Amazon has introduced Amazon Bazaar as a standalone mobile app in 14 new markets, expanding access to its ultra low-cost retail offering. 

The app is accessible to customers in Argentina, Bahrain, Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Hong Kong, Jamaica, Kuwait, Nigeria, Oman, Peru, the Philippines, Qatar and Taiwan, and a broader roll-out is planned.

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The Amazon Bazaar platform features goods across fashion, home and lifestyle categories.  

Most items are priced below $10, with some as little as $2. 

Amazon’s low-cost proposition has been already available under the name Haul. 

The digital storefront, integrated into the Amazon app, was launched in November 2024 in beta to take on fast-fashion retailers such as Shein and Temu. 

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The company also launched Amazon Bazaar late in the same year. 

Amazon Bazaar and Amazon Haul share the same low-cost retail framework but operate under different names to align with regional preferences and cultural contexts.  

In a statement, the e-commerce giant said: “Based on the positive response we’ve seen from customers shopping Amazon Haul in the US, UK, Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Japan and Australia, and Amazon Bazaar in Mexico, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, we are excited to be introducing this popular shopping experience to even more customers worldwide.” 

Orders that meet the local minimum purchase threshold qualify for free delivery, while standard charges apply to smaller transactions.  

Deliveries generally arrive in two weeks or under, and customers can return products free of charge within 15 days of receipt. 

The application supports six languages: traditional Chinese, English, French, German Portuguese and Spanish, It also enables payments in local currencies. 

In early November 2025, the e-commerce company was in the news for suing Perplexity AI over covert access to Amazon customer accounts through its agentic shopping solution. 

According to Amazon, the technology created potential risks to customer information and continued operating despite repeated warnings to stop.