I’m new to Wayfair. I set my wholesale price at $25, but Wayfair lists the item at $100 on their site. It’s been months, and it’s not selling. How can I get the price down to something reasonable (like $50 or less)?
Why is Wayfair marking it up so high? They’re making way more than Amazon would. Any advice?
Answers (6)
Adding a second warehouse on the East Coast
Reducing packaging size
Improving quality to lower return rate
The front-end price dropped by about 30% within a few months. It takes time, but it’s possible.
Also, new listings often start with higher retail prices until Wayfair’s algorithm has enough sales data to calibrate. Don’t panic if the first few weeks look expensive.
The higher retail price includes their marketing, shipping, returns processing, and margin. If you’re used to Amazon’s model, Wayfair feels expensive — but the cost structure is completely different.
Customer acquisition (marketing, ads)
Shipping (they generate labels, you just pack and ship)
Customer service and returns
In exchange, they set the retail price. If they sell your $25 item for $100, they keep the $75 to cover their costs and profit. Your payout is your wholesale price, minus a ~6% return reserve.
It’s not “too high” — it’s how the business model works.
Multi-warehouse strategy – stock inventory in both East and Midwest/West Coast warehouses. This reduces Wayfair’s estimated shipping cost, which lowers the retail price.
Optimize packaging – smaller, lighter packaging reduces shipping cost estimates.
Improve product quality – fewer returns = lower “risk buffer” in pricing.
Lower your wholesale price – if your margin allows, reduce your cost. This has a direct impact.
Participate in promotions – Wayfair sometimes runs site-wide discounts. If your product is included, the temporary lower price can help build sales history, which may lead to a permanent price adjustment.
Some sellers also open tickets with Wayfair support, providing screenshots of lower prices on competing platforms (Amazon, etc.) to argue for a price adjustment. It’s not guaranteed, but it has worked for some.
Your wholesale price – lower wholesale price usually leads to lower retail price.
Warehouse locations – if you have inventory in both the East and West Coast, Wayfair’s shipping cost estimates drop significantly, which lowers the retail price.
Product dimensions and weight – make sure these are accurate. Overestimating increases estimated shipping cost.
Return rate – if your product has high returns, Wayfair adds a buffer to cover those costs.
Product category – if your product is “branded” (brand already known), Wayfair may match market prices. If it’s “differentiated” (unique), your wholesale price is the biggest lever.