Economic news

Amazon Moves Prime Day to June, Keeps it a Four-Day Event

NEW YORK, June 2 (Reuters) - Amazon.com will host its annual Prime Day sales event from June 23 to June 26 after launching the event in July for the past five years, ​citing major holidays and sporting events as factors in its decision.

Prime Day is one ‌of Amazon's biggest sales events of the year, and helped drive $24.1 billion in U.S. online spending in 2025 when it extended the event to four days from two, according to data from Adobe Analytics.

The e-commerce company considers U.S. ​and global events, religious holidays and bank holidays when choosing the dates for Prime Day ​each year.

"This year, we have the (FIFA) World Cup," Jamil Ghani, Amazon Prime international ⁠vice president, told Reuters. "We've got also the 250th anniversary of U.S. independence, and so we thought ​this week (beginning June 22) was the best week for us to hold Prime Day."

FIFA World Cup 2026 ​runs from June 11 through July 19, while the U.S. Independence Day is on July 4.

Amazon last held its Prime Day event in June in 2021.

The Seattle-based e-commerce giant hopes that its members will stock up on perishable ​groceries and other everyday essentials for World Cup and holiday celebrations. Perishable items including bananas and ​ice cream are becoming a larger part of Prime members' shopping carts as Amazon expands same-day and next-day deliveries. ‌The company ⁠in August added free same-day deliveries of perishable foods for Prime members.

Now that Prime Day is in June, Adobe Analytics is "expecting strong year-over-year growth for the month, powered by expected sales and discounts across major categories like appliances, office supplies, home & garden and more," Vivek Pandya, lead analyst at Adobe ​Digital Insights, said.

Speedy deliveries ​on groceries is a ⁠core part of Amazon's strategy to compete with Walmart, the largest grocer in the U.S. Walmart's membership service, Walmart+, offers same-day delivery in under three ​hours - with some orders arriving in as little as 30 minutes. The ​service has played ⁠a vital role in taking e-commerce market share away from Amazon.

Ghani said that he expects grocery items to make up a bigger proportion of Amazon deliveries in the future as people's frequency of buying ⁠perishable and ​nonperishable food items is higher than beauty products, apparel and ​electronics.

"As groceries and household essentials grow as a part of our business overall ... it'll grow as a percent of the total ​units that we ship," Ghani said.

Reporting by Arriana McLymore in New York City; Editing by Christopher Cushing

Source: Reuters


To leave a comment you must or Join us


More news


Back to economic news list

By visiting our website and services, you agree to the conditions of use of cookies. Learn more
I agree