NARF Listings - Do I need separate listings, or do I need to keep enable/disabling NARF?

Countries

Read only
Australia
Belgium
Brazil
Canada
Egypt
France
Germany
India
Italy
Japan
Mexico
Netherlands
Poland
Saudi Arabia
Singapore
Spain
Sweden
Turkey
United Arab Emirates
United Kingdom
United States
United States
imgSign in
user profile
Seller_rjvoSRHXOrKwr

NARF Listings - Do I need separate listings, or do I need to keep enable/disabling NARF?

I am a bit confused about NARF listings and could use some clarification if anyone can.

Currently I sell in both Canada and USA. I have a product which has inventory available at the US FBA centers. NARF is enabled on this listing, and so Amazon.ca customers are able to purchase this product, and have it shipped from USA to Canada.

With NARF enabled on a listing, would I also be able to send inventory to Canada FBA warehouses on this listing? Or do I need to create a separate listing in each marketplace (we have our own brand)?

I made a test shipment to the Canada FBA warehouse and it allows me to send inventory for that listing to Canada, but I wanted to be sure how things work first. It would be ideal if once my listing ran out of stock from CA FBA, it would automatically begin offering it from our US FBA inventory.

37 views
2 replies
Tags:FBA, Fulfilment
00
Reply
user profile
Seller_AevYmOVtgtKV2
Most helpful replyThis reply was marked most helpful by the original poster.

So you would need a new SKU on the Canadian marketplace to ship inventory directly to FBA Canada warehouses. I suggest making it something obvious so you know which SKUs are in stock in which locations.

Example: SKU-CA

A good rule of thumb is to create a new SKU for each type of condition you plan on selling. Even though the products are new, each location is technically in a different condition because of its location (similar to having FBM and FBA listings at the same time)

If you use the NARF SKU it will deactivate NARF for that product and you will only have the FBA inventory available. I think it's useful to have both available in case your FBA inventory runs out, you have the NARF backup.

10
2 replies
user profile
Seller_AevYmOVtgtKV2
Most helpful replyThis reply was marked most helpful by the original poster.

So you would need a new SKU on the Canadian marketplace to ship inventory directly to FBA Canada warehouses. I suggest making it something obvious so you know which SKUs are in stock in which locations.

Example: SKU-CA

A good rule of thumb is to create a new SKU for each type of condition you plan on selling. Even though the products are new, each location is technically in a different condition because of its location (similar to having FBM and FBA listings at the same time)

If you use the NARF SKU it will deactivate NARF for that product and you will only have the FBA inventory available. I think it's useful to have both available in case your FBA inventory runs out, you have the NARF backup.

10
Follow this discussion to be notified of new activity