Buyer guide

How to pick an aged Amazon account in 2026

A short, no-fluff guide on what aged accounts are, why sellers use them, and how to set one up safely.

What "aged" actually means

An aged Amazon account is a real buyer account that has lived on the platform for several months and accumulated organic activity — logins, orders, reviews. Amazon's internal risk models treat these accounts very differently from fresh signups.

When you actually need one

Dropshippers running multi-account workflows, retail arbitrage operators placing bulk orders, and FBA sellers running review/ranking tests all hit the same wall: fresh accounts get flagged within hours. Aged accounts pass automated checks and unlock the workflows you've already built.

Picking the right tier

  • Starter ($20) — testing flows, low-risk single orders.
  • Standard ($30) — the default for most dropshipping setups.
  • Premium ($35) — multi-order scenarios, longer-running operations.

Setting up with an antidetect browser

  1. Create a fresh browser profile (Multilogin, Dolphin, GoLogin, AdsPower).
  2. Assign a US residential proxy that geolocates near the account's history.
  3. Import the delivered cookies before you log in manually.
  4. Open Amazon, verify you land logged-in, then proceed with your workflow.

Red flags to avoid

Avoid sellers that promise "100% lifetime guarantee" — no aged-account vendor can control what you do post-delivery. A short, clearly-scoped replacement window (like our 3-hour window) is the honest standard.

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