Amazon Bazaar

Amazon Rolls Out Bazaar, Its Low-Cost Shopping App, Across More Than a Dozen Markets

Amazon is launching Amazon Bazaar, a standalone budget shopping app designed for price-savvy shoppers across Asia, Africa, and Latin America. Built to sit apart from the main Amazon app, Bazaar focuses on ultra-affordable finds, with most items under $10 and some priced as low as $2.

The app is available on Android and iOS in Hong Kong, the Philippines, Taiwan, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, Oman, Peru, Ecuador, Argentina, Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, Jamaica, and Nigeria. More markets are slated to join soon.

Bazaar expands Amazon’s push into low-cost shopping and steps up competition with value-focused platforms like Shein, Temu, and TikTok Shop. The experience centers on everyday essentials and impulse buys, spanning fashion, home goods, and lifestyle products, all backed by familiar Amazon touches such as customer reviews and star ratings.

Shoppers can sign in using their existing Amazon credentials and pay with Visa, Mastercard, or American Express. Free shipping is available when orders meet the local minimum purchase amount, which varies by market; smaller orders incur a standard delivery fee. Most deliveries arrive in about two weeks or less. Returns are free within 15 days of receipt, and customer support is available in multiple languages. The app currently supports English, Spanish, French, Portuguese, German, and Traditional Chinese.

To keep the experience lively, Bazaar weaves in engagement features like social lucky draws and periodic promotions. New customers also get 50% off their first delivery as a welcome incentive.

Amazon Bazaar sits alongside Amazon Haul, the company’s other budget-focused offering. Haul continues to operate within the main Amazon app and website in markets such as the U.S., U.K., Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Japan, and Australia. In some countries, Amazon has already used the Bazaar name inside the main Amazon app for the same low-cost selection; that approach remains in Mexico, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and India. The dual branding is meant to better fit local language preferences and cultural expectations.

With an emphasis on low prices, broad selection, and familiar Amazon conveniences, Bazaar aims to make bargain hunting easier for millions of shoppers—and its footprint is set to grow as more regions come online.