Why Amazon Sellers Get Their Images Rejected
You think you did everything the right way. You found your best product, created the best title for it, and set the best price. Now you’re waiting for sales to come in, but you’re not getting any? You check Seller Central and find that your listing has been suppressed, and it’s due to your product image.
It’s one of the most common (and most frustrating) problems
Amazon sellers run into, and it’s almost always preventable. Amazon rejects thousands of product images every day, not because the products are bad, but
because the images don’t meet a very specific, very strict set of technical and
content rules.
How Amazon’s Image Review Process Works
Amazon doesn’t have a single person eyeballing every photo you
upload. Most reviews happen through a mix of automated and manual checks:
·
Automated checks scan for factors such as
background color, pixel dimensions, file size, and file format the moment you
upload an image.
·
Manual or algorithmic quality review
catches things automation might miss — misleading images, inappropriate
content, or category-specific violations.
If your image fails either check, Amazon suppresses the
listing rather than letting it go live with a non-compliant photo. You’ll
usually see this reflected in Seller Central as a suppressed listing
with a flag under Manage Inventory and a stated reason code.
The tricky part: Amazon’s stated reason isn’t always the only
issue. Sometimes a listing has two or three violations, but Amazon only shows you
the first one it catches.
Top Reasons Amazon Rejects Product Images
Here are the violations we see most often during seller
catalog audits.
Off-White or Non-Pure-White Main Image Background
Amazon requires the main image background to be pure white
(RGB 255, 255, 255). A slightly off-white, gray, or cream background — even one
that looks white to the eye — will often get flagged.
Product Doesn’t Fill 85% of the Frame.
Amazon wants the product to be the clear focus of the main
image, taking up at least 85% of the image frame. Too much empty space around
the product is a common rejection trigger.
Watermarks, Logos, Borders, or Promotional Text
Anything overlaid on the main image — a logo, a “50% OFF”
badge, a border, or descriptive text — is not allowed in the main image slot.
These elements are fine in secondary images, just not the primary one.
Low Resolution
Images need to meet Amazon’s minimum resolution requirement
(generally 1,000 pixels on the longest side) to enable the zoom feature.
Anything smaller gets rejected outright.
Lifestyle Shots Used as the Main Image
Lifestyle or in-context photos (product being used, styled
scenes, models) are great for secondary images, but Amazon requires the main
image to be a clean, standalone product shot.
Misleading Images
Showing a multipack as a single unit, displaying the wrong
color/variation, or heavily editing a photo to look different from the actual
product will trigger a rejection — and can lead to account-level issues if
repeated.
Category-Specific Violations
Some categories have their specific rules. For Apparel, you
usually need an image of the product on a person or a mannequin, which must be
a front-facing image. For jewelry and reflective items, the background and
lighting have particular specifications.
How to Check Why Your Listing Was Rejected
If your listing has been suppressed, here’s how to find out
why:
1.
Go to Seller Central → Manage Inventory.
2.
Filter by suppressed or inactive status
3.
Click into the listing to see Amazon’s stated rejection
reason.
4.
Cross-check the image against the violation categories
above — remember, there may be more than one issue even if only one is listed.
How to Fix and Resubmit Rejected Images
Once you know what’s wrong, fixing it usually comes down to a
few core steps:
·
Correct the background to true pure white
(255, 255, 255) — not just “close to white”
·
Re-crop or rescale the image so the
product fills roughly 85% of the frame
·
Remove all overlays — text, logos, and
badges — from the main image only; you can keep these on secondary images.
·
Re-upload the corrected image through
Seller Central or your feed.
After resubmission, re-review typically takes anywhere from a
few hours to a couple of business days, depending on category and current
review volume.
How to Prevent Future Rejections
The best solution is to avoid having your image denied. You
should check for the following before you upload a product image the next time:
✅ Main image background is pure white
✅ Product fills at least 85% of the frame
✅ No text, logos, watermarks, or borders on the
main image
✅ Image meets the minimum resolution requirement
✅ Main image is a clean product shot — no
lifestyle or styled scenes
✅ Image accurately represents the product,
variation, and quantity
If you’re managing a large catalog, it’s worth building this
into a repeatable process — either through an internal QA step or by working with a professional image editing service that understands Amazon’s exact specifications.
Catching an error before you upload is a lot faster than fixing a suppressed
listing after the fact.
Final Thoughts
Getting an Amazon image rejected isn’t a reflection of your
product — it’s almost always a technical compliance issue, and every one of
them is fixable. The sellers who avoid repeat rejections are the ones who build
a pre-upload checklist and treat image compliance as part of their standard
listing process, not an afterthought.
If you’d rather not deal with the back-and-forth of resubmissions
and suppressed listings, RoyalXStudio’s Image Post-Production service
handles Amazon-compliant editing for you — from background correction to resizing and multi-image sets ready for upload.
FAQ
Why was my Amazon image rejected if it looks fine to me?
The precision checks performed by Amazon go down to the pixels. If your image
background is not pure RGB255,255,255 (which is white), it may look white to
the human eye, but you would have triggered a denial for that.
How long does Amazon take to re-review resubmitted images?
It varies, but most re-reviews are completed within a few hours to a couple of
business days.
Can one rejected image suppress my whole listing?
Yes. If the main image fails compliance, Amazon can suppress the entire listing
until it’s corrected, even if all your other images and content are fine.
Do all image slots need to be compliant, or just the main
image?
The most stringent rules (plain white backgrounds, no overlays, no lifestyle images) apply only to the main image. Less strict rules apply to other images;
they still have to comply with the resolution and content requirements.




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