Feedvisor Review 2026
Feedvisor is an AI-powered marketplace optimization platform built for mid-market to enterprise Amazon sellers. It bundles algorithmic Buy Box repricing, advertising automation (Sponsored Products, Brands, Display, and DSP), and profitability analytics in a single dashboard. Essentials starts at $100/month for repricing only; the full Feedvisor 360 suite starts at $1,500/month and is realistically only justified at $500K+ in annual Amazon GMV. A 14-day free trial with no credit card gets you in the door.
In this hands-on review, we cover all five criteria: ease of use, value for money, feature depth, customer support, and integrations. We flag the real limits honestly: 60–80 days of historical data, no public API, a Shopify integration with documented bugs, and multiple independent reports of aggressive cancellation practices. We compare directly against Seller Snap, Teikametrics, and Repricer.com. If you are evaluating a repricing and advertising platform for a large Amazon catalog in 2026, this is the review to read before you sign a contract.
Feedvisor, scored.
Our review of Feedvisor in summary
Feedvisor is genuinely powerful for large Amazon sellers who need repricing and advertising managed in one place. The AI repricing engine avoids race-to-bottom by optimizing for margin rather than pure price-matching, and the Feedvisor 360 suite combines PPC automation with profitability analytics in a way that few competitors match at scale. Account managers on the 360 plan are praised repeatedly in reviews, sometimes by name. The platform has real longevity among enterprise sellers: one G2 reviewer mentions a decade-long relationship.
Our overall score of 3.3 reflects a platform that does exactly what it promises for the right buyer, but at a price and complexity level that excludes most sellers. Value for money takes the hardest hit: $1,500/month for the full suite, 60–80 days of historical data retention, no public API, and documented aggressive cancellation practices all weigh heavily. Sellers with under $40K in monthly GMV have better-value options. The platform is also Amazon-first to a fault: Walmart and Shopify are secondary integrations with meaningful functionality gaps.
The numbers speak. Want to try Feedvisor?
What real Amazon sellers say about Feedvisor
- 5★9
- 4★4
- 3★0
- 2★1
- 1★1
13 of 15 reviewers would recommend Feedvisor, and the 4.3/5 average sits on a polarized distribution: 9 five-star reviews from enterprise sellers who have used it for years, paired with 1-star and 2-star reviews from users who ran into access or billing barriers. The praise from established sellers is consistent and specific: account managers are named (Gavin, Gitty), the analytics dashboards are cited as best-in-class for custom CSV export, and the repricing engine’s ability to protect margin rather than race to the bottom is the standout feature. Reviewers with five-plus years of use describe the platform as indispensable. The negative reviews cluster around cost, customer service accessibility, and difficulty exiting the service. The 60–80 day historical data cap is flagged as a meaningful operational gap by a Marketplace Performance Analyst who had to maintain a second data tool to compensate.
Most loved
- +AI repricing that protects margins instead of triggering a price war
- +Analytics dashboards with custom CSV export, rated best-in-class by power users
- +Named account managers who respond fast and know the platform deeply
- +Net margin calculation at SKU level, including FBA fees and ad spend
- +Long-term reliability: multiple reviewers cite 5–10 year client relationships
Watch-outs
- !Pricing is the top complaint across positive reviews, too expensive for small sellers
- !Historical data capped at 60–80 days, requires a secondary tool for longer trend analysis
- !Customer service access is hard for non-enterprise users (bot replies, refund difficulties)
- !Buy Box status data not always accurate in real time, regional discrepancies noted
- !Platform can overload users with pricing data without a clear prioritization layer
- San Lukoss via Trustpilot
SCAM ALERT – My Experience. I was first contacted by someone named Alyssa, who introduced herself as my “mentor.” She was very convincing, reassured me it wasn’t a scam, and guided me step by step through their so-called training. The company presents itself as a marketing automation software firm that uses AI to launch and scale personalized omnichannel campaigns for big platforms like Amazon, Shopify, and BigCommerce. The job role sounded simple: all I had to do was click to submit product data. I went through their training and within two hours I had “learned” £123. Later, another member messaged me asking if I had withdrawn money yet. I tried to withdraw £20 and the transaction failed. My mentor then blocked me, I was removed from their WhatsApp group, and I lost access to my account entirely. I want to make something clear: Feedvisor.com and feedvisor-program.com are not the same. Feedvisor.com is a legitimate, established company specializing in AI-driven optimization for Amazon and Walmart. The website I dealt with, feedvisor-program.com, appears to be a scam impersonating the real company.
- Free Spirit via Trustpilot
So hard to speak to a human! Hardly used and services are not for me. As I’m not using the app I requested for a refund as I do not want to pay for a year under the circumstances. Presently can only get a bot to reply to my emails. This is so frustrating!! I genuinely hoped for better service from this app.
- Verified User in Retail via G2
My favorite feature that FeedVisor has that many other competitors miss is their powerful suite of analytics dashboards. They also allow you to generate custom CSVs using many of the columns that FV collects. They are very receptive to input regarding reporting, visualizations, UI, and data importing/exporting. The biggest complaint with FeedVisor is the price of the software. In comparison to other competitors, FV is a bit pricier than others.
- robert e. via G2
Feedvisor provides great insights into marketplace pricing and does a great job of guiding business decisions around pricing. Feedvisor can overload you with pricing data. It can be a bit more user friendly for the average user.
- Karen S. via G2
Knowledgeable and fast responding team. Vendor platform was limited in capabilities and number of features and bulk updates (if you are good with Excel the bulk updates might not be a major issue for you).
- clint l. via G2
I love how intuitive the platform is when finding the right sale price to command the Buy Box on Amazon. I also love the net margin calculation feature at the product level. Feedvisor shows that we don’t have the Buy Box on certain products when we do have it. Maybe it needs to update the data more often.
We tested Feedvisor on five criteria.
One honest score per criterion, with the wins and the catches.
Test Feedvisor: Ease of use.
Feedvisor is not a plug-and-play tool. The platform assumes you are already comfortable with Amazon Seller Central, FBA fee structures, and advertising campaign logic. The 14-day trial is effectively the onboarding period, which tells you something: even getting to a useful first read of your data takes days of configuration, not hours. Third-party reviewers describe the dashboard as “powerful but not intuitive,” and the sidebar pop-out navigation draws consistent complaints about excessive clicking to complete routine tasks. One reviewer put it plainly: “push a button and you might as well go make yourself a cup of coffee.” Performance lag on heavier catalog operations is a documented pattern, not an isolated incident.
The 360 plan includes a dedicated account manager, and this is genuinely where the UX pain gets absorbed. G2 reviews on the 360 plan are specific and warm: enterprise users name Gavin and Gitty directly, call response times “amazing,” and describe account managers as proactive rather than reactive. That human layer compensates for the interface’s rough edges. On Essentials, you navigate the product without that layer, and the experience is noticeably harder.
The repricing logic itself, once configured, runs automatically without daily intervention. Prices update approximately every 15 minutes when market conditions warrant it. That automation is genuinely useful for sellers managing hundreds or thousands of SKUs who cannot monitor prices manually. But getting there requires an onboarding investment that some sellers underestimate. The platform also cannot reprice used or condition listings, a hard limit that catches sellers by surprise during setup.
Test Feedvisor: Value for money.
This is where Feedvisor takes the hardest hit. Essentials at $100/month covers repricing only, with tech support only and no dedicated account manager. At that same $100/month price point, Seller Snap offers game-theory AI repricing across 16 Amazon marketplaces including MENA coverage. The Essentials plan is a hard sell competitively.
Feedvisor 360 starts at $1,500/month. Every independent reviewer who discusses ROI points to the same threshold: you need roughly $500K+ in annual Amazon GMV to justify the investment. Enterprise tiers reportedly reach $2,500/month and above. The pricing structure combines a base fee with volume variables (SKU count, ad spend managed, catalog complexity), so $1,500 is a floor, not a ceiling. Users report paying up to $3,000/month at enterprise levels with limited pricing flexibility at that scale.
There is a 20% discount on Feedvisor 360 if you upgrade from Essentials. But the documented cancellation experience dulls that incentive considerably. Multiple independent reviewers describe being placed under contract without explicit authorization and facing aggressive responses when attempting to cancel. A Trustpilot reviewer in our dataset tried to get a refund after limited use and could only reach a bot. That combination of high price, volume-variable costs, and a difficult exit path is why this score sits at 2.4.
There is no free plan. The 14-day free trial requires no credit card, which is a genuine courtesy. But the trial is short for a platform of this complexity: meaningful ROI evaluation requires real catalog data over weeks, not 14 days.
Test Feedvisor: Features and depth.
For Amazon-native sellers, Feedvisor’s feature set is legitimately deep. The core AI repricing engine does not just match competitors: it builds a model of optimal price thresholds using historical and current data points, adjusting approximately every 15 minutes. Unlike rule-based repricers that descend into price wars, the algorithm is designed to identify the price where Buy Box win rate and margin intersect optimally. G2 reviewers with years of experience consistently confirm this holds up in practice. One states directly: “I’m yet to see someone objectively better.”
Feedvisor 360 extends this with ProductSphere, a repricing module for private-label sellers who do not compete on a shared Buy Box. PPC automation covers Sponsored Products, Sponsored Brands, Sponsored Display, and DSP campaigns. The advertising engine is integrated directly with the repricing engine: when the repricer raises a price, ad spend adjusts accordingly. That feedback loop is one of the genuinely distinctive things about Feedvisor versus standalone ad tools. Amazon Marketing Cloud (AMC) integration provides cross-funnel visibility linking Sponsored Ads and DSP performance.
Profitability analytics go to SKU level, calculating margin after FBA fees, ad spend, and cost of goods. The 360 plan adds operating margin data, scheduled reports, and inventory intelligence with restocking recommendations. Custom CSV exports are available, and reviewers specifically praise the flexibility here. Competitive ASIN tracking is capped at 20 ASINs on both plans, a real limit for sellers managing broad catalogs. Historical data retention stops at 60–80 days, requiring a secondary tool for longer-term trend analysis. A Marketplace Performance Analyst on G2 explicitly notes having to maintain parallel software to compensate. Campaign name changes break ad tracking because the system ties to campaign names rather than static IDs, a documented bug pattern. The forecast and replenishment module has also drawn criticism for being too basic, with one seller reporting overstocking based on system recommendations.
Sold on the details? Start a Feedvisor trial.
Test Feedvisor: Customer support and assistance.
The support experience on Feedvisor splits sharply along plan lines. On 360, you get a dedicated Amazon Expert account manager, 24/7 tech support, and weekend availability. G2 reviews on the 360 plan are specific and warm: enterprise users name Gavin and Gitty directly, call response times “amazing,” and describe their account managers as “smart, honest, and creative.” One seller who has been a client since 2013 credits the people at Feedvisor explicitly as the reason for the platform’s success. That is genuine, durable satisfaction from long-term clients, and it is the main reason this score sits at 3.6 rather than lower.
On Essentials, you get tech support only. No dedicated account manager, no proactive optimization help, no weekend escalation path. For a repricing tool where misconfigured floor prices can directly damage margins, that support gap is significant. A Trustpilot reviewer in our dataset tried to cancel after limited use and could only reach a bot for their refund request, which signals that the Essentials support experience is materially different from what 360 clients describe.
The aggressive cancellation pattern documented across independent review sources is the most damaging signal. Being placed under contract without clear authorization and facing pushback when trying to leave surfaces in multiple independent sources, not a one-off complaint. Complex support tickets can take days to weeks to resolve. There is no public documentation hub, though Feedvisor University provides educational content on Amazon marketplace topics.
Test Feedvisor: Available integrations.
Feedvisor’s integration story is narrow by design. Amazon is the primary integration and the one that works fully: connection via Amazon SP-API covers pricing, advertising, and inventory data. Everything the platform does well runs through this channel. Walmart is a native integration for repricing and advertising, but feature parity with Amazon is significantly reduced. Sellers who operate primarily on Walmart, or who need a genuine dual-marketplace setup, should test the Walmart functionality specifically before committing.
Shopify is listed in the Shopify App Store as an AI-based repricing and analytics integration. User reviews note persistent Shopify integration bugs that affect profit calculations. This is not a minor edge case: inaccurate profit data on Shopify-sourced products undermines one of Feedvisor’s core value propositions. Amazon DSP and Amazon Marketing Cloud (AMC) are supported, which is meaningful for enterprise sellers running cross-funnel campaigns. Tableau and Google Looker connect via native data export for sellers who need custom BI reporting beyond Feedvisor’s dashboards. Linnworks lists Feedvisor as an integration partner.
There is no public API for customers. Feedvisor consumes Amazon’s SP-API on the back end but does not expose its own API to sellers. For anyone with a custom tech stack, internal dashboards, or data warehouse pipelines, this is a meaningful gap. There is no Zapier integration and no evidence of Make or any other automation connector. The integration surface is essentially: Amazon (full), Walmart (partial), Shopify (buggy), BI tools via data export, and nothing else. For sellers who expect the connective tissue of a modern SaaS platform, that is a material limitation.
Frequently asked questions
Is Feedvisor worth it for small Amazon sellers?
Feedvisor Essentials starts at $100/month for repricing only. At that price, Seller Snap offers similar AI repricing coverage across 16 Amazon marketplaces. The full Feedvisor 360 suite starts at $1,500/month, which independent reviewers and Feedvisor’s own positioning suggest requires roughly $500K+ in annual Amazon GMV to justify. If your monthly Amazon revenue is below $40K, alternatives like Aura (from $47/month) or Repricer.com provide AI-driven repricing at a fraction of the cost. Feedvisor is most defensible for mid-market sellers already generating meaningful volume who need repricing and PPC automation under one roof.How much does Feedvisor actually cost per month?
Feedvisor publishes two tiers: Essentials from $100/month (repricing only, tech support only) and Feedvisor 360 from $1,500/month (full suite with advertising, analytics, and a dedicated account manager). Enterprise tiers reportedly reach $2,500+/month. The pricing structure combines a base fee with volume variables including SKU count, ad spend managed, and catalog complexity. The $1,500 figure is a floor, not a ceiling. Users have reported costs up to $3,000/month at enterprise levels. There is no free plan, though a 14-day trial requires no credit card.Feedvisor vs Seller Snap: which AI repricer should you choose?
Both start at $100/month for repricing. Seller Snap uses game-theory AI specifically designed to avoid price wars and covers 16 Amazon marketplaces including MENA. Feedvisor’s differentiator is the 360 suite at $1,500/month, bundling repricing with PPC automation and analytics. Choose Seller Snap for pure repricing without committing to a larger platform cost. Choose Feedvisor if you need repricing and advertising automation managed together and can justify the 360 price with sufficient GMV.Feedvisor vs Teikametrics: which is better for Amazon advertising?
Teikametrics (now merged with Perpetua) focuses on advertising automation from around $250/month. Feedvisor 360 combines repricing with advertising, with price changes triggering automatic ad spend adjustments. That feedback loop is unique to Feedvisor. But at $1,500/month minimum for the full suite, if your primary need is PPC management without repricing, Teikametrics is a more cost-accessible starting point. Feedvisor is the stronger choice when repricing and advertising need to respond to each other in real time.What is the best free alternative to Feedvisor?
Feedvisor has no free plan. Amazon’s own basic repricing tools in Seller Central are free but rule-based and limited. For paid alternatives, Aura starts at $47/month (annual) with AI repricing for both Amazon and Walmart on every plan, plus a 14-day free trial. Repricer.com offers multi-channel repricing across Amazon, eBay, Walmart, and Shopify at predictable flat fees. ProfitProtectorPro offers a 30-day trial. None include PPC automation, which is a Feedvisor 360-specific capability.Does Feedvisor work for Walmart sellers?
Yes, Feedvisor supports Walmart repricing and advertising. But Walmart functionality is meaningfully reduced compared to the Amazon feature set. Feedvisor was built Amazon-first, and the Walmart integration reflects that priority. Sellers whose primary marketplace is Walmart, or who need true feature parity across both platforms, should evaluate the Walmart-specific functionality during the 14-day trial before committing to a paid plan.Does Feedvisor have a public API?
No. Feedvisor consumes Amazon’s SP-API on the back end but does not expose its own public API to customers. There is no Zapier or Make connector available either. If API access is required for your workflow, Feedvisor is not the right tool at this time. This limitation is flagged across multiple independent reviews and is a documented gap for sellers with custom tech stacks.How does Feedvisor handle historical data?
Feedvisor retains 60–80 days of historical data. For sellers who need longer-term pricing and performance trend analysis, this means running a secondary tool in parallel. A Marketplace Performance Analyst on G2 specifically notes having to maintain additional software to compensate. If multi-year pricing trend data is important for your business decisions, build that secondary data pipeline before or alongside a Feedvisor subscription.Feedvisor vs Repricer.com: which offers better value for Amazon repricing?
Repricer.com offers sub-90-second repricing speed, flat-fee pricing lower than Feedvisor, and multi-channel support across Amazon, eBay, Walmart, and Shopify. It is the stronger choice for sellers who want predictable monthly costs and broader channel coverage. Feedvisor’s repricing engine is more sophisticated on the Amazon margin-optimization side, and the 360 suite adds PPC automation that Repricer.com does not offer. For pure repricing at a predictable price: Repricer.com. For repricing integrated with Amazon advertising at scale: Feedvisor 360, if the GMV justifies it.What should I know about Feedvisor's cancellation process before signing up?
Multiple independent reviewers describe difficulties when attempting to cancel Feedvisor subscriptions, including reports of being placed under contract without explicit authorization and receiving aggressive responses to cancellation requests. Before signing up, read the contract terms carefully, particularly around contract length, automatic renewal clauses, and the notice period required to cancel. The 14-day free trial requires no credit card, so you can evaluate the platform before any contract commitment. These reports are consistent enough across sources to warrant caution before signing.
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