Shopify + Amazon MLI: Boost Delivery Speed with M2E Cloud

Shopify + Amazon MLI: Boost Delivery Speed with M2E Cloud

Operate two or more warehouses across the US? Have fulfillment centers in California and New York?

You could distribute inventory regionally to reduce transit time and carrier costs. With Shopify, you can manage inventory by location. Your team knows exactly how many units are available in each warehouse.

But Amazon doesn’t.

If you send Amazon a single combined stock number, it sees the total quantity – not warehouse-level inventory. It doesn’t know which units are in which state. As a result, your Amazon delivery promise may not reflect reality.

This creates real business consequences.

Delivery dates may be longer than necessary. When your promise looks slower than competitors’, you lose Buy Box opportunities. Orders may ship cross-country even when local stock is available. Transit time increases. Shipping costs rise. If delivery estimates don’t match actual fulfillment speed, the risk of late shipments increases, and SLA metrics can suffer.

For multi-warehouse sellers and brands with regional fulfillment centers, this is not a small configuration issue. It directly affects performance.

Amazon Multi-Location Inventory (MLI) solves this by allowing you to share inventory by supply source.

M2E Cloud supports Amazon MLI and syncs location-level inventory from Shopify to Amazon, so delivery promises align with your real warehouse network.

What Is Amazon Multi-Location Inventory (MLI)?

Amazon Multi-Location Inventory (MLI) is an inventory feature for Fulfilled by Merchant (FBM) sellers on the Amazon US marketplace.

It allows you to share location-level inventory rather than sending a single combined stock number.

In Amazon terms, each warehouse is a supply source. When MLI is enabled, Amazon sees how many units are available at each supply source. It doesn’t treat your inventory as one pooled quantity.

Amazon uses this data to enable accurate, automated deliveries. Delivery dates are calculated using:

MLI is available through:

For sellers managing multiple warehouses, this is the structural shift. Amazon no longer guesses. It calculates delivery based on real warehouse data.

MLI in Action: Before vs After

Amazon explains MLI through a simple contrast. The difference is operational.

Without MLI

Without Multi-Location Inventory:

Example:

Your actual delivery time is 4 days. The delivery promise shown to customers is 10 days.

You lose a competitive advantage even though your fulfillment network is efficient.

With MLI

With Multi-Location Inventory enabled:

Example:

Your actual delivery time is 4 days. The delivery promise shown to customers is also 4 days.

That alignment drives better performance.

Warehouse routing example

Let’s imagine that you operate two warehouses, and both of them hold the same SKU:

If a buyer places an order from Boston, Amazon selects the New York supply source.

And if a buyer places an order from Los Angeles, Amazon selects the California supply source.

This changes fulfillment dynamics.

Transit zones are shorter. Orders don’t cross the country by default. Carrier routing becomes more predictable.

Delivery dates shown to customers reflect actual distance and ship capabilities. A 3-4 day real transit window isn’t displayed as 7-10 days.

When delivery estimates are accurate and competitive, conversion probability increases. Buyers respond to clear and fast delivery windows.

At the same time, SLA exposure decreases. Orders ship from the warehouse that aligns with the delivery promise. Fewer mismatches mean lower risk of late shipment metrics.

For sellers with distributed warehouses and large catalogs, this isn’t just another improvement. It is a structural performance optimization.

Why MLI Matters for Enterprise and Mid-Market Sellers

For multi-warehouse Amazon sellers and brands with regional distribution, it makes a big difference.

MLI directly impacts:

For brands running large catalog operations across distributed fulfillment centers, this is performance architecture – not a configuration detail.

Where most sellers struggle

MLI is powerful, but implementation requires precision.

To use Multi-Location Inventory correctly, sellers must:

Each step introduces potential failure points, such as:

For sellers managing multiple warehouses and large catalogs, manual control becomes fragile.

This is where structured integration, which takes the weight off your shoulders, becomes necessary.

How M2E Cloud Supports Amazon MLI

Amazon Multi-Location Inventory requires accurate data, correct mapping, and continuous sync. For sellers operating multiple warehouses and large catalogs, this can’t rely on manual feeds.

M2E Cloud provides the infrastructure layer.

It is an enterprise-level solution built for multi-channel sellers who need control, scalability, and operational stability. With over 18 years of marketplace expertise, M2E is a trusted partner for advanced sellers managing complex fulfillment networks.

MLI inside M2E Cloud isn’t an add-on. It is part of a powerful multi-channel architecture designed for structured inventory control.

A. Native Shopify integration

M2E Cloud connects directly to Shopify and works with your existing location structure.

You can:

Amazon receives inventory by location, not as a pooled quantity. The warehouse logic in Shopify aligns with supply sources in Seller Central.

B. Policy-based architecture

MLI in M2E Cloud is controlled through Selling Policies.

The Selling Policy:

For sellers with large catalogs, policies can be assigned in bulk. This reduces manual SKU-level management and keeps the configuration structured.

C. Automated sync layer

M2E Cloud continuously updates inventory per location.

This provides:

If stock changes in Shopify, Amazon receives updated quantities per the mapped supply source. Delivery calculations remain aligned with actual inventory distribution.

D. Support for advanced fulfillment strategies

Many mid-market and enterprise sellers operate hybrid fulfillment models.

M2E Cloud supports:

This allows sellers to manage distributed inventory while maintaining accurate delivery performance.

The system is built to support operational depth, not surface-level integration.

For detailed technical setup and configuration guides, refer to our docs.

FAQ

Q1. Who can participate in Amazon Multi-Location Inventory?

Multi-Location Inventory is available to Fulfilled by Merchant (FBM) sellers on Amazon US who manage inventory across multiple locations. 

Q2. Is MLI required for all ASINs?

You can enable MLI for as many or as few ASINs as you choose. However, to gain full operational benefits, many sellers apply it across their entire FBM catalog.

Q3. What happens if Shipping Settings Automation (SSA) is disabled?

If SSA is disabled on a shipping template that includes MLI ASINs, customers can still place orders.

However, delivery promises will revert to manual estimates, and you will not receive the automation benefits of Multi-Location Inventory.

Q4. Is MLI available for FBA inventory?

Multi-Location Inventory applies only to FBM listings. FBA inventory is managed within Amazon’s fulfillment network.

Instead of the Conclusion

MLI changes one thing that matters: how Amazon decides what delivery date to show. But the benefits only appear when the setup is correct, and the data stays consistent across every warehouse, SKU, and shipping template.

M2E Cloud keeps that system under control. It connects your Shopify locations to Amazon supply sources, applies MLI through customizable selling policies, and continuously syncs inventory across locations. So you can treat MLI as a scalable infrastructure and operate it efficiently across multiple Amazon US warehouses.

Kateryna Oriekhova
A content writer with over 6 years of experience in eCommerce and marketplace integrations. Passionate about the latest industry trends and the inner workings of online selling, she transforms complex topics into clear, engaging blog posts, landing pages, and user-friendly guides.
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