Amazon Multi-Marketplace Strategy: US, UK, EU, and Beyond
Connor Mulholland
Expand to UK first (English language, similar market, 15-25% of US revenue potential), then Germany (largest EU market), then Pan-European FBA for France/Italy/Spain. International expansion typically adds 30-60% to your total revenue within 12 months. Budget for translations, VAT registration, and compliance.
Why expand internationally
International Amazon marketplaces represent incremental revenue with relatively low marginal effort. Your product is proven, your brand is established, your supply chain is running, and Amazon's infrastructure handles fulfillment in each country.
The math is compelling: if international markets add 30-60% to your US revenue, and the setup cost is $5,000-15,000, the ROI typically hits positive within 2-4 months. You're not starting from scratch — you're extending what already works.
Competition is often lower in international markets. Categories saturated in the US may have half the competition in the UK or Germany. Your US experience, listing optimization skills, and PPC knowledge give you an advantage over local sellers who haven't refined their approach.
Marketplace comparison
UK (Amazon.co.uk): The easiest expansion for US sellers. English language, similar product preferences, well-developed Amazon marketplace. Typically generates 15-25% of US revenue. GBP pricing, UK-specific product compliance required for some categories.
Germany (Amazon.de): The largest European marketplace. German translation essential — machine translation won't cut it. Requires VAT registration. Typically 20-30% of US revenue potential. German consumers are detail-oriented; thorough product specifications in bullets matter more here.
France (Amazon.fr): Third-largest EU market. French translation required. Can be served through Pan-European FBA once you're established in Germany.
Japan (Amazon.co.jp): Large, sophisticated market with unique consumer preferences. Japanese translation essential. Import regulations are strict. High effort but can be very rewarding for products that match Japanese taste — beauty, kitchen, electronics accessories.
Canada (Amazon.ca): Often overlooked but very easy — English language, similar consumer behavior, proximity for shipping. Typically 8-15% of US revenue.
Australia (Amazon.com.au): Growing market, English language, but smaller scale. Good for testing with minimal investment.
Recommended expansion sequence
For most US-based sellers, the optimal sequence is:
- Canada + UK (Month 1-2): Both are English-language, low friction. Set up simultaneously since the effort is similar.
- Germany (Month 4-6): Largest EU market. Budget for professional translation and VAT registration. This is the gateway to all of EU.
- Pan-European FBA (Month 6-8): Once established in Germany, enable Pan-European FBA to automatically serve France, Italy, Spain, Netherlands, Sweden, and Poland from your German inventory.
- Japan (Month 9-12, optional): Only if your product category has strong demand in Japan. Higher setup effort but can be highly profitable.
For more details on the international expansion process, see our step-by-step guide.
Logistics and compliance
Inventory management: You'll need separate FBA inventory for each marketplace (or region, with Pan-European FBA). Don't spread inventory too thin — start with your top 5-10 ASINs in each new market rather than your entire catalog.
VAT registration: Required for EU marketplaces if you store inventory or exceed distance selling thresholds. VAT rates: UK (20%), Germany (19%), France (20%), Italy (22%), Spain (21%). Use a VAT service like AVASK, Hellotax, or SimplyVAT for registration and filing.
Product compliance: Each country has specific requirements. EU requires CE marking for many product categories. UK has UKCA marking post-Brexit. Electrical products, toys, and food products have the strictest requirements. Research compliance BEFORE shipping inventory.
Translations: Invest in professional native-speaker translators, not machine translation. Your product titles, bullets, descriptions, A+ Content, and backend keywords all need translation. Budget $200-500 per product per language.
Automate this with Jarvio; no coding required.
Start free trialCommon expansion mistakes
Using US listings without translation. Even in the UK, some product terminology differs. And for non-English markets, machine-translated listings read poorly, hurt conversion, and can contain embarrassing errors.
Ignoring VAT requirements. Selling in the EU without proper VAT registration can result in fines, account suspension, and retroactive tax liability. Set up VAT before you start selling.
Spreading inventory too thin. Launching 50 products across 5 marketplaces simultaneously means none of them get enough inventory depth. Start with your top 5-10 products in one new market, prove demand, then expand.
Same PPC strategy everywhere. Keyword behavior, competition levels, and CPCs differ by marketplace. Your US PPC strategy won't directly translate. Start with auto campaigns in new markets to learn local search behavior.
Ignoring cultural differences. Product preferences vary by country. Color preferences, sizing expectations, and feature priorities differ. Research local preferences before assuming your US bestseller will perform identically in Germany or Japan.
Planning your expansion
Jarvio can analyze your product catalog against international marketplace demand data, estimate revenue potential per country, and create a prioritized expansion plan:
Frequently asked questions
Which Amazon marketplace should I expand to first?
Do I need a separate account for each marketplace?
How much does international expansion cost?
Do I need to translate my listings?
What about VAT for EU marketplaces?
Connor Mulholland
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