carrier — not when the item actually arrives back at your warehouse or fulfilment centre.
This is precisely why documentation discipline matters more during the holiday return window than at any other point in the year. The volume of returns is higher, the dollar exposure per claim can be significant, and the evidentiary bar for recovering a disputed refund is genuinely demanding.
Not every product category faces equal risk during the extended window. Gift-purchase behaviour, sizing uncertainty, and "remorse return" patterns vary significantly by category — and knowing where you sit helps you forecast more accurately.
The combination of DD+7 and the 92-day return window means most holiday sellers need a larger cash buffer heading into Q1 than they did in prior years. Here's how to size it properly rather than guessing.
Look at last year's holiday-period return rate for each of your top SKUs. This is your starting baseline — category averages are a reasonable proxy only if you don't yet have your own data.
Rather than treating Q4 revenue as final on December 31st, build a provisional giveback estimate (historical return rate × Q4 revenue) and hold it back from what you treat as truly distributable profit until the return window closes.
The reserve needs to cover not just refunded revenue, but the knock-on effects: restocking costs, return shipping where applicable, and the lost margin on any units that come back damaged or unsellable.
The most useful thing the extended return window gives you, beyond the cash flow headache, is data. Once January 31st passes and your true net Q4 numbers settle, you have a far more accurate picture of real demand than you did in the rush of December.
Use that finalised data — not the optimistic December snapshot — to set next year's reorder points, safety stock levels, and pricing strategy. Sellers who only ever look at gross December sales consistently overestimate true demand and undersize their return-rate assumptions for the following season.
Get the market and demand data to set reorder points and pricing based on real net performance — not gross holiday numbers that haven't finished settling. Free 3-day trial, no credit card required.
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