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Amazon Supplement Reinstatement: How to Get Your Listing Back After a Compliance Removal

7 min read Updated June 9, 2026

Your Seller Central dashboard just lit up red. An ASIN is suppressed. Or worse — your entire supplement listing got removed. Sales drop to zero overnight. You refresh the page hoping it's a glitch. It's not.

This happens to legit brands constantly. Amazon's supplement compliance team is aggressive and automated. They flag products based on keyword scans, customer complaints, competitor reports, and random audits. Sometimes you did nothing wrong and a bot still nuked your listing.

The good news: reinstatement is possible. I've helped brands recover listings in as little as 5 days and as long as 6 weeks. The timeline depends almost entirely on whether you send Amazon the right documents the first time.

Here's exactly how to handle it.

Step 1: Figure Out Why You Got Taken Down

Before you fire off an angry appeal, understand what Amazon is actually flagging. The suspension notice usually includes a reason code. Common ones for supplements:

  • Product authenticity / customer complaints — People reported your product doesn't match the description, or doesn't contain what the label claims.
  • Dietary supplement compliance — Your listing language or label makes drug-like claims, or lacks required disclaimers.
  • Restricted product — Your supplement contains an ingredient Amazon restricts (there's a long list, and it changes).
  • Missing compliance documents — Amazon wants testing documents you haven't provided.

Read the notice carefully. Twice. Amazon's language is bureaucratic and dense, but buried in that email is the exact thing they want from you. Ignore it and your appeal gets rejected. Address it directly and you're halfway home.

Step 2: Gather Your Documentation (The Stuff Amazon Actually Wants)

Amazon's supplement compliance requirements have a specific document list. Here's what you need ready before you hit "submit appeal":

1. Certificate of Analysis (COA) from an ISO 17025-accredited third-party lab. This is non-negotiable. Must be from an independent lab — your manufacturer's in-house COA won't cut it. Must show potency (meets label claim), heavy metals (within USP <2232> limits), and microbiology (within limits per USP <2021>/<2022>). Must be for the specific batch/lot currently in FBA inventory.

2. Current Good Manufacturing Practice (cGMP) certificate or registration for your manufacturer. Amazon wants to know your product was made in a compliant facility. A third-party GMP audit certificate (NSF, UL, SGS, etc.) is strongest. A self-declared GMP registration is weaker but sometimes accepted.

3. Product label images. Both the front and the Supplement Facts panel. Amazon's team will compare these against your listing content. If the label says one thing and your bullets say another, that's a problem. Make sure they match.

4. Letters of authenticity or authorization from the manufacturer. If you're a private label brand, your contract manufacturer should provide a letter confirming they produce your product. This addresses the "authenticity" concern.

5. Testing for any restricted ingredients. If your product includes an ingredient on Amazon's radar (kratom, kava, certain sports ingredients, some botanicals), you may need additional documentation proving it's within permitted limits. Check Amazon's restricted products policy for supplements — it's a living document.

⚠️ Critical

The COA must be from an ISO 17025-accredited third-party lab. Amazon rejects COAs from manufacturer in-house labs, overseas labs without recognized accreditation, and labs they've never heard of. Use an A2LA, ANAB, or equivalent accredited lab with a scope that covers your test methods. This is the single biggest reason appeals get rejected on first submission.

Step 3: Write Your Appeal (Plan of Action)

Amazon doesn't want an apology. They barely read the emotional parts. What they want is a Plan of Action (POA) that answers three questions:

What went wrong? Own it. "Our listing included the phrase 'proven to reduce inflammation' which is a non-compliant disease claim." Or "We failed to maintain current third-party testing documentation for batch #XYZ." Don't blame Amazon's algorithm. Don't blame a competitor. State what was non-compliant.

What did you do to fix it immediately? "We removed the non-compliant language from our listing." "We sent retain samples for third-party testing and received a passing COA dated [date]." "We quarantined the affected inventory in FBA and initiated removal." Concrete actions.

What will you do to prevent this from happening again? "We implemented a pre-publication review checklist for all listing content to ensure no disease claims." "We established a quarterly third-party testing schedule for every SKU." "We hired a regulatory compliance consultant to review all new product listings." Show systemic change, not just one-time cleanup.

Keep it short. 1-2 paragraphs per section. No emotional pleas. No threats. No "I've been selling on Amazon for 10 years." Just facts and process improvements.

Attach every document from Step 2. Upload them as PDFs, not links. Amazon's reviewers don't click external links.

Step 4: Submit and Wait (Here's What Happens Behind the Scenes)

You submit the appeal through Seller Central's Account Health dashboard. Amazon's initial review is automated — their system checks for document format, presence of key items, and completeness. If anything is missing, you get an auto-rejection within hours. That's fine. Fix it and resubmit.

If the documents pass the automated check, it goes to a human reviewer on Amazon's compliance team. This is where your Plan of Action matters. The reviewer is looking for two things: evidence that the violation is corrected, and confidence that you have systems in place to prevent recurrence.

Typical timeline:

  • Automated response: same day
  • Human review: 2-5 business days, sometimes longer during high-volume periods
  • Additional information requests: Amazon may come back asking for more documents. Respond quickly and completely.

Don't open multiple appeal cases. Don't call Seller Support (they can't help with compliance cases). Don't delete and resubmit the same appeal hoping for a different reviewer. Each new appeal resets your position in the queue.

How to Prevent This From Happening Again

Once you're back up, build your compliance infrastructure so you're not back here in three months:

  • Pre-publication content review. Every listing change, every A+ content update, every bullet point edit — run it through a compliance checklist before publishing. No disease claims. No forbidden words. Disclaimer present.
  • Scheduled testing. Set a recurring calendar reminder. Every batch gets tested. Every SKU gets retested at least annually even if the batch hasn't changed. Have current COAs on hand before Amazon asks.
  • Monitor customer reviews and questions. Customers sometimes use disease language in Q&A. "Does this cure arthritis?" If your product page says "Yes, it helps my arthritis" in the answers, Amazon's bots can flag that. Monitor and report non-compliant content.
  • Keep your documents organized. If Amazon asks for a COA at 4 p.m. on a Friday, you want to be the brand that responds by 4:15 — not the brand scrambling until Monday while sales flatline.

FAQ

Q: How long does Amazon reinstatement usually take?

If you submit a complete, correct appeal on the first try, 3-7 business days. If Amazon asks for additional documents or your appeal is incomplete, 2-4 weeks. The speed is entirely in your hands — send everything they need the first time.

Q: Do I need a lawyer for an Amazon appeal?

For most standard supplement compliance removals, no — if you have the right documents and a clear Plan of Action. For account-level suspensions, suspected IP complaints, or if you've been rejected multiple times, yes. There are law firms that specialize specifically in Amazon seller reinstatement.

Q: What testing does Amazon accept?

Third-party lab testing from an ISO 17025-accredited facility. The lab must have the specific test methods you're reporting within their scope of accreditation. Amazon also accepts COAs from labs enrolled in the FDA's LAAF program, though that's less common.

Q: Can I sell the same product under a new ASIN while the old one is under appeal?

Don't. Amazon considers this a duplicate listing creation violation and it'll get both ASINs removed — possibly your account too. Fix the original listing or don't sell the product.

Q: My listing was removed due to a competitor filing a false complaint. What do I do?

Respond with your documentation proving authenticity and compliance. Include invoices from your manufacturer and third-party testing. If you have evidence the complaint was fraudulent (a competitor's employee admitting it, for example), include that. Amazon takes fraudulent complaints seriously and may penalize the complainant's account.


Get the Testing Amazon Wants, Fast

Amazon's compliance team doesn't negotiate on documentation. You need an ISO-accredited lab COA, and you need it from a lab they'll recognize. Don't waste time with labs that don't meet their standards.

Find ISO 17025-accredited labs on LabQuotes — specify you need Amazon compliance documentation and get matched with labs that do this every day.

Ready to get your products tested?

Build a basket of the tests you need and compare quotes from ISO 17025–accredited labs in one place. Free to start.

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