Is Amazon Limiting Shared Prime Free Shipping Perk To One Household?


In September 2025, reports began spreading online that from Oct. 1, 2025, online retailer Amazon would no longer allow members of its Prime subscription service to share free shipping with someone else unless they lived at the same address.

For example, CNET, a publication covering consumer technology, produced a post on Facebook stating that Amazon’s Prime Invitee Program was changing to “Amazon Family.”

The caption read, in part:

Starting October 1st, Amazon is replacing its free shipping perk, more specifically the “Prime Invitee Program” with Amazon Family which won’t allow free shipping to addresses outside of your home address.

According to an update on Amazon’s website, “If you’re a Prime Invitee: You can either ask the Prime member in your household to add you to their Amazon Family, or sign up for your own Prime Membership.”

However, to share Prime benefits, “you and your invitee must live together at the same primary residential address.”


(Facebook page CNET)

The post had amassed more than 20,000 reactions and 19,500 comments as of this writing. Besides, the claim also appeared elsewhere on Facebook and on Reddit.

In short, the claim was true. Amazon announced the change on its website, though when the announcement went live was unclear, saying that: “Amazon Family is replacing the Prime Invitee Program”:

To share benefits, you and your invitee must live together at the same primary residential address. This is the address you consider to be your home and where you spend the majority of your time.

The benefit would cover two adults, up to four teens who were added before April 7, 2025, and up to four children.

Amazon added that the Prime Invitee Program would end on Oct. 1, 2025. “Prime invitees will lose access to the shared Prime delivery benefit, but can use Amazon Family instead,” the page read. Those in the program could manage their family members on the Amazon Family page, which would be accessible once a member logged in.

The Verge, another website covering consumer tech news, reported that Amazon’s decision to switch to this system was an effort to attract more subscribers for the perks. According to a Sept. 2, 2025, article by Reuters news agency, Amazon failed to hit its subscription goal in the run-up to Prime Day, an annual event during which the company runs steep discounts on a range of its products across four days.

The benefits will cost former Prime invitees $14.99 for the first year and then $14.99 a month, The Verge’s report added.

 

 

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