hollydolly
SF VIP
- Location
- London England
this is what Chatgpt saysWonder what the difference is that some don’t pay any extra to avoid ads.
Amazon doesn’t really have a simple “pay to remove ads everywhere” model, so the difference you’re noticing usually comes down to how ads are targeted and where you’re seeing them.
Here are the main reasons some people see fewer (or no) ads:
1. Personalisation and tracking settings
On Amazon, ads are heavily personalised. If someone has:
- turned off ad personalisation
- limited tracking (via browser settings, VPNs, or device privacy controls)
they may still get ads, but they’ll be much less noticeable or relevant—sometimes looking like normal listings rather than “ads.”
2. Account activity (or lack of it)
Amazon’s ad system relies on browsing and purchase history. If someone:
- rarely uses Amazon
- clears cookies often
- uses private browsing
there’s less data to target them, so fewer ads get shown.
3. Ad blockers or browser setups
Some people use:
- browser extensions (like uBlock Origin)
- privacy-focused browsers
These can hide sponsored placements on Amazon pages, especially on desktop.
4. Placement differences (what you’re calling “ads”)
Amazon ads are often just:
- “Sponsored” product listings in search results
- promoted items on product pages
Some users don’t recognise these as ads, or their layout differs slightly by device/app, making them less obvious.
5. Region and experiments
Amazon constantly runs A/B tests. Depending on:
- country
- device (app vs desktop)
- account group
some users simply get fewer ad slots.
6. Prime doesn’t remove shopping ads
Amazon Prime doesn’t remove ads from shopping results. It only affects things like shipping, video, etc. (and even Prime Video now has ads unless you pay extra in some regions).
If you’re seeing way more ads than others, it’s usually a mix of:
- highly active browsing history
- ad personalisation being fully enabled
- no ad blocker in use
If you want, tell me what device/app you’re using (phone app, desktop browser, etc.), and I can explain exactly where those ads are coming from and how to reduce them.