Why did Amazon Prime Day shift to June? What the company has said.

June 13, 2026

Technically, this isn’t the first time Prime Day has occurred in June.
 By 
Haley Henschel

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the amazon prime day logo next to a june 2026 calendar and amazon boxes
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Amazon is hosting its 2026 Prime Day sale from June 23 to 26 instead of mid-July like usual, throwing the summer retail calendar for a loop. What gives?

The company isn’t sharing many details about its reasoning. But based on what it has said, and what it’s prioritizing lately, it’s fairly easy to deduce an answer: There’s a lot happening this July already, and shoppers will want to stock up for the festivities.

“This year, we have the [FIFA] World Cup,” Jamil Ghani, worldwide VP of Amazon Prime, told Reuters earlier this month. The international soccer tournament, which is being hosted across North America this year, runs through July 19.


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“We’ve got also the 250th anniversary of U.S. independence [on July 4],” Ghani added, “and so we thought ​this week [in late June] was the best week for us to hold Prime Day.”

An Amazon spokesperson previously told Mashable that the company “felt holding the event earlier in the summer was the right choice for our customers.” When asked how an earlier Prime Day would benefit shoppers, exactly, they declined to elaborate. But as Reuters pointed out, Amazon is likely positioning its June Prime Day as an opportunity to save on groceries and household goods for July’s celebrations.

A bigger focus on grocery savings

Grocery delivery has become a massive part of Amazon’s business. In January, the company said it was the second-largest grocer in the U.S., with everyday essentials now representing one out of every three units it sells online. Amazon introduced same-day delivery of fresh foods in thousands of U.S. cities last August. And earlier this month, it expanded its 30-minute delivery service for groceries and essentials in dozens of locations.

Prime member benefits include free same-day grocery delivery on orders over $25, exclusive discounts at Whole Foods (which Amazon also owns), and 5% cash back on groceries with a Prime Visa card. Notably, Amazon is running a free grocery sweepstakes ahead of Prime Day 2026.

Amazon has shifted Prime Day’s schedule before

Technically, this isn’t the first time Prime Day has fallen outside of its regular time frame since it launched in 2015. Back in 2020, Amazon pushed its members-only sale to October because of supply chain issues related to the COVID-19 pandemic. The following year, it moved up Prime Day to late June — its earliest slot thus far — before returning it to July from 2022 to 2025.

Amazon had similar reasons for moving Prime Day to June in 2021. CFO Brian Olsavsky cited “a number of factors” for the shift in an earnings call that year, per ZDNet, including July being “a big vacation month” and the timing of the 2020 Olympics, which had been rescheduled to that summer.

Olsavsky framed the 2021 June move as a test at the time. “It might be better … for customers, sellers, and vendors to experiment with a different time period,” he said. That seemed to have panned out: Prime members “shopped more and saved more” on Prime Day 2021 than any Prime Day prior, per a company earnings report.

Prime Day 2021 also saw record-breaking sales for third-party sellers on Amazon, but its earlier timing probably wasn’t the only contributing factor. Amazon funded a “Spend $10, Get $10” promotion on products sold by small businesses that year.

Other major retailers usually run their own sales alongside Prime Day in mid-July, and this year, they’ve all adjusted their calendars accordingly. Walmart is hosting a Summer Deals event from June 22 to 28; Target is having a Circle Week Deal Days sale from June 23 to 26; and Best Buy is running a Tech Fest sale from June 22 to June 28.

Topics
Amazon
Prime Day

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Haley Henschel
Senior Shopping Reporter

Haley Henschel is a Chicago-based Senior Shopping Reporter at Mashable who reviews and finds deals on popular tech, from laptops to gaming consoles and VPNs. She has years of experience covering shopping holidays and can tell you what’s actually worth buying on Black Friday and Amazon Prime Day. Her work has also explored the driving forces behind digital trends within the shopping sphere, from dupes to 12-foot skeletons.

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