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Home » Amazon Strikes New FedEx Deal to Fill UPS Delivery Gap
U.S. Energy Policy

Amazon Strikes New FedEx Deal to Fill UPS Delivery Gap

omc_adminBy omc_adminMay 12, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
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Amazon is going back to FedEx after falling out with UPS.

According to an internal document obtained by Business Insider, Amazon signed a new partnership deal with FedEx in late February to handle some parts of its package deliveries.

The FedEx deal gives Amazon “cost favorability” compared with UPS, the document said, indicating the retail giant stands to save money from the transition.

The document didn’t specify the extent of the deal or which Amazon packages would be handled by FedEx.

“Securing FedEx capacity is our primary solution for these capacity constraints,” the internal document said.

FedEx shares popped in after-hours trading on Monday, following BI’s exclusive reporting.

Amazon comments

In an email to BI, an Amazon spokesperson confirmed the new partnership.

“We’ve reached an agreement with FedEx to serve as one of several third-party partners to deliver packages to our customers,” the spokesperson said in an email statement. “FedEx joins our other third-party partners like UPS and the USPS, that work alongside our own last mile delivery network to help us balance capacity to best serve customers.”

The Amazon spokesperson said that the company regularly worked with third-party delivery partners to “balance capacity” and that the FedEx deal wasn’t meant to replace UPS entirely.

FedEx weighs in

A FedEx spokesperson told BI the company remained “focused on driving profitable growth” and that the two companies had been discussing this partnership for more than a year.

“FedEx has the global network, capacity, and expertise to serve the shipping needs of thousands of retailers in the e-commerce space,” the FedEx spokesperson said in a statement. “We have reached a mutually beneficial, multi-year agreement to provide residential delivery of select large packages for Amazon.”

This new deal will be “net positive” for FedEx’s average system yields, the company added. That’s an industry metric that measures the efficiency and profitability of a shipping network.

A twist

The renewed alliance between Amazon and FedEx adds a notable twist to the broader shipping industry.

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FedEx and Amazon cut ties in 2019 as the two companies increasingly competed in the logistics and delivery space. At the time, FedEx said it would focus on other e-commerce customers instead. Amazon’s then operations lead, Dave Clark, downplayed the fallout, writing on X that FedEx was a “very small piece of our network and vice versa.”

The logistics consulting firm MWPVL estimates that FedEx handles no Amazon packages in the US. (Third-party sellers on Amazon’s marketplace are still able to use FedEx as a shipping option.)

The FedEx deal follows UPS’s announcement earlier this year that it would reduce its shipping volume for Amazon packages by more than half by the end of 2026. Despite Amazon being its largest customer, the company cited profitability concerns as the reason for slowly winding down the partnership.

The internal document obtained by BI said Amazon’s extra-large delivery network, which ships bulky items such as TVs and furniture, expected to get some delivery support from FedEx through this new deal. In the second half of this year, Amazon’s extra-large delivery team plans to “leverage FedEx for 100%” of any capacity risks, it added.

The Amazon spokesperson said the document’s reference to the extra-large delivery team’s plans was “premature at this point.”

Meanwhile, Amazon’s in-house logistics service has since surpassed FedEx and UPS in shipping volume.

According to Pitney Bowes, Amazon shipped 6.3 billion parcels in 2024, up 7.3% from the year before, and far ahead of UPS’s 4.7 billion and FedEx’s 3.7 billion. USPS was the only carrier ahead of Amazon at 6.9 billion packages.

Amazon previously disclosed that more than two-thirds of its packages were delivered through its own logistics network in the US.

Have a tip? Contact Eugene Kim via email at ekim@businessinsider.com or Signal, Telegram, or WhatsApp at 650-942-3061. Contact Hugh Langley via email at hlangley@businessinsider.com or Signal at 628-228-1836. Use a personal email address and a nonwork device; here’s our guide to sharing information securely.



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