TL;DR
Informed a évolué depuis la rédaction de la plupart des listes d’« alternatives ». La plateforme a changé de nom pour devenir Informed Repricer et est passée à une tarification forfaitaire : 147 $ par mois pour la formule Pro avec un nombre illimité d’annonces, ou 99 $ par mois pour la formule Launch jusqu’à ce que votre chiffre d’affaires mensuel dépasse 5 000 $. Ainsi, l’argument souvent avancé selon lequel Informed augmente ses tarifs à mesure que votre activité se développe ne correspond plus à la réalité de son offre. Si vous envisagez toujours de changer de prestataire, les critères qui comptent en 2026 sont la rapidité, l’assistance à la mise en place et la capacité de l’outil à préserver votre marge nette, plutôt que de se contenter de viser la « Buy Box ». Voici un aperçu objectif du marché.
La plupart des articles consacrés aux alternatives à Informed.co reprennent une critique qui n’est plus d’actualité. Voici en quoi consistait le problème : Informed facturait en fonction de votre chiffre d’affaires mensuel, de sorte qu’un bon mois vous faisait passer dans une formule plus coûteuse et que le développement de votre activité vous coûtait de l’argent.
C’était une critique justifiée à l’époque où cela était vrai. Ce n’est plus le cas aujourd’hui.
Informed propose désormais une tarification forfaitaire avec un nombre illimité d’annonces, et indique clairement sur sa page dédiée aux tarifs qu’il ne facturera jamais en fonction du nombre d’articles que vous proposez ou du chiffre d’affaires que vous réalisez. Si vous avez conservé l’ancien modèle de facturation, ce que vous aviez conservé n’existe plus. Si vous envisagez de changer de plateforme aujourd’hui, il vous faut de meilleures raisons qu’une simple plainte concernant les tarifs datant de 2024. Ce guide vous présente les chiffres actuels, les critères pertinents à prendre en compte et une réponse claire quant à l’utilisation optimale de chaque outil.
Quel sera le coût d’Informed Repricer en 2026 ?
Worth getting the facts straight before comparing anything against them. Checked on Informed’s own pricing page in July 2026:
- Pro: $147/month. Unlimited listings, unlimited users, instant repricing, all features. No feature gates.
- Launch: $99/month. Same access, available while your business is under $5,000 in gross monthly revenue.
- Add-ons: additional stores in the same marketplace $49/month, Amazon Business and Walmart Business strategies $149/month, Priority Support $49/month.
- Coverage: 20-plus international Amazon marketplaces plus Walmart.
- Trial: 14 days, no card required.
Note what that means for a large catalogue. Flat and unlimited is a genuinely strong model if you run tens of thousands of SKUs, because your bill doesn’t move when your catalogue does. We’d rather say that plainly than pretend otherwise.
One thing to know going in: Informed has restructured its plans more than once, and sellers on older legacy tiers have publicly complained about tiers being discontinued with short notice. Whatever you choose, read the plan terms rather than the marketing.
Les critères qui distinguent réellement les outils de réévaluation des prix
Price is the easy thing to compare, which is why most lists stop there. It’s rarely the thing that decides your result. Five criteria do more work.
- Repricing speed. How fast your price moves after a competitor moves theirs. On a listing where the Buy Box rotates every few minutes, a tool on a 15-minute cycle misses most rotations. Ask any vendor for a number, then watch it on a trial rather than taking the figure on faith.
- Net-margin floors. A flat dollar minimum goes stale the moment Amazon changes a fee. A floor built from landed cost plus referral fee plus FBA fee plus returns and ad allocation doesn’t. This is the single biggest difference between a repricer that protects profit and one that just moves numbers, and our net margin calculation guide covers what belongs in it.
- Which direction it prices. Plenty of tools are competent at going down and hopeless at going back up. You want one that raises your price when you hold the Buy Box and demand supports it.
- Rules plus AI, not one or the other. Rules give control on the SKUs that need it. AI handles pattern recognition across the long tail. Our rule-based vs AI breakdown covers where each fits.
- Setup and support. Past a few hundred SKUs, whether someone configures it with you decides how fast you get value. Self-serve is fine at small scale and painful at large.
A sixth, quietly: what happens when a competitor prices below your floor. Good tools let you filter out sellers you shouldn’t be matching. Our price war guide covers the patterns that start spirals.
Les alternatives à connaître en 2026
A note on the numbers below. We’ve published figures only where we could confirm them on the vendor’s own pricing page in July 2026. Where a vendor doesn’t publish figures, we’ve said so rather than guess, because a wrong price helps nobody and repricing vendors change plans often. Check current pricing directly before you commit.
Repricer.com
Ours, so read this section with that in mind. Repricer is Amazon-only by design, built around speed and net-margin logic. It reprices in seconds, which is where it built its name as the fastest Amazon repricer, and its AI Buy Box optimizer targets the box on more than price alone. Minimum price floors work off your net position after fees rather than a flat number, free managed setup means you’re not calibrating alone, and the Buy Box Predictor uses competitor stock, fulfilment method and feedback score to call outcomes before they happen. Coverage runs to roughly 21 Amazon country marketplaces, with a separate layer for Amazon Business tiered pricing.
Pricing: plans scale on SKU count and order volume rather than a flat fee. See plans and pricing for current tiers.
Where it doesn’t fit: if you sell on eBay, Walmart or Shopify and want one dashboard for everything, Repricer is the wrong tool; it does Amazon deliberately. And on a very large catalogue, a flat unlimited-listing plan elsewhere may well cost you less. That’s a real trade-off, not a footnote.
BQool Repricing Central
The budget end of the credible field, and Amazon-only by their own description. Tiers are structured by listing count, which makes the bill predictable if your revenue swings but your catalogue doesn’t. AI and rule-based strategies both available. Coverage spans nine Amazon marketplaces, so check yours is on the list before committing.
Pricing (verified July 2026): from $25/month, tiered by listings. 14-day trial, no card.
Suits: smaller catalogues and cost-sensitive sellers who want real functionality without a three-figure bill.
Seller Snap
Built around game-theory repricing, the idea being that sellers on a shared ASIN do better cooperating than undercutting each other into the floor. Genuinely interesting if price wars are your problem. Covers Amazon and Walmart, with plans structured by seller IDs and SKU count.
Pricing (verified July 2026): their Accelerator program starts from $100/month. Other tiers aren’t published; the pricing page directs you to their sales team for custom billing. 15-day trial.
Suits: established sellers in categories where the race to the bottom is the main threat and who don’t mind a sales conversation to get a number.
La fonctionnalité « Automate Pricing » d’Amazon
Free, inside Seller Central. Basic competition settings, limited rule logic, and a habit of dropping you to your minimum when a competitor moves. That last part is how price wars start.
Pricing: free.
Suits: new sellers under 100 SKUs learning how repricing behaves. Don’t run a serious catalogue on it, but don’t feel you need to spend $150 a month before you understand the basics either.
Également sur le terrain
Aura, Feedvisor and Sellerlogic all compete here and are worth a look depending on your profile. We haven’t published pricing for them because we couldn’t verify current figures from their own pages at the time of writing, and quoting a number we can’t stand behind would defeat the point of this article.
Comparaison des différents acteurs du secteur
|
Criterion |
What to check |
Notes |
|
Speed |
Seconds vs minutes vs 15-minute cycles |
Watch it on a trial, don’t take the number on faith |
|
Margin logic |
Net-margin floor vs flat dollar minimum |
Flat floors go stale at every fee change |
|
Direction |
Does it price up, or only down? |
Pricing up is where margin hides |
|
Coverage |
Which Amazon marketplaces, exactly |
Counts vary widely; check yours specifically |
|
Onboarding |
Managed vs self-serve |
Matters more the bigger your catalogue |
|
Pricing model |
Flat vs per-SKU vs quote-based |
Flat suits big catalogues; per-SKU suits small ones |
A note on this comparison: Repricer.com publishes this article, so treat it as a considered view rather than a neutral lab test. We’ve kept the comparison to things you can check yourself on any vendor’s trial, published figures only where we could verify them, and said plainly where Repricer isn’t the right answer.
Devriez-vous vraiment changer ?
Honest answer: not automatically. If Informed is repricing fast enough for your categories and its flat plan suits your catalogue size, staying put is a perfectly good decision, and nobody selling you software will tell you that.
The cases where switching earns its keep:
- Speed is costing you rotations. If you’re watching the Buy Box flip on hot listings while your tool catches up, that’s the clearest reason to move, and no feature list compensates for it.
- Your floors don’t understand fees. With Amazon seller fees climbing again in 2026, a flat minimum quietly turns busy days into losses. A fee-aware floor doesn’t.
- You want someone to set it up. If configuring rules across thousands of SKUs is the part that never gets done, managed onboarding is worth more than any single feature.
- You’re Amazon-only and want a tool that is too. Focus cuts both ways, but it does mean the roadmap isn’t split across four marketplaces.
If you do move, our migration walkthrough covers the sequence. Export your min and max prices first; that’s your safety net regardless of where you land. New to the mechanics? Start with what repricing is and the repricing basics page.
FAQ
Does Informed still charge based on your revenue? No. That was the old model, and it’s the reason most « Informed alternatives » articles exist. As of July 2026 Informed Repricer charges a flat $147/month on Pro with unlimited listings and unlimited users, or $99/month on Launch while you’re under $5,000 in monthly revenue. Their pricing page states explicitly that they don’t charge based on item count or revenue.
What’s the cheapest credible Informed alternative? BQool starts at $25/month (verified July 2026), tiered by listing count, and covers nine Amazon marketplaces with both AI and rule-based strategies. Amazon’s own Automate Pricing is free but basic enough that it tends to drop you to your minimum when a competitor moves.
Is a faster repricer actually worth paying for? It depends on your categories. On a listing where the Buy Box rotates every few minutes, a tool reacting in seconds captures rotations that a 15-minute cycle never sees, and that difference compounds across a catalogue every hour. On a quiet listing with no real competition, speed buys you very little. Be honest about which describes you.
Why doesn’t this article list ten tools with prices for each? Because we could only verify current pricing for some of them from the vendors’ own pages, and repricing vendors change plans often. A list of confidently stated but stale numbers reads well and helps nobody. Where we couldn’t confirm a figure, we’ve left it out.
Can I keep my min and max prices when I switch? Yes. Export them before you do anything else. Every credible tool supports importing minimum and maximum prices, and having your own export means your floors travel with you no matter how the new tool maps your data. Our FBM repricing strategies guide covers what changes if you’re self-fulfilling.
Par où commencer ?
Don’t switch on a two-year-old complaint. Work out whether speed, margin logic, or setup is your actual problem, then test your shortlist on your own listings for a fortnight and watch Buy Box percentage and profit per unit rather than whether your price moved.
If speed and a fee-aware floor are what you’re missing, see what that looks like on your catalogue.



