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Profit

Are Amazon aggregator dashboards accurate? Why your software is lying to you

Five reporting blind spots that explain why 'healthy' stores leak six figures a year — and how to reconcile dashboard profit with settlement deposits.

10 min read
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Every aggregator tool — the big three that I will not name — has a dashboard that says your store is healthy. Profit margin trending up. Inventory turning. ACOS within target. Everything green.

Then your quarterly P&L lands and you are down $80,000 from what the dashboard said.

This is not a bug. The dashboard is structurally optimistic by design. Here is exactly why — and how to reconcile against the truth.

Why does my Amazon dashboard show different numbers than my settlement report?

Blind spot 1: Fee schedules update twice a year

Amazon updates FBA fees in January and June every year. Most aggregator tools update their fee tables within 30 days. That window is when the lies start — your dashboard is calculating profit using last quarter’s fees while you are paying this quarter’s.

For a brand doing $2M annually, a 1.5% fee schedule change you have not reconciled is $30K of “profit” that exists only in the dashboard.

Blind spot 2: Returns are amortised, not deducted

The “Profitability” view typically shows revenue when the order ships and ignores returns until the return processing fee hits 30+ days later. Your dashboard sees a profitable order on day 1. Reality catches up on day 35 and most operators never reconcile the difference.

Build a habit of comparing last quarter’s “profit” against this quarter’s settlement reports. The gap is what your dashboard hid.

Blind spot 3: Long-term storage fees are quarterly

Aggregator tools amortise long-term storage fees monthly to make the dashboard look smoother. Real storage fees hit in lump sums in January and July. If you are seeing a “smooth” storage line in your dashboard, that is a model, not reality — and your January cash position is going to land harder than the chart suggests.

Blind spot 4: PPC attribution windows over-credit ads

Most tools use Amazon’s 7-day attribution window for sponsored products. That over-credits ads with revenue that would have come organically. Your dashboard says your ads have a 4× return. The incremental truth — measured by actually cutting ad spend on an ASIN and watching total revenue — is often 1.5–2×.

We unpack this in detail in why ACOS is a vanity metric.

Blind spot 5: Brand-funded promotions hide in three places

When you run a coupon, Vine, or A/B test, the cost can hide in three different places: Promotions, Marketing, or Discounts. Aggregator tools typically deduct only the costs tagged as “Marketing.” Vine fees and A/B-test variant losses often miss the margin view entirely — meaning you are paying $200/SKU for Vine reviews and $5K/quarter on Manage Your Experiments without those costs showing up in dashboard profit.

How do I reconcile dashboard profit against actual Amazon profit?

The reconciliation takes about an hour per quarter once you have the spreadsheet set up. The hour is the single highest-ROI hour of operational work the founder can do all quarter.

Should I switch aggregator software to get more accurate numbers?


Aggregator-software blindness is what makes the fee-creep leak — the first of the six categories inside The Profit-Leak Method — invisible to most operators until it has already compounded into six figures of phantom margin.

Sources & further reading

About the author

Founder, Lynx Media

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