The 2026 Amazon Image Suppression Checklist: What Actually Gets Listings Hidden From Search
- July 07, 2026
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Amazon’s image compliance checks are automated now, and they move faster and more quietly than they used to. A single detail can pull a listing out of search with no warning: an off-white background, a pixel count just under the line, or a stray logo in the corner of the frame.
On listings shared with other sellers, it gets more complicated. Amazon’s own system decides which contributed photo actually displays, and that can happen even when you are brand registered.
Run this checklist before any of that happens to your listings.
The underlying numbers have not moved in the last year. What has changed is how fast a violation gets caught, and how little warning you get before it does. Start here.
A few categories run on their own rules. Check these before assuming the general spec applies.
This is the part that catches even experienced sellers off guard. When a listing has more than one selling partner attached to it, and the required image types — white background, lifestyle, size, and fit — are not all supplied by one seller, Amazon’s system can pull in an image from a different contributor.
Amazon has said plainly that sellers may see an image on their own listing that is different from the one they provided.
Important: Brand owner images are prioritized, but brand registration does not make a seller immune. Outside images may still be pulled in to fill a genuinely missing image type.
One seller learned this the hard way. Sourcing directly from the manufacturer, on a shared listing with the correct UPC, they watched Amazon’s system select a different contributor’s photo as the live image. That contributor then filed a copyright complaint against them over a photo they never uploaded.
Amazon’s answer was that winning the image slot and holding selling rights are two separate things. If you sell wholesale on shared listings, this is worth reading twice.
Amazon does not reliably email sellers when an image triggers a suppression. Check these places directly, on a regular schedule, rather than waiting on a notification that may not come.
If you catch a suppression, here is a realistic timeline, not a hopeful one.
Tip: If the issue is caused by Amazon’s image-selection mechanics on a shared listing, a simple image resubmission may not fix it. Treat it as a shared listing/image contribution issue.
Amazon does require sellers to disclose AI-generated or AI-modified cover art, but that rule lives in Kindle Direct Publishing’s guidelines for book covers. It is not a general Seller Central policy for physical products.
For a physical product listing, the standing rule is simpler: the image has to accurately represent the product, regardless of what tool made it. Anyone saying there is now a blanket AI-image disclosure requirement for regular listings is repeating something that could not be verified against an actual Amazon source.
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