How to avoid going out of stock on Amazon FBA
A stockout doesn't just pause your sales — it hands your ranking to competitors, wastes the ad spend that built the momentum, and the recovery takes weeks, not days. Avoiding it is arithmetic plus discipline: true velocity, real lead times, and a reorder point you actually watch.
What a stockout really costs
The lost units are the smallest part. When a listing goes dark: the ranking your sales history earned starts decaying immediately, and your ads — the money already spent building that momentum — stop mid-flight. When you're back in stock you often re-buy visibility at a higher ACOS than before. That is why "we ran out for a weekend" shows up in the numbers for a month.
1 · Know your true velocity (spikes lie)
Daily sales velocity is the base of every reorder decision — and averages lie. A single viral day or a Lightning Deal inflates a 30-day average and makes you order for a demand that isn't coming back. Winsorize the spikes (cap outlier days against the median) and, if you sell in several marketplaces, compute velocity per SKU per marketplace — a Pan-EU total hides that Germany is about to run dry while France sits on excess.
2 · Use the lead time you actually experience
Your reorder math is only as good as the lead time in it: production + freight + customs + Amazon check-in (receiving at FBA regularly adds one to three weeks, more in Q4). Track what recent shipments actually took per supplier and route — not what the contract says — and use that number.
3 · Set the reorder point and let it decide
The classic formula holds: reorder point = daily velocity × lead-time days + safety stock, with safety stock sized to your demand variability (a volatile SKU needs more cushion than a steady one). When available + inbound stock crosses that line, you order — not when it "feels low". Coverage days (units on hand ÷ daily velocity) is the same idea expressed as a countdown, and it's the number worth checking every morning.
Prioritize by consequence: your top sellers by margin and velocity deserve the tightest watch. And in the other direction — don't fix stockouts by drowning in overstock; dead inventory ties up the cash you need for the winners.
The mistakes that cause most stockouts
Waiting for Amazon's low-stock alerts — they fire on remaining
units, blind to your lead time; by the time they warn you, the reorder window is
gone.
Ordering on gut feel — usually right after a good week, i.e. on a
spike.
One number for all marketplaces — Pan-EU stock splits mean each
marketplace has its own countdown.
Ignoring inbound reality — a shipment "on the way" isn't sellable
until checked in; count it with its real ETA, not its ship date.
Watching this daily without spreadsheets
Stock Control inside SellerEngine runs this exact logic on your live Amazon data: spike-resistant velocity per SKU and marketplace, lead-time-aware coverage forecasts, reorder alerts with priority buckets and suggested quantities — so the reorder window never closes on you silently.
