Amazon wants you to believe Prime Day is when the savings get serious. Sometimes that’s true. And sometimes that giant “50% off” badge is a magic trick — and the thing disappearing is your money.
Prime Day 2026 runs June 23 through 26, kicking off just after midnight Pacific on Tuesday. Four days. Thousands of deals. A ticking clock on every single one.
Here’s the catch. A “discount” is only real if the original price was real. And lately, Amazon’s original prices have landed the company in court.
I’ve been writing about money for more than 35 years, and I’ve watched retailers turn the fake sale into an art form. So before you tap “Buy Now” this week, here are seven ways to tell whether a deal is the real thing — or just theater.
1. Check the price history first
This is the single most powerful move you can make, and it takes about 10 seconds. Free tools like CamelCamelCamel and Keepa — two of the best browser extensions for tracking online prices — show you what an Amazon item has actually cost over months or even years.
Paste in the product link and look at the graph. You’ll know instantly whether today’s “deal” is a true low, or just Tuesday’s regular price wearing a costume.
2. Treat the strike-through ‘list price’ as marketing
You know that higher number with a line through it, sitting right next to the sale price? Don’t trust it on faith. That’s the exact figure now under legal fire.
In September 2025, two shoppers sued Amazon in federal court, alleging Prime Day discounts were built on fictional list prices. The complaint calls the event “rife with fake sales.” Amazon hasn’t commented publicly.
One example from the suit: headphones promoted as 44% off a $179.95 “list price” that, the plaintiffs say, had never actually sold above roughly $160. The discount only impresses you if the starting number is honest.
3. Ignore the countdown clock
“Only 2 left!” “Deal ends in 4 minutes!” That urgency is engineered. The lawsuit argues Amazon leans on the brief Prime Day window’s intense time pressure to nudge you into buying before you think to compare.
Here’s my rule: any deal that needs you to panic isn’t a deal. A real bargain survives a five-minute pause. If the timer just resets the moment it expires, you’ve got your answer.
4. If it’s always on sale, that’s just the price
Watch an item for a while and the trick reveals itself. If something’s been “30% off” for three straight months, then 30% off is the actual price — not a discount you’re lucky to catch.
The FTC has rules on exactly this. Under its Guides Against Deceptive Pricing, a former price is only legitimate if the item was genuinely offered at that price, on a regular basis, for a meaningful stretch of time. A made-up “before” price is deceptive, period.
And Amazon’s hardly alone here. Plenty of big-name retailers run sale prices that mislead shoppers more weeks than not.
Quick aside — most internet financial advice comes from people who weren’t alive during the last recession. I’ve been writing about money for more than 35 years. Want rock-solid advice? Sign up for the free Money Talks Newsletter. Takes 10 seconds. No fluff. No spam.
5. Open a second tab and comparison-shop
Prime Day doesn’t happen in a vacuum. Walmart, Target, Best Buy and the brand’s own website often run competing sales the same week — sometimes cheaper, and with no membership required.
Not a Prime member and don’t want to pay? There are ways to get Amazon Prime for free or cheap. But you don’t even need it to pull up a competitor’s price and check.
Thirty seconds of comparison either saves you real money or confirms you’ve already found the lowest price. Both are wins.
6. Check who’s actually selling it
Not every “Amazon” listing is sold by Amazon. Third-party sellers set their own prices, and some bump them up during big events, betting you’re in a hurry and won’t comparison-shop.
Check the “ships from” and “sold by” details before you commit. And keep in mind there are things you’re better off never buying on Amazon in the first place.
Stay sharp for fake Prime Day emails and phishing links this week, too — scammers love the event as much as bargain hunters do.
7. Build your list before Prime Day, not during it
The purchases that wreck your budget are the ones you never planned to make. That “percent off” badge is engineered to make you want things you didn’t want 10 minutes ago.
So flip it around. Write down what you actually need now, and track those specific prices going in. Then Prime Day becomes a tool you use — instead of a trap that uses you.
None of this means Prime Day is a con. Real bargains are in there, and if you’ve got your eye on something specific, you might save nicely.
But Amazon is a trillion-dollar company with very smart people paid to separate you from your money. So treat every “deal” as a claim to verify, not a gift to grab. Check the history, ignore the clock, and trust the math — not the badge.
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