3PL Storage Fees Eating Your Margins? When to Liquidate vs. When to Relocate

Third-party logistics (3PL) providers offer enormous value to growing eCommerce businesses—professional warehousing, integrated order fulfillment, and scalability without capital investment. Until you realize you’re paying $800, $2,000, or $5,000 monthly to store inventory that isn’t selling.

For eCommerce businesses using 3PL services like Amazon FBA, ShipBob, ShipMonk, or Fulfillment by Amazon, excess inventory creates a unique financial pressure: premium storage rates designed for active, fast-moving products applied to dead stock that might sit for months or years. The result? Storage fees that quickly exceed the inventory’s entire value.

This guide provides a complete decision framework for eCommerce businesses facing mounting 3PL costs: when to liquidate excess inventory immediately, when relocating to cheaper storage makes sense, and how to calculate which option maximizes your financial outcome.

Understanding 3PL Storage Economics

Before making liquidation vs. relocation decisions, understand how 3PL pricing works and why it creates special pressure:

Standard 3PL Storage Fee Structures

Per Cubic Foot Pricing: Most 3PLs charge $8-20 per cubic foot monthly, with variations based on:

  • Volume commitments
  • Service level
  • Location
  • Seasonal demand

Example Costs:

  • Small item (0.5 cubic feet): $4-10/month
  • Medium item (2 cubic feet): $16-40/month
  • Large item (8 cubic feet): $64-160/month

Per Pallet Pricing: Alternative model charging $15-40 per pallet position monthly

Why 3PL Costs Hurt More Than Traditional Warehousing

Premium Locations: 3PLs operate in logistics hubs near population centers with expensive real estate, passing costs to clients.

Bundled Services: You’re paying for pick/pack/ship capability even for inventory that never ships.

Efficiency Design: 3PL facilities optimize for throughput, not long-term storage. Dead inventory occupies space that could house active products.

Opportunity Cost: Space consumed by slow-moving inventory prevents you from bringing in profitable new products.

Amazon FBA: The Most Expensive 3PL Option

Amazon FBA combines storage fees with punitive measures for excess inventory:

Standard Storage Fees (January-September):

  • Standard size: $0.87 per cubic foot per month
  • Oversize: $0.56 per cubic foot per month

Peak Storage Fees (October-December):

  • Standard size: $2.40 per cubic foot per month
  • Oversize: $1.40 per cubic foot per month

Aged Inventory Surcharges:

  • 271-365 days: Additional $1.50 per cubic foot per month
  • 365+ days: Additional $6.90 per cubic foot per month

Long-Term Storage Fees (LTSF): Assessed February 15 and August 15:

  • Inventory stored 271-365 days: $0.69 per cubic foot or $0.15 per unit (whichever is greater)
  • Inventory stored 365+ days: $0.42 per cubic foot or $0.15 per unit (whichever is greater)

IPI Score Impact: Low inventory performance scores can result in storage limits, preventing you from sending new inventory during peak season.

Real Cost Example: A standard-size item (1 cubic foot) aged 400+ days:

  • Base storage: $0.87/month
  • Aged surcharge: $6.90/month
  • Total: $7.77/month or $93.24/year per cubic foot

For a 500-unit inventory lot occupying 500 cubic feet, annual storage costs approach $47,000—often exceeding the inventory’s liquidation value.

The Liquidate vs. Relocate Decision Framework

Use this systematic approach to determine the right strategy:

Step 1: Calculate Your Current 3PL Costs

Monthly Storage Cost: [Units] × [Cost per unit] = $______

Annual Storage Cost: Monthly cost × 12 = $______

Projected 6-Month Cost: Monthly cost × 6 = $______

Include any surcharges, aged inventory fees, or seasonal rate increases.

Step 2: Estimate Liquidation Recovery

Based on your product category and condition (refer to our guide on actual liquidation recovery rates):

Estimated Liquidation Value: [Inventory Cost] × [Recovery %] = $______

Typical recovery ranges:

  • New, perfect condition: 25-40% of cost
  • Opened/like new: 20-35% of cost
  • Returns/used: 15-28% of cost
  • Damaged/mixed: 10-20% of cost

Less Liquidation Coordination Costs: Minimal: $200-500 for manifest preparation and coordination

Net Liquidation Recovery: Liquidation value – coordination costs = $______

Step 3: Calculate Alternative Storage Costs

Option A: Traditional Warehouse Storage

Local warehouse rental: $0.50-2.00 per square foot per month

Example Calculation:

  • 500 cubic feet inventory ≈ 150-200 square feet floor space
  • Cost at $1.00/sq ft: $150-200/month
  • Annual cost: $1,800-2,400

Option B: Self-Storage Facilities

Personal/commercial storage: $50-300/month depending on unit size

Considerations:

  • Access restrictions
  • Climate control availability
  • Insurance requirements
  • No pick/pack services (you handle fulfillment separately)

Step 4: Run the Numbers

Compare three scenarios over 6-month and 12-month periods:

Scenario A: Keep in Current 3PL

  • 6-month cost: $______
  • 12-month cost: $______
  • Depreciation (2-5% monthly): $______
  • Total cost: $______

Scenario B: Liquidate Immediately

  • Net recovery: $______ (from Step 2)
  • Immediate capital freed for reinvestment
  • Opportunity value (capital × return rate): $______
  • Net outcome: $______

Scenario C: Relocate to Cheaper Storage

  • Moving costs (one-time): $______
  • Storage costs (6 or 12 months): $______
  • Potential future liquidation recovery: $______
  • Depreciation during hold: $______
  • Net outcome: $______

The scenario with the best financial outcome is your optimal choice.

When to Liquidate Immediately

Liquidation makes financial sense when:

1. Storage Costs Will Exceed Recovery Within 6 Months

Calculation: If (6-month storage cost) ≥ (liquidation recovery value), liquidate immediately.

Example:

  • Current 3PL cost: $800/month
  • 6-month cost: $4,800
  • Estimated liquidation recovery: $4,200
  • Decision: Liquidate now (waiting 6 months costs more than inventory is worth)

2. Inventory Is Actively Depreciating

For technology, fashion, or trend-driven products losing 3-5% value monthly:

Calculation: Monthly depreciation + monthly storage cost = total monthly value loss

If this exceeds 8-10% monthly, every month of delay significantly reduces recovery.

Example:

  • Product depreciating 4% monthly
  • Storage costing 3% of value monthly
  • Total value loss: 7% monthly
  • Over 6 months: 42% value destruction
  • Decision: Liquidate immediately

3. Product Has Reached Amazon’s LTSF Assessment Threshold

If you’re approaching 271 or 365-day inventory age in Amazon FBA:

Before LTSF Assessment (250 days aged):

  • Monthly cost: $0.87 per cubic foot
  • Liquidation recovery: 30% of cost (estimate)

After LTSF Assessment (380 days aged):

  • Monthly cost: $7.77 per cubic foot ($6.90 surcharge + $0.87 base)
  • Liquidation recovery: 25% of cost (slightly depreciated)
  • LTSF fee charged: Additional hit to recovery

Decision: Liquidate before LTSF assessment to avoid the fee and higher ongoing charges

4. Capital Is Urgently Needed

If freed capital can generate returns exceeding storage cost savings:

Example:

  • Liquidation recovers: $10,000 immediately
  • Capital reinvested in profitable inventory generates 30% return: $3,000 over 6 months
  • Alternative storage savings over 6 months: $2,400
  • Decision: Liquidate ($3,000 opportunity value > $2,400 storage savings)

5. IPI Score Pressure Exists (Amazon Sellers)

If your IPI score is below 450 and excess inventory contributes to the low score:

Consequences of Low IPI:

  • Storage limits preventing new inventory during Q4
  • Inability to scale during peak season
  • Lost sales opportunities exceeding liquidation recovery

Decision: Liquidate strategically to improve IPI score and regain storage capacity for profitable inventory.

6. Inventory Is Truly Dead

Products that will never sell through normal channels:

  • Discontinued with no replacement market
  • Severely obsolete technology
  • Expired or near-expiration consumables
  • Failed product launches with no demand

Decision: Liquidate immediately rather than paying to store worthless inventory.

When to Relocate to Cheaper Storage

Relocation makes sense when:

1. Storage Cost Differential Justifies Moving Expense

Calculation: (Current monthly cost – alternative monthly cost) × planned holding period > moving costs

Example:

  • Current FBA cost: $600/month
  • Traditional warehouse cost: $180/month
  • Savings: $420/month
  • Moving costs (one-time): $800
  • If holding 12 months: $420 × 12 = $5,040 savings – $800 moving = $4,240 net benefit
  • If holding 6 months: $420 × 6 = $2,520 savings – $800 moving = $1,720 net benefit

Decision: Relocate if planning to hold 3+ months (savings exceed moving costs)

2. Inventory Retains Value and Has Future Demand

Products that aren’t depreciating and have viable future sales potential:

  • Evergreen products with steady demand
  • Seasonal items being held until next season
  • Quality products that just need time/marketing
  • Items awaiting packaging/branding updates

Decision: Relocate to preserve value while reducing carrying costs.

3. You’re Between Seasons (Seasonal Products)

Example: Winter apparel in April

  • Current FBA cost: $500/month
  • Liquidation recovery now (off-season): 18% of cost = $3,600
  • Hold until next pre-season (6 months) estimated recovery: 32% of cost = $6,400

Comparison:

  • Liquidate now: $3,600 recovered
  • Relocate and hold:
    • Alternative storage: $150/month × 6 = $900
    • Estimated recovery in October: $6,400
    • Net: $5,500 ($6,400 – $900)

4. Volume Justifies Negotiated Warehouse Rates

For significant inventory volumes (500+ cubic feet):

Regional warehouses may offer:

  • Bulk discounts ($0.30-0.75 per cubic foot for large commitments)
  • Flexible terms
  • Dedicated space

When volume exceeds 1,000-2,000 cubic feet: Private warehouse space becomes competitive with 3PL rates while providing more flexibility.

5. Products Need Refurbishment or Repackaging

If inventory can be improved before resale:

  • Damaged packaging that can be replaced
  • Products needing minor repair
  • Items requiring bundling or reconfiguration
  • Returns that can be tested/refurbished

Decision: Relocate to facility where you can access inventory for improvements, then resell through normal channels at higher recovery than liquidation.

Hybrid Strategy: Selective Liquidation + Relocation

Often the optimal approach combines both strategies:

Tiered Inventory Approach

Tier 1 (20% of inventory, 50% of value):

  • High-value items with refurbishment potential
  • Action: Relocate to accessible storage, improve, resell normally

Tier 2 (50% of inventory, 35% of value):

  • Medium-value items with future seasonal demand
  • Action: Relocate to cheap storage until optimal liquidation timing

Tier 3 (30% of inventory, 15% of value):

  • Low-value, obsolete, or damaged items
  • Action: Liquidate immediately

Result: Maximize recovery on valuable items while eliminating storage costs on low-value inventory.

Amazon FBA Specific Strategy

Remove from FBA:

  • All aged inventory approaching LTSF thresholds
  • Slow-moving items unlikely to sell before next assessment
  • Anything creating IPI score pressure

Send to Budget Storage: Hold for optimal liquidation timing or channel shift

Keep in FBA:

  • Only fast-moving, profitable inventory
  • Products meeting IPI efficiency requirements

Liquidate Immediately:

  • Truly dead products not worth moving costs

Calculating Moving Costs

Before relocating, accurately estimate costs:

FBA Removal Order Costs

Amazon Removal Fees:

  • Standard size: $0.10-0.30 per unit
  • Oversize: $0.30-0.60 per unit

Disposal Alternative: Amazon disposal is free but you lose any liquidation value—only viable for truly worthless inventory.

Transportation Costs

LTL Freight (for pallets):

  • Local: $150-400 per pallet
  • Regional: $300-800 per pallet

Full Truckload (for large volumes):

  • Local: $400-800
  • Regional: $800-1,500

Alternative Storage Setup

One-Time Costs:

  • Security deposit: Often 1 month rent
  • Setup fees: $0-300 depending on provider
  • Insurance setup: $50-200

Ongoing Costs:

  • Monthly storage rent
  • Insurance (if not included)
  • Access fees (some facilities charge per visit)

Labor and Handling

If you’re personally involved:

  • Time to coordinate removal orders
  • Time to receive and organize at new location
  • Opportunity cost of your time

Total Moving Cost Example:

  • 500 units FBA removal: $150
  • LTL freight (3 pallets): $600
  • Storage deposit: $200
  • Your time (10 hours): $300
  • Total: $1,250

Compare this against storage savings to determine break-even timeline.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Mistake 1: Emotional Attachment to Inventory

Error: “I paid $20,000 for this inventory, I can’t sell it for $5,000.”

Reality: The $20,000 is sunk cost. The question is whether paying ongoing storage to potentially recover $8,000 in 12 months makes sense vs. taking $5,000 now.

Solution: Make decisions based on forward-looking economics, not past investment.

Mistake 2: Underestimating Total Storage Costs

Error: Only considering base monthly fees, ignoring surcharges, seasonal increases, and FBA penalties.

Reality: Total storage costs often 2-3x the base rate when all fees are included.

Solution: Calculate fully loaded costs including all surcharges and penalties.

Mistake 3: Overestimating Future Demand

Error: “This inventory will definitely sell next season at full price.”

Reality: Most slow-moving inventory continues to be slow-moving. Seasonal improvement is modest, not transformative.

Solution: Be realistic about future sales potential. Assume 60-70% of current sell-through rate, not 150-200%.

Mistake 4: Ignoring Opportunity Cost

Error: Comparing storage cost savings vs. liquidation recovery without considering what freed capital could earn.

Reality: $10,000 tied up in dead inventory can’t be invested in profitable inventory generating returns.

Solution: Factor opportunity cost into calculations. If your capital normally generates 20-30% annual returns, that’s real cost of keeping it locked in dead stock.

Mistake 5: Relocating Without Clear Plan

Error: Moving inventory to cheaper storage without specific plans for eventual disposition.

Reality: “Temporarily” storing inventory often becomes indefinite storage, continuing to drain resources.

Solution: Relocate only with clear timeline and plan:

  • When will you liquidate?
  • What’s the trigger for liquidation decision?
  • What improvement/refurbishment will occur during storage?

For eCommerce business guidance, resources from the Small Business Administration can help with financial planning.

Action Plan Templates

30-Day Action Plan for FBA Sellers

Week 1: Assessment

  • Run Inventory Age report
  • Identify inventory aged 240+ days (approaching LTSF)
  • Calculate current monthly storage costs
  • Estimate liquidation recovery values

Week 2: Decision

  • Apply liquidate vs. relocate framework
  • Get liquidation quotes from buyers like BulkOverstockBuyers.
  • Research alternative storage options
  • Calculate 6-month and 12-month scenarios

Week 3: Execution

  • Submit liquidation inventory for sale
  • Create FBA removal orders for relocated inventory
  • Arrange alternative storage
  • Coordinate logistics

Week 4: Completion

  • Confirm liquidation payment
  • Receive relocated inventory at new storage
  • Verify FBA inventory removal complete
  • Calculate IPI score impact

Ongoing: Monitor remaining FBA inventory age monthly to prevent future LTSF issues.

60-Day Action Plan for ShipBob/3PL Users

Weeks 1-2: Deep Analysis

  • Get detailed storage cost breakdown from 3PL
  • Calculate cost per SKU
  • Identify highest-cost items
  • Evaluate sales velocity by SKU

Weeks 3-4: Strategic Decisions

  • Separate fast-movers (keep in 3PL) from slow-movers
  • Decide liquidation vs. relocation for each category
  • Source alternative storage options
  • Get liquidation quotes

Weeks 5-6: Execution Planning

  • Coordinate with 3PL for partial removal
  • Arrange transportation
  • Set up alternative storage
  • Submit liquidation inventory

Weeks 7-8: Implementation

  • Execute removal and relocation
  • Complete liquidation transactions
  • Optimize remaining 3PL inventory
  • Establish new storage arrangements

Result: Reduced 3PL costs by 30-60% while maintaining fulfillment for active products.

The Bottom Line

3PL storage fees create unique pressure on eCommerce businesses because they combine premium pricing with inventory that, by definition, isn’t earning its keep. The liquidate vs. relocate decision depends on specific circumstances:

Liquidate When:

  • 6-month storage costs ≥ liquidation recovery value
  • Products are depreciating (tech, fashion, trends)
  • Amazon LTSF thresholds approaching
  • IPI score pressure exists
  • Capital has better uses
  • Inventory is truly dead

Relocate When:

  • Storage savings exceed moving costs over planned hold period
  • Inventory retains value (evergreen, seasonal, quality)
  • Future sales potential exists
  • Refurbishment can improve value
  • Optimal liquidation timing is months away
  • Volume justifies warehouse rates

Use Hybrid Approach:

  • Liquidate bottom 30% (low-value, obsolete)
  • Relocate middle 50% (seasonal, timing-dependent)
  • Keep top 20% in 3PL (fast-movers generating revenue)

Most importantly: Make this decision proactively through regular inventory reviews rather than reactively when costs have already spiraled. ECommerce businesses that implement quarterly storage cost reviews and act decisively on underperforming inventory consistently outperform those that let 3PL fees accumulate while hoping inventory eventually sells.

The goal isn’t perfection—it’s optimizing total financial outcome across all inventory, even if that means accepting liquidation recovery on some products to free resources for growth elsewhere in your business.


3PL storage fees eating your margins? BulkOverstockBuyerspurchases excess inventory across all categories and conditions, providing fast quotes that help you make liquidate-vs-relocate decisions. Submit your inventory for evaluation within 24 hours.