Amazon is the largest online retailer in the world, and it handles restocks differently than any other platform. Understanding its systems, from how wishlists interact with inventory to when prices actually drop, can save you hundreds of dollars a year and help you grab limited items before they sell out again.

How Amazon Inventory Actually Works

Before diving into tactics, it helps to understand Amazon’s inventory model. Amazon sells products through three channels:

  • Sold and shipped by Amazon - Amazon owns the stock. Prices are set algorithmically and change frequently.
  • Fulfilled by Amazon (FBA) - Third-party sellers store products in Amazon’s warehouses. Amazon handles shipping. Prices are set by the seller.
  • Sold by third-party, shipped by third-party - No Amazon involvement beyond the marketplace listing. Highest risk, most variable pricing.

For restock purposes, you almost always want to target “Sold and shipped by Amazon” listings. These have the most stable pricing, the best return policies, and are the ones that go in and out of stock during high-demand periods.

The Wishlist Monitoring Method

Amazon wishlists are more powerful than most people realize. Here is how to use them as a restock tool:

Step 1: Create a Dedicated Restock Wishlist

Do not mix your restock targets with your regular wishlist. Create a separate list called something like “Restock Watch” so you can check it quickly.

Step 2: Add Out-of-Stock Items

Even when an item shows as unavailable, you can still add it to your wishlist. This is key. When the item comes back in stock, your wishlist will update to show the current price and an “Add to Cart” button.

Step 3: Check the Wishlist, Not the Product Page

Loading your wishlist page is significantly faster than loading individual product pages. When checking for restocks across multiple items, the wishlist view lets you scan 20-30 items in seconds.

Step 4: Enable “Item Available” Notifications

On each wishlist, toggle on email notifications for item availability. Amazon will email you when an out-of-stock item becomes available again. The delay is typically 5-15 minutes, which is not fast enough for extremely competitive drops but works well for moderately hard-to-find items.

Price Tracking Tools That Actually Work

Amazon changes prices constantly. A product might fluctuate by 20-40% over the course of a month. These tools help you buy at the right time:

ToolPlatformKey FeatureCost
CamelCamelCamelWeb, Browser ExtensionFull price history charts, price drop alertsFree
KeepaBrowser ExtensionDetailed price graphs embedded on Amazon pages, international trackingFree (basic), $20/mo (premium)
HoneyBrowser ExtensionCoupon auto-apply, price historyFree
Capital One ShoppingBrowser ExtensionPrice comparison across retailers, price drop creditsFree
EarnyMobile AppAutomatic price adjustment refund claimsFree (takes 25% of savings)

How to Use CamelCamelCamel Effectively

CamelCamelCamel is the gold standard for Amazon price tracking. Here is how to get the most out of it:

  1. Create an account and import your Amazon wishlists directly
  2. Set price alerts at realistic thresholds. Check the historical low price and set your alert slightly above it
  3. Use the browser extension (called “The Camelizer”) to view price history directly on Amazon product pages
  4. Track third-party vs. Amazon prices separately. CamelCamelCamel distinguishes between the two, and the patterns are very different

Reading Price History Charts

When looking at a price history chart, pay attention to:

  • Seasonal patterns: Many products hit their lowest prices during Prime Day (July), Black Friday (November), and post-holiday clearance (January)
  • New model cycles: Electronics drop in price when a successor is announced, often weeks before the new model ships
  • Stock-dependent spikes: When inventory runs low, third-party sellers raise prices. A price spike on the third-party line often precedes an out-of-stock event on the Amazon line

Optimal Purchase Timing

Amazon’s pricing algorithms follow predictable patterns. While not guaranteed, these timing strategies improve your odds of buying at or near the lowest price:

Product CategoryBest Time to BuyWorst Time to Buy
ElectronicsPrime Day, Black FridayJanuary-February (post-holiday lull in deals)
Home & KitchenPrime Day, Labor DaySpring (new product launches at full MSRP)
Toys & GamesJanuary (clearance)October-November (pre-holiday markup)
FashionEnd of seasonStart of season
BooksRarely fluctuatesRarely fluctuates
PC ComponentsNew generation launches (old gen drops)Supply shortage periods

The Tuesday/Wednesday Pricing Pattern

Internal analyses of Amazon pricing data have shown that prices on many product categories dip slightly on Tuesdays and Wednesdays, likely because consumer demand peaks on weekends and Mondays. The difference is usually 2-5%, but on higher-priced items that can add up.

Lesser-Known Amazon Features for Restockers

Subscribe & Save for Consumables

For items that regularly go out of stock (supplements, specialty foods, cleaning supplies), Subscribe & Save locks in a recurring delivery at a 5-15% discount. Even better, it reserves your allocation from Amazon’s inventory, so you are less affected by stock fluctuations.

Amazon Warehouse Deals

Navigate to amazon.com/warehouse for open-box and refurbished items sold by Amazon. During competitive restocks, Warehouse listings for the same product often remain available because most buyers overlook them. Conditions labeled “Very Good” or “Like New” are typically indistinguishable from new products.

Price Match Guarantee (Sort Of)

Amazon does not formally price match, but it does automatically apply pre-shipment price drops. If you order an item and the price drops before it ships, you get the lower price automatically. For post-delivery price drops within 7 days, Amazon customer service will sometimes issue a credit if you contact them, though this is not guaranteed.

The “Other Sellers” Box

On any product page, click “Other sellers on Amazon” beneath the main buy box. During restocks, inventory sometimes appears from other fulfilled-by-Amazon sellers before the main listing updates. Checking this section manually can give you a 1-2 minute head start.

Setting Up a Complete Amazon Restock System

Here is the full workflow, combining everything above:

  1. Install CamelCamelCamel and Keepa browser extensions
  2. Create a dedicated wishlist for items you are tracking
  3. Set price alerts on CamelCamelCamel for each item at your target price
  4. Enable wishlist notifications for availability alerts
  5. Save your payment and address info for fast checkout
  6. Check your wishlist on Tuesdays and Wednesdays for price dips
  7. Monitor Warehouse Deals as a backup source

This system takes about 15 minutes to set up and runs mostly on autopilot after that. You will get notified when prices drop or items restock, and you will be ready to buy faster than average shoppers when competitive drops happen.