At a glance
The share of your seller-fulfilled orders that shipped after their expected ship date. Late Shipment Rate is one of the three core seller-fulfilled performance metrics Amazon scores (with Cancellation Rate and Valid Tracking Rate), and it directly affects your account health and Buy Box eligibility. It is an FBM metric: when you ship orders yourself, missing the ship-by window counts against you. Amazon sets a strict ceiling, and a breach can suppress listings or put the selling account at risk. The fix is almost always operational, tighter dispatch discipline and realistic handling times.
| What it counts | The percentage of seller-fulfilled (FBM) orders confirmed as shipped after the expected ship date, over the window. An order is late if dispatch confirmation lands after the ship-by date Amazon set from your handling time. |
| FBA vs FBM | This is an FBM / Seller-Fulfilled Prime metric. Amazon ships FBA orders itself, so FBA orders do not count against your Late Shipment Rate. An FBA-only seller usually sees a near-empty value. |
| Why it matters | Late shipments break the buyer’s delivery promise, drive complaints and INR (item-not-received) claims, and damage account health. Amazon enforces a ceiling; persistent breaches can suppress listings or deactivate the account. |
| Handling time link | The expected ship date is derived from the handling time you set per listing. An over-optimistic handling time manufactures late shipments; padding it realistically is often the simplest fix. |
| Tracking link | Late Shipment Rate works alongside Valid Tracking Rate. Confirming dispatch with valid tracking on time is what keeps both healthy. |
| Account-health triad | Read with Pre-Fulfilment Cancel Rate and Order Defect Rate for the full seller-performance picture. |
| Reading the gauge | Lower is better. Comfortably under the warn line is healthy; nudging the breach line is an account-risk situation needing immediate operational attention. |
| Currency / unit | percent |
| Time window | 30D vsP (last 30 days vs the prior 30 days) |
| Alert trigger | >3.5% (warn) / >4% (breach) |
| Roles | owner, operations |
Calculation
Calculated automatically from your Amazon Seller Central data. See the At a glance summary above for what the metric tracks and the worked example below for a typical reading.Worked example
A garden-tools seller running FBM on Amazon UK, 30-day window 02 Apr 26 to 01 May 26 vs the prior 30 days. All numbers illustrative.| Cause of late shipment | Late orders | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Handling time too short for bulky items | 14 | Set to 1 day, realistically needs 2 |
| Carrier collection missed on a Friday | 6 | Weekend pushed dispatch to Monday |
| Stock at a second warehouse, slow transfer | 5 | Inventory not where the order routed |
| Bank-holiday cut-off not adjusted | 3 | Handling time not paused for the holiday |
| Total late orders | 28 | |
| Total seller-fulfilled orders | 800 | |
| Late Shipment Rate | 3.5% | 28 / 800 |
- 3.5% hits the warn line and is one bad day from a breach. At the
>3.5% (warn)threshold with>4% (breach)close behind, Vortex IQ Nerve Centre flags this. A single missed carrier collection could tip it into breach territory, where listing suppression and account risk begin. - Half the lateness is a handling-time setting, not a real delay. Fourteen of the 28 late orders are bulky items given a 1-day handling time they cannot meet. Padding the handling time to 2 days for those SKUs removes the manufactured lateness without shipping any faster.
- Weekends and holidays are predictable failure points. The missed Friday collection and the un-adjusted bank holiday are calendar problems. Setting realistic cut-offs and pausing handling time over holidays prevents both.
- The denominator protects an FBA-heavy seller. This metric only counts seller-fulfilled orders. A seller who moves these SKUs to FBA removes them from the calculation entirely, because Amazon then owns the shipping.
- The fix is operational, not promotional. Nothing here is solved by price or content. Tighter dispatch discipline, realistic handling times, and holiday-aware cut-offs are the levers. Pair with Order Defect Rate to see the downstream complaint impact.
Sibling cards merchants should reference together
Late Shipment Rate is one leg of seller performance; read it with:| Card | Why pair it with Late Shipment Rate |
|---|---|
| Pre-Fulfilment Cancel Rate | The second seller-fulfilled pillar; the same operations gap often moves both. |
| Order Defect Rate | Late shipments drive defects and INR claims; this is the downstream metric. |
| Account Health Status | The overall standing this metric feeds; watch it when lateness climbs. |
| A-to-z Guarantee Claims (open) | Late and non-delivery is a leading cause of A-to-z claims. |
| Negative Feedback (30d) | Late deliveries generate negative feedback; the two tend to move together. |
Reconciling against Amazon Seller Central
Where to look in Amazon Seller Central:Seller Central → Performance → Account Health. The Late Shipment Rate tile under seller-fulfilled performance is the native figure, with Amazon’s current target shown alongside.For the order-level detail, Seller Central → Reports → Fulfilment, or the Manage Orders view filtered to late-dispatched orders for the same range. Timing, settlement, and reporting-lag table:
| Topic | Detail |
|---|---|
| Timezone | The Account Health page uses your marketplace account timezone; Vortex IQ aligns to your configured reporting timezone. An order shipped just after midnight relative to its ship-by can fall differently across timezones. |
| Window definition | Amazon presents Late Shipment Rate over its own rolling windows (commonly 10-day and 30-day views). Vortex IQ uses 30D vs prior 30D; the headline differs if you compare to Amazon’s 10-day figure. |
| Ship-confirm timing | Lateness is judged on when dispatch is confirmed, not when the parcel physically left. Confirming dispatch promptly (even before collection) matters for the metric. |
| Reporting lag | The Account Health page recomputes on Amazon’s cadence; a late order can take a refresh cycle to appear. The card refreshes on the standard data cadence. |
| Reason | Direction | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Window length | Either | Comparing the card’s 30D to Amazon’s 10-day tile gives different rates; match the window. |
| Ship-confirm vs physical dispatch | Either | Edge cases around when dispatch was confirmed vs collected shift which orders count as late. |
| Timezone boundary | Marginal | Orders near the ship-by deadline fall differently across timezones. |
| Recompute lag | Temporary | The Account Health tile and the card can be briefly out of sync after a fresh late order. |
| Card | Expected relationship | What causes legitimate divergence |
|---|---|---|
ebay.late-shipment-rate | Marketplace peer. eBay scores late dispatch under its own seller-standards rules with different windows and thresholds. Independent populations. | Different definitions and ceilings; use as a peer benchmark, not a line-for-line reconciliation. |
shopify.total_revenue | Independent channel. A shared fulfilment operation that ships both Amazon and DTC late will show stress on both, but Shopify has no equivalent scored metric. | No reconciliation; the shared cause (warehouse capacity, carrier issues) is the link, not the numbers. |
Known limitations / merchant FAQs
Does this include FBA orders? No. Amazon ships FBA orders itself, so they do not count against your Late Shipment Rate. This is a seller-fulfilled (FBM / Seller-Fulfilled Prime) metric. An FBA-only seller typically sees a near-empty value. My number here does not match the rate on my Account Health page. Why? The most common reason is window length. Amazon shows Late Shipment Rate over both a 10-day and a 30-day view; this card uses 30D vs prior 30D. Compare like for like before assuming a real difference. Timezone and recompute lag account for small residual gaps. Half my late shipments are not really late. What is going on? A handling time set shorter than you can actually achieve manufactures lateness: Amazon computes the ship-by date from your handling time, so an over-optimistic setting guarantees late orders. Padding handling time to a realistic value on bulky or slow SKUs is often the single biggest fix. Does confirming dispatch early help? Yes. The metric is judged on when you confirm dispatch with valid tracking, not when the parcel physically leaves. Confirming promptly, and ideally pre-printing labels and confirming as items are picked, protects the metric. Can I change the alert threshold? Yes. The>3.5% (warn) / >4% (breach) defaults are configurable per profile in the Sensitivity tab. Amazon enforces its own ceiling regardless, so keep the warn line below Amazon’s target to give yourself reaction time.