International expansion sur Amazon is the fastest path to scaling revenus beyond the ceiling of a single place de marché. Sellers who operate in three or more places de marché report 2.4x higher revenus annuels on average compared to single-place de marché vendeurs. But cross-border selling introduces complexity across legal, tax, logistics, listing, advertising, and compliance dimensions that can derail expansion if not addressed systematically.

This 47-point checklist distills the essential steps into an actionable sequence. It is organized into seven phases that should be completed in order, with estimated timelines and cost ranges for each phase.

Phase 1: Market Research and Selection (Points 1-7)

Market Research

  1. Identify target places de marché. Compare 3-5 candidate places de marché using taille du marché, concurrence density, and fee structures. Start with our place de marché comparison guide for US, EU, and JP data.
  2. Analyze niche-specific concurrence. Your product may face different competitive dynamics in each place de marché. Run HHI analysis for each target market.
  3. Validate demande signals. Check search volume for primary keywords in each target place de marché. Use Amazon's own auto-suggest as a free indicator of demande presence.
  4. Model place de marché-specific profitability. Build unit economics for each target place de marché accounting for local fees, frais de livraisons, and expected prix de ventes. Reference our fees comparison for accurate inputs.
  5. Assess regulatory requirements. Identify product-specific compliance needs (CE marking, PSE marks, FDA equivalents) for each target country. Flag any showstoppers early.
  6. Evaluate language and localization needs. Determine whether listings need professional translation and estimate costs. Budget $200-400 per ASIN for professional localization.
  7. Set expansion timeline and budget. Allocate minimum 90 days from decision to first sale for EU/JP expansion. Budget $3,000-8,000 per place de marché for setup costs (excluding inventaire).

Phase 2: Legal and Entity Setup (Points 8-15)

Legal Structure

  1. Determine legal entity requirements. Some places de marché require a local legal entity or fiscal representative. EU requires an Authorized Representative for non-EU vendeurs. Japon requires an Importer of Record.
  2. Register for tax obligations. EU: VAT registration in each country where you store inventaire (or use One-Stop Shop for distance sales). UK: separate VAT registration post-Brexit. Japon: Consumption Tax registration if exceeding JPY 10M threshold.
  3. Obtain EORI number (EU/UK). Required for customs clearance when importing goods into the EU or UK. Apply through the customs authority of any EU member state.
  4. Appoint fiscal representative (if required). Non-EU vendeurs need a fiscal representative in several EU countries (France, Italie, Espagne, Pologne). Cost: $100-300/month per country.
  5. Obtain product liability insurance. Allemagne effectively requires product liability insurance for all vendeurs. Minimum coverage of EUR 10 million is standard. Cost: $500-2,000/year depending on product catégorie.
  6. Register trademarks (optional but recommended). Register your marque in target places de marché for Brand Registry access. EU trademark (EUIPO): EUR 850. Japon (JPO): JPY 12,000 + JPY 8,600 per class. UK (UKIPO): GBP 170.
  7. Open local currency bank accounts. Use Payoneer, WorldFirst, or similar to receive payments in local currency without Amazon's 3-4% conversion spread. Saves $3,000+ annually at $100K+ revenus.
  8. Engage local accountant or tax advisor. Essential for ongoing VAT/GST/Consumption Tax compliance. Budget $200-500/month per place de marché for tax filing services.

Phase 3: Compliance and Product Certification (Points 16-23)

Product Compliance

  1. Obtain CE marking (EU). Required for most product catégories sold in the EU. Self-declaration is possible for many catégories; third-party testing required for others. Cost: $500-5,000 depending on complexity.
  2. Obtain UKCA marking (UK). Post-Brexit equivalent of CE marking. Currently, CE marking is still accepted for most catégories, but UKCA will become mandatory. Check current transition timeline.
  3. Register with LUCID/VerpackG (Allemagne). All vendeurs in Allemagne must register packaging with the Central Packaging Registry (LUCID) and contract with a dual system provider. Annual cost: EUR 50-500 depending on packaging volume.
  4. Register for WEEE (electronics, EU). If selling electrical or electronic equipment, register with the WEEE authority in each target EU country. Cost: EUR 100-500 per country annually.
  5. Register for battery compliance (if applicable). Allemagne's BattG, UK's Battery Regulations, and similar laws require producer registration if your product contains batteries. Cost: EUR 50-200 per country.
  6. Ensure labeling compliance. Check country-specific labeling requirements: bilingual labels for Canada, metric units for EU/UK/AU, Japonese labeling for JP, energy efficiency labels where applicable.
  7. Prepare Safety Data Sheets (if applicable). Required for chemical products, cleaning supplies, and certain beauty/personal care items. Must be in the local language.
  8. Obtain catégorie-specific certifications. Food: local food safety authority registration. Children's products: CPC (US), EN 71 (EU). Cosmetics: CPNP notification (EU). Medical devices: MDR compliance (EU).

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Phase 4: Listing Creation and Localization (Points 24-31)

Listing Optimization

  1. Research local keywords. Do not simply translate US keywords. Conduct native-language recherche de mots-clés for each place de marché. German, French, and Japonese consumers use different search patterns than English speakers.
  2. Commission professional translations. Use native-speaker translators with Amazon listing experience. Machine translation (even GPT) produces suboptimal results for fiche produits. Budget $200-400 per ASIN per language.
  3. Adapt product titles to local conventions. Title structure, length limits, and keyword placement conventions vary by place de marché. Japonese titles are typically longer and more keyword-dense than US titles.
  4. Localize bullet points and descriptions. Beyond translation, adapt benefits messaging to local consumer priorities. German consumers value technical specifications; Japonese consumers value quality assurances.
  5. Create or adapt A+ Content. A+ Content modules may need redesign for different reading directions (RTL for Arabic) and cultural preferences. Budget additional $100-200 per ASIN for A+ localization.
  6. Optimize images for local markets. Some places de marché require metric measurements in infographics. Lifestyle images should reflect local demographics where possible.
  7. Set local pricing strategy. Do not simply convert USD prices. Research local price points, competitor pricing, and local purchasing power. A $24.99 US product might optimally price at EUR 27.99 in Allemagne or JPY 3,480 in Japon.
  8. Configure shipping and return settings. Set return addresses, return window (30 days minimum in EU), and client communication templates in each local language.

Phase 5: Logistics and Inventory (Points 32-38)

Supply Chain Setup

  1. Select fulfillment strategy. FBA is recommended for all new place de marché entries. Consider Pan-European FBA for EU (distribute from one warehouse to all EU countries) or European Fulfillment Network (EFN) for lower initial commitment.
  2. Arrange international freight forwarding. Identify freight forwarders experienced with Amazon FBA shipments in your target country. Get quotes for both air and sea freight.
  3. Create compliant shipping labels. Each place de marché has specific labeling requirements for FBA shipments. Ensure country of origin, HS codes, and customs declarations are accurate.
  4. Calculer initial inventaire quantities. Ship 60-90 days of estimated demande for the initial shipment. Under-stocking leads to stockout penalties; over-stocking triggers long-term storage fees.
  5. Set up replenishment pipeline. Establish reorder points and lead times for each place de marché. Sea freight to EU typically takes 30-40 days; to Japon 20-30 days; to Australia 25-35 days.
  6. Configure inventaire placement preferences. For US place de marché, decide between Inventory Placement Service (single destination, additional fee) or Amazon-distributed shipping (multiple destinations, no fee). For EU, Pan-European FBA handles distribution automatically.
  7. Arrange customs brokerage. Ensure your freight forwarder or a dedicated customs broker handles import declarations, duties, and tariff classifications for each destination country.
  8. Set up removal/disposal orders. Configure removal order destinations in each place de marché for returned or aged inventaire. This requires a local return address or disposal arrangement.

Phase 6: Advertising and Launch (Points 39-44)

PPC and Launch Strategy

  1. Create place de marché-specific campagnes PPC. Do not clone US campaigns. Build campaigns using locally researched keywords. Keyword difficulty varies significantly across places de marché.
  2. Set place de marché-appropriate budgets. CPC costs vary dramatically. EU and JP require 40-60% less PPC budget than the US for equivalent visibility. Start with $30-50/day per place de marché and optimize based on ACoS.
  3. Configure Sponsored Products campaigns. Start with automatic campaigns (1-2 weeks for data collection), then build manual campaigns from converting search terms. Use exact match for high-intent keywords.
  4. Set up Sponsored Brands (if Brand Registered). Headline search ads drive marque awareness in new places de marché. Particularly effective in low-concurrence environments like Australia and Canada.
  5. Plan launch velocity strategy. Determine promotional pricing, coupon strategy, and vine review enrollment for each place de marché. Launch pricing 15-20% below target price to drive initial velocity.
  6. Configure deal and promotion schedules. Research place de marché-specific shopping events: Prime Day (global), Singles' Day (select), Black Friday (all), Amazon Japon's annual sales events. Plan inventaire and promotions around these dates.

Phase 7: Operations and Monitoring (Points 45-47)

Ongoing Operations

  1. Set up client service in local languages. Amazon requires response to buyer messages within 24 hours in the local language. Options: hire bilingual VAs ($500-1,500/month), use Amazon's buyer-vendeur messaging translation tool, or partner with multilingual client service agencies.
  2. Establish performance monitoring dashboards. Track place de marché-specific KPIs: unit sessions, conversion rate, ACoS, organic rank for primary keywords, account health metrics. Set alerts for account health issues.
  3. Schedule monthly compliance reviews. Verify tax filings are current, packaging registrations are maintained, product certifications remain valid, and place de marché policy changes are addressed. Assign a team member or agency to each place de marché.

Timeline and Budget Résumé

For a US-based vendeur expanding to one EU place de marché (such as Allemagne with Pan-European FBA), the typical timeline and costs are:

Total first-year setup and operational cost for one European place de marché: approximately $8,000-25,000 depending on product catégorie and scale. For vendeurs assessing whether this investment makes sense, start by determining if your target niche meets the criteria for profitable entry.

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