Amazon's ad business is the quiet money maker inside the company. It pulls in tens of billions of dollars a year and grows faster than almost anything else Amazon does.
Now federal regulators may be coming for it.
The FTC's New Focus On Amazon Ads
Bloomberg News reported that Amazon could face billions of dollars in civil penalties from a possible Federal Trade Commission lawsuit. The case centers on claims that Amazon misled advertisers - including how it disclosed terms, pricing, and "reserve pricing" in its ad auctions.
The agency has been looking into Amazon's ad business since at least last year, but no formal case has been filed yet. Several state attorneys general are also involved, and Bloomberg reported the probe could wrap up through a lawsuit or settlement as soon as this summer.
If one lands, it would open a second regulatory front against Amazon.
The FTC already won a major case against Amazon over how it signs up and cancels Prime members. In September, Amazon agreed to pay $2.5 billion - $1 billion in civil penalties and $1.5 billion in customer refunds - to settle those claims.
An ad case would stack on top of that. The timing is rough - Amazon's stock is already dealing with heavy AI spending and questions over AWS growth.
Why now? The FTC's consumer protection unit has been probing whether Amazon and Google properly disclosed terms and pricing to the advertisers buying ads on their platforms.
Amazon's ad-heavy pages have drawn the biggest share of that attention from lawmakers and consumer groups.
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Why Ads Matter So Much To Amazon
Most shoppers still think of Amazon as the everything store. But investors see it more as an ad company that happens to sell stuff on the side.
Amazon's ad unit is now one of the largest in the world. It trails only Google and Meta and pulled in roughly $68.6 billion in 2025, up 22% year over year.
That revenue keeps growing fast, climbing more than 20% a year and outpacing retail. AWS is the one segment running even hotter right now, growing 24% in the latest quarter - its fastest pace in 13 quarters.
Ads also carry far higher margins than retail. That's why Wall Street values them as a separate engine inside the company - and why any rule change could land straight on the bottom line.
The most sensitive piece is sponsored product listings. They dominate the top of search results on Amazon and pull in the bulk of ad dollars.
Sellers have long complained that they need to buy those ads just to stay visible. That revenue stream is now central to how Amazon hits its profit targets each quarter.
Any rule forcing Amazon to change how it discloses ad pricing, run its auctions differently, or limit how sponsored listings appear could reshape the whole format.
What To Watch
The first question is whether the FTC really files. Bloomberg's reporting flags this as a chance, not a done deal.
From there, the focus shifts to what any penalty would look like.
A fine is one outcome. Bigger changes, like new rules for ad auctions or sponsored listings, would matter much more to investors.
Watch for:
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Any formal FTC complaint or settlement news as soon as this summer.
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Statements from Amazon on regulatory risk in its next earnings call.
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Reaction from rival ad platforms like Google and Meta, which face their own antitrust fights.
For now, Amazon's ad engine keeps running. The question is how long it runs the way it does today.
And the FTC docket just became one of the bigger swing factors hanging over Amazon stock heading into next year.
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