World, Writing, Wealth discussion
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Amazon payment thresholds
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Of course the solution you'll receive is if you don't like the policy, don't do business with them. It might be worth the aggravation just to shut off some of those low performing foreign markets and force them to shop through the .com site if that one person in Brazil wants your book.


We haven't published anything yet, so no royalties yet, hence I did not stop to check yet.


It can be checked here under 'Payment options by Location':
https://kdp.amazon.com/help?topicId=A...
The threshold is a real problem. For example: Somebody bought one of my books in Germany, but I'm unlikely to receive MY royalties, ever.
As Mehreen said, Amazon could easily solve this problem by paying through PAYPAL or through providing credits for purchases on AMAZON itself equal to the amount of accrued royalties. But no, the money that belongs to the authors just sits there ....

I like the idea that amazon could provide credits for purchases, it would be a lot more useful than just sitting on other people's money.

This is outrageous. There is no EFT system where I am in Australia.

Business idea?

I mean there are successful businesses now, offering a US address for free delivery of goods bought on Ebay or Amazon and relatively cheap further shipment to the end-users abroad.
Collecting of payments for authors can be a viable service, if and until Amazon kills it by solving this problem -:)

I just bought something from the US for 70$. Shipping was 47$, and customs was another 35$. So in total I paid 152$ - more than double the price I bought it for!
The items were worth it for me personally, but for other goods I'm not doing that again anytime soon.

I mean there are successful businesses now, offering a US address for free delivery of goods bought on Ebay or Amazon and relat..."
You could be onto an idea in a different direction. If you know a number of other authors in your area, you might form a shell company and put all your books under their banner. Reach the threshold more quickly with a group of authors, then divide up the payment when it comes. Only problem is the authors in this pool have to trust each other and you would need someone handling the "company" that you could trust and wouldn't mind putting in the work.


As an aside, Australia will certainly have EFT, BUT perhaps persuading Amazon to use it is another matter. I say that because NZ has EFT from Amazon, and Amazon always puts NZ behind a lot of others.
As another aside, every time I sell 1 book on Google, I get a prompt payment by EFT. Google is not at all bad on that. (Getting your books onto Google, though is a bit if a bureaucratic nightmare.)

Yeah, I think Amazon should solve it.
If I get desperate I'll write Bezos about it -:)
It's probably a very naive question, but which venue(s) does Google offer for selling books? Google play, google store?

https://kdp.amazon.com/help?topicId=A...
In a nut shell: last time I checked Amazon allowed EFT payment of royalties to authors from 4 countries: US, UK and maybe Canada and Australia, if I remember correctly and not everybody choose EFT there. All the rest, are not entitled to EFT payments, but are supposed to receive royalties by check or wire, which are subject to a threshold of a minimum of 100 USD, pounds, EURO or whatever accrued. And each marketplace has its own threshold.
Now, there are different statistics and evaluations, most of which indicate that average indie author doesn't sell a lot of books, some even less than 100 ever!
Imagine all the money sitting somewhere in Amazon coffers, which represent authors' royalties that isn't being paid because of the threshold. We might be looking into Millions of USD here.
I haven't reached a threshold in any country yet, having the first book published 1.5 years ago and the 2-nd - 0.5 a year ago.
Isn't it like an unjust enrichment of a sort? A possible cause for a class action?
I mean I understand that wiring 20 USD through wire is not feasible, as correspondent banks' commissions would be higher than that, but Amazon could provide credits for purchases on Amazon, for example. Would stimulate its business even.
Moreover, lets say I sold 2 books in Brasil, 5 in Mexico and 7 in Italy. Not gonna see a penny of these sales, because each such country represents its own marketplace with its own threshold.
What do you think?