Amazon is not adding AI to its shopping experience - it is ripping the whole thing out and starting over.
CEO Andy Jassy told investors the company is rebuilding its retail platform "from a clean sheet of paper," putting every part of how customers find and buy products on the table. The language was deliberate - Jassy is signaling that this is not a feature update but a full rethinking of how the world's largest online store works.
The Investment
Amazon committed $200 billion to AI infrastructure in 2026, covering both the retail rebuild and the continued build-out of AWS - its cloud computing business. That figure is roughly double what the company spent on capital expenditures in 2025 and represents the largest single-year investment any tech company has ever made in AI.
Jassy called AI "not a standalone initiative - it's a multiplier," saying it would "reshape every customer experience we offer and unlock entirely new ones."
The bulk of the spending goes toward data centers, custom chips like Trainium and Inferentia, and the computing power needed to run AI models across all of Amazon's businesses. AWS remains the company's most profitable division, and scaling it to meet enterprise AI demand is a core part of the plan.
Amazon is building data centers in at least 15 countries this year to keep up with client demand.
What It Looks Like
The first tools are already live and being tested with millions of users. Rufus is Amazon's AI shopping assistant that can answer product questions, compare items, and make suggestions based on what you are looking for.
Early data shows customers who use Rufus spend more time on the platform and add more items to their carts.
Amazon Lens lets you search for products using your phone camera - point it at a pair of shoes or a piece of furniture, and it finds similar items for sale on Amazon. The tool uses image recognition powered by Amazon's own AI models to match visual features with products in the catalog.
Amazon has also started using AI to write product descriptions, generate review summaries, and personalize search results based on a customer's browsing and purchase history. The company says AI-powered recommendations already drive more than 35% of all purchases on the platform.
The most interesting one for investors: "Buy for Me" is an AI agent that can go to other websites and complete purchases on your behalf - even when products are not sold on Amazon. It keeps the customer inside Amazon's ecosystem while buying from competitors, which could change how investors think about Amazon's share of total e-commerce spending.
What to Watch
The $200 billion bet is huge, even for Amazon. Investors are weighing this spending against the company's record 2025 profits, watching for signs that the AI rebuild drives higher sales and keeps users on the platform longer.
If the clean-sheet approach works, it could give Amazon a level of personalization and convenience no other retailer can match. If it does not deliver measurable returns by late 2026, expect Wall Street to start asking tough questions about the price tag.
