Amazon Deal vs Fake Discount: A 60-Second Validation Method
Learn how to spot fake Amazon discounts in under 60 seconds using price history tools, cross-retailer checks, and skeptical reading of strikethrough prices.
Author
ErrorEmpire
Published on
The Problem with Amazon Strikethrough Pricing
That red "was $89.99, now $42.99" label on Amazon is one of the most powerful conversion tools in online retail. It creates an instant feeling of value. But in our years of tracking pricing errors and verifying deals daily, here is what we've found most shoppers miss: Amazon does not independently verify the "was" price. Sellers set their own list prices, and some inflate them specifically to make discounts look dramatic.
This does not mean every Amazon deal is fake. Plenty of legitimate discounts exist, especially during Prime Day, Black Friday, and regular warehouse clearances. The challenge is telling the real ones apart from the inflated ones, and our team does it in about 60 seconds.
The 60-Second Validation Method
Here is a step-by-step process we run on every Amazon product before we ever post it to our notification channels.
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Step 1: Copy the Product URL (5 seconds)
Grab the Amazon product link from your browser address bar. You only need the part up to the ASIN (the 10-character product identifier that starts with "B0" for most items).
Step 2: Paste into CamelCamelCamel (15 seconds)
Go to camelcamelcamel.com and paste the URL. The site will show you a price history chart going back months or years. You are looking for three things:
- The average price over the last 90 days. If the current "deal" price is close to or higher than this average, the discount is cosmetic.
- Whether the "was" price was a real selling price. If the list price jumped up two weeks ago and immediately got "discounted," that is a manufactured deal.
- The all-time low. This tells you whether the current price is genuinely special or just normal.
If you prefer not to visit a separate site every time, install the Keepa browser extension (see our Ultimate Tool Stack for our full list of recommended extensions). It adds a price history chart directly to every Amazon product page.
Step 3: Quick Cross-Retailer Sanity Check (20 seconds)
Search for the exact product name (or model number for electronics) on Google Shopping. If Walmart, Best Buy, or Target sells the same item at or below the Amazon "deal" price with no special promotion, the Amazon discount is not real savings. You would have gotten that price anywhere.
This step is especially important for products sold by third-party sellers on Amazon. Name-brand products from official brand stores tend to have more consistent pricing, while third-party listings have more room for price manipulation.
Step 4: Read the Seller and Listing Carefully (20 seconds)
Check these details before you trust the deal:
- Seller identity. "Ships from and sold by Amazon.com" is different from a random third-party seller. Third-party sellers have more freedom to inflate list prices.
- Review authenticity. A product with 4.5 stars and 12,000 reviews is generally more trustworthy than one with 4.8 stars and 47 reviews. Extremely high ratings with low review counts can indicate review manipulation.
- Listing age. If the product was listed only a few weeks ago and already has a "massive discount," be skeptical. New listings sometimes launch at inflated prices specifically to create a fake discount narrative.
Categories Where Fake Discounts Are Most Common
Not every product category has the same level of price manipulation. Based on price tracking data, here is where you should be most skeptical:
High risk for inflated pricing:
- Off-brand electronics accessories (cables, chargers, screen protectors)
- Supplements and vitamins from unknown brands
- Home organization products and kitchen gadgets
- Fashion items from unfamiliar brands
Lower risk (but still worth checking):
- Major brand electronics (Sony, Samsung, Apple)—these have more pricing transparency
- Books and media—prices are generally stable and verifiable
- Amazon's own devices (Echo, Fire tablets, Kindle)—Amazon controls pricing directly, and the discounts during events are typically genuine
How Amazon's Own Sales Events Work
Amazon runs several categories of promotions, and they work differently:
Lightning Deals appear for a limited time (usually 4-12 hours) with a claimed percentage off. The discount percentage is calculated from the list price, which may itself be inflated. Always run the CamelCamelCamel check.
Deal of the Day items tend to be more legitimate because Amazon curates them more carefully. The discounts are still calculated from list price, so verification helps, but these are generally better than random Lightning Deals.
Prime-exclusive pricing offers discounts only visible to Prime members. These tend to be smaller (5-15%) but are more consistently real because Amazon controls the pricing directly on these promotions.
Coupons (the clickable green checkbox) stack on top of the displayed price. These are usually genuine additional discounts, but verify that the base price was not inflated to offset the coupon.
What the FTC Says About Fake Discounts
The Federal Trade Commission has clear rules about reference pricing. A "was" price must reflect a genuine price at which the product was offered to the public for a reasonably substantial period. A seller cannot jack up a price for two days, then "discount" it and claim savings.
In practice, enforcement is inconsistent because the sheer volume of Amazon listings makes policing every one impossible. That puts the verification responsibility on you as the buyer. The good news is that the tools exist and the process takes less than a minute.
Setting Up Ongoing Price Monitoring
If you are not ready to buy right now but want to track a price, CamelCamelCamel lets you set price alerts. Enter the product URL, choose your target price, and the site emails you when the price drops to that level. This removes the pressure of deciding on the spot during a sale event.
Keepa offers similar alert functionality through its browser extension, with the added benefit of showing you the price chart without leaving Amazon.
For high-value purchases ($200+), tracking for two to four weeks before buying almost always reveals whether the current price is a genuine low or an artificial dip.
If you keep finding "deals" after everyone else has already tested them, you are reacting too late and too blind. Keep one filtered channel open so you can validate live offers before the noise takes over.
Bottom Line
Most fake Amazon discounts fall apart the moment you look at the price history. Copy the URL, paste it into CamelCamelCamel, glance at the 90-day average, and do a quick Google Shopping comparison. That 60-second habit will save you from overpaying on manufactured deals while letting you confidently grab the real ones.
About the Author: ErrorEmpire Team
The ErrorEmpire team has spent over 5 years tracking retail pricing algorithms, finding flash discounts, and verifying glitch pricing before it disappears. We aren't just an automated bot. Our editors manually verify deals using tools like Keepa and CamelCamelCamel to ensure you only see genuine savings. Learn more about how we verify deals.
