At a glance
Headline ordered product sales across every Amazon order in the period. This is Amazon’s “Ordered product sales” line, the customer-paid total of every unit ordered, gross of Amazon’s referral fees, gross of FBA fees, and gross of refunds. It is the single number an owner or CFO checks each Monday alongside the Shopify storefront and any other marketplace. On Amazon this figure is reported in the Business Reports “Sales and Traffic” view and as the headline tile in Seller Central.
| What it counts | Ordered product sales: the sum of unit price times quantity for every order line in the window. Amazon labels this Ordered product sales in Business Reports. It is order-time revenue, not shipped-time or settled-time. |
| Fulfilment scope | All channels combined: FBA (Fulfilled by Amazon) and FBM (Fulfilled by Merchant / Seller-Fulfilled). The card does not split the two; use the fulfilment-specific cards for that read. |
| Fees / commission framing | Gross of fees. This is the customer-paid total before Amazon deducts the referral fee (typically 8 to 15% by category, most consumer categories at 15%), FBA fulfilment and storage fees, and any advertising spend. For the post-fee figure, use Net Revenue (after fees + refunds) and Fees % of Revenue. |
| Advertising | Sponsored Products, Sponsored Brands, and Sponsored Display spend is on top of this number, not deducted from it. Ad-attributed sales are already inside this total (an ad-driven order is still an order). The paid-vs-organic split lives in Organic vs Ad Sales Share. |
| Marketplace aggregation | If multiple Amazon marketplaces are connected (US amazon.com, UK amazon.co.uk, DE amazon.de, etc.) their ordered product sales are summed. Each marketplace keeps its own currency, so a multi-marketplace seller should read per-marketplace rather than the blended headline. |
| Refunds | NOT deducted. A fully refunded order still contributes its full value to ordered product sales. Refunds are tracked separately by Return Rate and netted out in Net Revenue (after fees + refunds). |
| Cancellations | Orders cancelled before dispatch fall out of ordered product sales once Amazon processes the cancellation. Pre-fulfilment cancels are tracked by Pre-Fulfilment Cancel Rate. |
| Time window | T/7D/30D vsP (today, last 7D, last 30D, each vs the prior identical window). |
| Alert trigger | drop >15% vsP, driven by the revenue-trend sentiment signal. |
| Roles | owner, finance |
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 UK health-and-beauty brand selling on amazon.co.uk, mostly FBA with a small FBM tail for oversized bundles. Period: 02 Apr 26 to 01 May 26 (30D), comparing against the prior 30D (03 Mar 26 to 01 Apr 26).| Fulfilment / source | Orders | Avg order value | Ordered product sales |
|---|---|---|---|
| FBA, organic | 2,180 | £31 | £67,580 |
| FBA, Sponsored Products attributed | 940 | £34 | £31,960 |
| FBA, Sponsored Brands attributed | 160 | £37 | £5,920 |
| FBM oversized bundles | 145 | £58 | £8,410 |
| Total Revenue (this card) | 3,425 | mixed | £113,870 |
- The headline is gross, the banked figure is far lower. After a 15% referral fee, FBA fulfilment and storage, and refunds, this seller keeps roughly two thirds of the headline. Always pair with Net Revenue (after fees + refunds) and Fees % of Revenue before drawing conclusions.
- Ad-attributed sales are already inside this number. The 1,100 Sponsored Products and Brands orders (£37,880) are part of the £113,870, not on top of it. What sits on top is the ad spend itself. To see how much of revenue is paid-for, read Organic vs Ad Sales Share.
- FBM AOV runs higher here because of the bundle mix. The 145 FBM orders average £58 versus the £31 to £37 FBA range, that is a product-mix effect (oversized bundles ship FBM), not a channel-quality signal. Do not read AOV across fulfilment types without accounting for mix.
- Refunds do not reduce this card. The 4.1% refund value (~£4,670) is still inside ordered product sales here. It is netted out only in the net-revenue card and tracked as a rate in Return Rate.
- Buy Box health gates this number quietly. Every unit in this total was won at the Buy Box (or via an “other sellers” click, which is rare). If Buy Box win rate slips on a top ASIN, ordered product sales fall even though demand has not. Cross-check Buy-Box Win Rate (top-50 ASINs) when revenue dips without an obvious traffic cause.
drop >15% vsP alert threshold, so Nerve Centre stays quiet. The seller can still see the downward trend on the card and investigate the Buy Box and refund drivers before it becomes material.
Sibling cards merchants should reference together
Ordered product sales on its own tells you very little. Pair it with these to make decisions:| Card | Why pair it with Amazon Total Revenue |
|---|---|
| Average Order Value | Total Revenue divided by Orders. Rising revenue with flat AOV means you grew on volume; flat revenue with rising AOV means a mix-shift toward premium ASINs or bundles. |
| Orders | The other half of the equation. Always check the order count before reading a revenue trend, deal events and Prime Day distort the volume side. |
| Net Revenue (after fees + refunds) | This card is gross. Net Revenue strips referral fees, FBA fees, and refunds so you see what actually banks. |
| Fees % of Revenue | The ratio version. A creeping fee percentage usually means category mix shifted toward higher-referral-fee categories or FBA size-tier fees rose. |
| Organic vs Ad Sales Share | Tells you how much of the revenue is paid-for. If revenue is up 10% but ad sales share jumped, the unit economics may be degrading even as the headline grows. |
| Amazon Share of Total Revenue | For sellers running multiple channels, how concentrated the business is on Amazon. High concentration is a platform-risk flag. |
Reconciling against Amazon Seller Central
Where to look in Seller Central: The closest Amazon-native view is:Seller Central → Reports → Business Reports → Sales and Traffic (“By Date” or “Detail Page Sales and Traffic”) Headline column: Ordered product sales for the selected date range.For an order-by-order view, use Seller Central → Orders → Manage Orders, or the Date Range Reports under Reports → Payments for a settlement-aligned view. Note that the Payments reports are organised by settlement date, not order date, so they will not tie out line-for-line to this card. Timing, settlement, and reporting-lag table:
| Topic | Detail |
|---|---|
| Timezone | Business Reports display in the marketplace’s local timezone (Pacific Time for US, GMT/BST for UK). Vortex IQ uses UTC for period boundaries. Orders near midnight on the boundary days fall on different sides; the effect averages out over 30D. |
| Order date vs settlement date | This card reads order-creation time (matching Business Reports “Ordered product sales”). The Payments / settlement reports use settlement date and a 14-day rolling reserve, so they will legitimately differ from this card. |
| Reporting lag | Amazon’s Business Reports finalise the prior day a few hours after midnight local time. The Vortex IQ pipeline syncs through the SP-API on a regular cadence; “today” can understate during active buying hours and catches up within the day. |
| Pending orders | Amazon holds some orders in a “Pending” state until payment clears. These may not appear in ordered product sales until they confirm, so very recent orders can be undercounted for a short window. |
| Reason | Direction | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Order date vs settlement date | Differs in shape | Business Reports “Ordered product sales” is order-dated (matches this card). Payment reports are settlement-dated. Compare against Business Reports, not Payments, for parity. |
| Pending orders | Ours slightly lower near “today” | Orders awaiting payment confirmation are excluded until they clear; both views catch up within a day. |
| Refund treatment | Same on both | Both ordered product sales and this card are gross of refunds. For the net read use Net Revenue (after fees + refunds). |
| Multi-marketplace currency | Ours wrong shape if blended | If several marketplaces are connected, read per-marketplace. Seller Central reports each marketplace separately. |
| Card | Expected relationship | What causes legitimate divergence |
|---|---|---|
| Amazon Share of Total Revenue | This card is the Amazon numerator in that share. | The share card needs other connected channels (Shopify, eBay) to compute a denominator; with only Amazon connected the share reads 100%. |
| Shopify Total Revenue | Independent populations. Amazon orders are not in Shopify unless a feed app dual-lists. For most sellers these are separate revenue streams. | A feed app mirroring Amazon orders into Shopify as draft orders for inventory sync causes double-counting in the Shopify figure. |
| GA4 revenue | Mostly invisible to GA4. Amazon checkout happens on Amazon, not the seller’s own site, so the purchase event never fires in GA4. | Off-Amazon traffic driven to listings shows as referral sessions in GA4, but the purchase is still uncaptured. |
Known limitations / merchant FAQs
Is this gross or net revenue? Gross. This is ordered product sales: customer-paid totals before Amazon’s referral fee, before FBA fulfilment and storage fees, before advertising spend, and before refunds. For the post-fee, post-refund figure use Net Revenue (after fees + refunds). How much will Amazon take in fees? The referral fee is typically 8 to 15% of the item price by category, with most consumer-goods categories at 15%. On top of that, FBA sellers pay per-unit fulfilment fees (driven by size and weight tier) and monthly storage fees, plus long-term storage surcharges on aged stock. Advertising spend is separate again. As a rough rule, an FBA seller in a 15% referral category keeps somewhere in the region of 60 to 70% of ordered product sales after fees and refunds, before ad spend. Track the blended rate with Fees % of Revenue. Does advertising spend reduce this number? No. Ad spend is not deducted here, and ad-attributed orders are already counted inside ordered product sales. The card does not separate paid from organic at the revenue line; for that read Organic vs Ad Sales Share. Why does today’s number jump up and down so much? Today is incomplete data. Buyers across time zones are still placing orders after midnight UTC, pending orders have not all cleared, and the sync has its own short lag. Use the rolling 7-day or 30-day view for stable numbers, which is why the alert window is30D vsP and not 1D.
Why doesn’t my Amazon revenue match my Shopify revenue?
They are independent populations. Unless a third-party feed app mirrors Amazon orders into Shopify for inventory sync, the two never overlap. Amazon ordered product sales plus Shopify revenue is your true cross-channel figure, do not double-count.
Does Buy Box loss show up here?
Indirectly. If you lose the Buy Box on a top ASIN, units that would have been yours go to another seller and never enter your ordered product sales, so revenue falls without any change in demand. When revenue dips without a clear traffic cause, check Buy-Box Win Rate (top-50 ASINs) and Estimated Revenue Lost to Buy-Box Loss.