The most reliable way to generate more Amazon reviews is to pair Amazon’s built-in Request a Review with a compliant, value-first Buyer-Seller Messaging strategy. Done right, this lifts review volume without risking policy violations or deliverability issues.
What Amazon allows
Two compliant paths exist: use the Request a Review button (5–30 days post-delivery) or send a permitted Buyer-Seller Message that asks for a review without incentives, gating, or off-Amazon links. Messages must be neutral and concise.
The Request a Review button sends an Amazon-generated, auto-translated message that includes both product review and seller feedback prompts—no custom text needed.
What to avoid (policy)
Never offer incentives, refunds, replacements, or coupons in exchange for a review or to influence sentiment; do not ask only satisfied buyers; avoid conditional “if you’re happy, review us” language.
Do not include links to third-party websites or attempt to steer unhappy buyers away from leaving an Amazon review via gating flows. Keep requests neutral and singular.
Timing and cadence
Best practice: send exactly one request per order within 5–30 days after delivery. Earlier for fast-use products (7–10 days), later for longer evaluation cycles (15–21+ days). The built-in button enforces the eligible window.
Avoid duplicates: do not send a manual email if the Request a Review was already triggered for that order.
How to use “Request a Review”
Navigate to Manage Orders, open the Order Details page, and click Request a Review. Amazon will deliver a standardized, localized message to the buyer that asks for a product review and seller feedback.
Pros: guaranteed compliance, automatic translation, consistent format, and simple workflow that scales per order.
Compliant email framework (Buyer-Seller Messaging)
Keep it short, neutral, and helpful. Focus on product-use tips and a single clear CTA to “share an honest review,” without suggesting a rating or sentiment.
Use one link that directs the buyer to the review page for that order/product; avoid off-Amazon links and promotional content.
Ready-to-use templates
Template 1: Value-first, neutral
Subject: Quick check-in on the recent order
Body:
Hi [First Name],
Thanks for ordering [Product Name]. A few quick tips to get the best results: [Tip 1], [Tip 2], [Tip 3].
When time allows, an honest product review helps other shoppers: [Review Link].
If any questions come up, reply to this message and support will assist.
This template adds value before asking and uses a neutral, non-incentivized CTA.
Template 2: Setup/usage reminder
Subject: Setup tips for [Product Name]
Body:
Hi [First Name],
Here are the most-used steps for [Product Name]: [Step 1], [Step 2], [Step 3].
If an honest review can be shared, it would be appreciated: [Review Link].
For any help, reply to this message—support is ready to assist.
Education-driven copy increases satisfaction and improves the odds of voluntary reviews.
Template 3: Single-sentence minimalist
Subject: A quick favor
Body:
Hi [First Name], hoping [Product Name] is working well. If time permits, please share an honest product review to help other customers: [Review Link].
Concise, neutral, and easy to read on mobile—ideal for high-volume SKUs.
Subject lines that get opened
Friendly: “How’s [Product Name] treating you?”
Utility-led: “3 quick tips for [Product Name]”
Neutral ask: “A quick favor on your recent order”
Simple, value-first subject lines drive higher open rates without veering into promotional territory.
Conversion boosters (still compliant)
Lead with tips: include 2–3 actionable usage tips to create goodwill before the ask.
One clear CTA: place the review link once, near the middle or end—no pressure language or star requests.
Mobile formatting: short paragraphs, scannable bullets, and a visible link that’s easy to tap.
When to choose Request a Review vs. custom email
Request a Review for speed, translation, and guaranteed compliance; great default for most orders.
Custom compliant email for higher-priced/complex items where setup guidance improves satisfaction before a review request.
Workflow and scaling tips
Standard operating procedure:
Day 7–21 post-delivery: trigger Request a Review OR send one compliant message.
Suppress duplicates per order; never send both.
Test timing by category (consumables earlier, complex electronics later).
Templates library: maintain 3–5 variants tied to product type (consumables, electronics, apparel) to keep content relevant.
Common pitfalls to avoid
Incentives, refunds, or “happy/unhappy” gating language—these risk policy violations and account health.
Long messages packed with marketing or external links; keep it short and Amazon-focused.
Multiple requests per order; this hurts deliverability and customer experience. Use a single touch.
Quick checklist
One request per order within 5–30 days of delivery.
No incentives, gating, or off-Amazon links.
Value-first copy, one neutral CTA, mobile-friendly format.
Use Request a Review for easy compliance and localization when in doubt.
With a light, value-first message and a single neutral ask—or the built-in Request a Review flow—sellers can steadily increase authentic review volume while staying 100% compliant.