Amazon Private Label vs Wholesale vs Arbitrage
Connor Mulholland
Three main Amazon business models: Private Label (create your own branded products, 30-50% margins, $3-10K startup, 2-3 months to first sale), Wholesale (resell established brands, 15-30% margins, need distributor relationships), and Arbitrage (buy retail/online at discount and resell, 10-20% margins, fastest start but doesnt scale). Many sellers start with arbitrage to learn, then transition to private label for long-term brand building.
Private Label: build your own brand
Private label is the most popular model among serious Amazon sellers. You create your own branded product — typically by sourcing from manufacturers (often in China via Alibaba, though domestic sourcing is increasingly common) — and sell it exclusively under your brand on Amazon.
You own the listing, the brand, the reviews, and the customer relationship. This is the model that creates real business equity — private label Amazon brands routinely sell for 2-4x annual profit through aggregators and brokers.
How it works
- Product research: Find a product with proven demand, manageable competition, and healthy margins. Use tools to analyze BSR, review counts, and estimated sales volume.
- Sourcing: Contact manufacturers, request samples, negotiate pricing. For a complete guide, see how to find a manufacturer.
- Branding: Create your brand name, logo, and packaging design. Register your trademark for Brand Registry.
- Launch: Create your listing, ship to FBA, and run launch PPC campaigns.
- Scale: Optimize listing, build reviews, expand to additional products.
Financials
| Cost Category | Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Product samples | $50-200 | Order from 3-5 suppliers |
| First inventory order | $1,000-5,000 | 500-1,000 units typical first order |
| Shipping to Amazon | $300-1,500 | Sea freight vs. air freight |
| Product photography | $200-500 | 7 images including infographics |
| Logo and packaging | $100-500 | Fiverr to professional designer |
| Launch PPC (first 30 days) | $300-1,000 | Aggressive initial visibility |
| Amazon Vine reviews | $200 | Optional but recommended |
| Total | $2,150-8,700 |
Pros and cons
Pros: Highest margins (30-50%), full control over listing and brand, builds sellable equity, scalable through product expansion, eligible for A+ Content and Sponsored Brands.
Cons: Highest upfront investment, longest time to first sale (2-3 months), product development risk (might not sell), requires more skills (product research, sourcing, branding, PPC), inventory commitment.
Wholesale: resell established brands
Wholesale involves purchasing existing branded products from manufacturers or authorized distributors at wholesale prices and reselling them on Amazon. You're selling someone else's brand — the product, listing, and reviews already exist.
How it works
- Find brands: Research brands that sell well on Amazon but don't sell direct (or whose authorized sellers are limited)
- Get authorized: Contact the brand or its distributors, open a wholesale account, and negotiate pricing
- List on existing ASINs: Add your offer to the existing product listing
- Win the Buy Box: Compete with other sellers for the Buy Box through competitive pricing and seller performance
- Replenish and expand: Reorder winning products, add new brands to your portfolio
Financials
| Cost Category | Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum order (per brand) | $300-2,000 | Most distributors have minimums |
| Initial portfolio (3-5 brands) | $1,000-5,000 | Diversify across multiple brands |
| Prep and labeling | $0.20-0.50/unit | If using a prep center |
| Repricing tool | $15-100/month | Essential for Buy Box competition |
| Total startup | $1,000-5,000 |
Pros and cons
Pros: Faster to revenue (2-4 weeks), lower risk (proven products), no product development, steady cash flow, scalable through adding brands, minimal listing work.
Cons: Lower margins (15-30%), Buy Box competition, no brand equity, dependent on supplier relationships, can be undercut by other authorized sellers, limited control over listing content.
Arbitrage: buy low, sell higher
Arbitrage involves finding products at retail or online stores at a discount and reselling them on Amazon at market price. Retail arbitrage (RA) involves physical stores; online arbitrage (OA) is done from your computer.
How it works
- Find deals: Scan clearance aisles (RA) or deal sites (OA) for products selling below Amazon market price
- Verify profitability: Use the Amazon Seller app to scan barcodes and check current selling price, FBA fees, and estimated profit
- Purchase and ship: Buy the inventory, prep it, and ship to FBA (or fulfill via FBM)
- Sell at market price: Your offer competes with other sellers on the existing listing
Financials
| Cost Category | Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Initial inventory | $200-1,000 | Start small, learn fast |
| Tools (scanning apps) | $0-40/month | Amazon Seller app is free |
| Supplies (labels, poly bags) | $20-50 | One-time startup cost |
| Total startup | $200-1,000 |
Pros and cons
Pros: Lowest startup cost, fastest to first sale (days), minimal risk per item, great for learning Amazon's systems, no supplier relationships needed, immediate cash flow.
Cons: Lowest margins (10-20%), trading time for money, doesn't scale well beyond $5-10K/month, no brand equity, inconsistent sourcing (deals come and go), gating issues on many brands, race to the bottom on pricing.
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Start free trialSide-by-side comparison
| Factor | Private Label | Wholesale | Arbitrage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Startup cost | $3,000-10,000 | $1,000-5,000 | $200-1,000 |
| Time to first sale | 2-3 months | 2-4 weeks | 3-7 days |
| Typical margins | 30-50% | 15-30% | 10-20% |
| Scalability | High | Medium-High | Low |
| Brand equity | Yes | No | No |
| Risk level | Medium-High | Low-Medium | Low |
| Time commitment | 20-40 hrs/week initially | 15-25 hrs/week | 20-40 hrs/week (sourcing) |
| Exit value (sellable) | 2-4x annual profit | 1-2x annual profit | Minimal |
Hybrid models
Many successful Amazon sellers don't stick to one model. Common hybrid approaches:
Arbitrage → Private Label: Start with arbitrage to learn Amazon's systems and generate initial capital. Once you understand what sells and how Amazon works, launch your first private label product. This is the most common progression path.
Wholesale + Private Label: Use wholesale products for consistent cash flow while investing in private label for long-term brand building. Wholesale revenue funds private label product development.
Private Label + Accessories: Build a private label brand, then add complementary wholesale products that complement your brand. For example, a private label kitchen gadget brand might also sell wholesale kitchen accessories.
Capital requirements by model
Here's what you need to get started and what it takes to reach $10K/month revenue:
| Milestone | Private Label | Wholesale | Arbitrage |
|---|---|---|---|
| First sale | $3,000-5,000 | $1,000-2,000 | $200-500 |
| $5K/month revenue | $5,000-8,000 | $3,000-5,000 | $1,000-2,000 |
| $10K/month revenue | $8,000-15,000 | $5,000-10,000 | $3,000-5,000 |
| $50K/month revenue | $20,000-40,000 | $15,000-25,000 | Difficult to achieve |
Note: These are working capital requirements, not total investment. Revenue cycles back into inventory purchases, so your actual out-of-pocket stays relatively stable once you reach steady state.
Scaling each model
Scaling private label
Scale by launching additional products within your brand. Each new product follows the same process but benefits from your existing brand presence, customer base, and operational expertise. Successful private label brands typically add 2-4 new products per year.
Scaling wholesale
Scale by adding new brands and products to your portfolio. The key constraint is finding authorized supplier relationships — once you have 10-15 reliable suppliers, scaling is about capital allocation and inventory management rather than new sourcing.
Scaling arbitrage
Arbitrage has a natural ceiling because it's fundamentally time-limited. You can hire VAs for online arbitrage sourcing, but quality deals are finite. Most arbitrage sellers plateau at $5-15K/month revenue before transitioning to wholesale or private label.
Common mistakes by model
Private label mistakes:
- Choosing a product based on passion instead of data (the market doesn't care what you like)
- Under-investing in photography and listing quality
- Ordering too much inventory on the first order before validating demand
- Not budgeting for PPC during launch phase
Wholesale mistakes:
- Buying from unauthorized distributors who sell to everyone (resulting in Buy Box wars)
- Not checking Amazon's fee structure before purchasing (some products have negative margins after fees)
- Ignoring MAP policy enforcement (if the brand doesn't enforce MAP, expect a price race to the bottom)
Arbitrage mistakes:
- Not accounting for all Amazon fees when calculating profit (FBA fees, referral fees, storage)
- Buying gated products you can't actually sell on Amazon
- Holding inventory too long (seasonal deals become aged inventory with storage surcharges)
Which model fits you?
The right model depends on your resources, risk tolerance, and goals:
- Choose private label if: You have $5,000+ to invest, 2-3 months of patience, and want to build a brand you could eventually sell. You're comfortable with product development risk.
- Choose wholesale if: You want faster revenue with moderate capital, prefer working with proven products, and are good at building business relationships.
- Choose arbitrage if: You have limited capital, want to learn Amazon with minimal risk, and don't mind the time-intensive sourcing process as a learning phase.
Most importantly: don't overthink it. The best model is the one you actually start. You can always transition later — and the skills you learn in any model transfer to the others.
Frequently asked questions
Which Amazon business model is most profitable?
Can I switch models later?
Which model is best for a complete beginner?
Can I run multiple models simultaneously?
Do I need Brand Registry for every model?
Which model works best with automation tools like Jarvio?
Connor Mulholland
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