• Chat GPT Checkout 4%

    By ZonSupport | Posted on January 27, 2026| Blog

    If you sell online, you’ve probably felt this frustration already: every new sales channel sounds exciting… until the fees, ads, and pay-to-play rules show up.

    Is there actually a new marketplace that doesn’t crush margins from day one?

    Let’s explore what’s quietly changing.

    Starting January 26, Shopify sellers who use ChatGPT’s built-in checkout will pay OpenAI a 4% fee on completed sales.

    A Shopify spokesperson confirmed this to The Information. That number matters.

    It’s far lower than Amazon’s standard 15% referral fee, and there’s no requirement to spend money on ads just to be seen.

    The volume today is smaller than major marketplaces, but the structure is very different.

    Early data shows this isn’t just hype. Northbeam, an ecommerce analytics platform, found that traffic from AI search tools grew from 0.01% to 0.15% of total site visits by the end of 2025.

    That’s still tiny, but it’s a 15x increase in a short period. Adoption is clearly accelerating. With more than one million Shopify merchants now accessible through ChatGPT checkout and roughly 3.9 billion product-related queries happening each year, this is no longer theoretical. It’s an actual marketplace with real economics.

    Now let’s talk about margins, because that’s where things get interesting.

    On Amazon, a seller doing $1 million a year typically hands over about $150,000 in referral fees. Add another $100,000 to $150,000 in ads just to stay visible, and you’re looking at a 25–30% cut before fulfillment even enters the picture.

    By contrast, that same $1 million in sales through ChatGPT checkout would incur a 4% OpenAI fee plus Shopify’s usual 2.9% payment processing.

    All in, that’s roughly $69,000, or about 7% total. That gap is massive.

    Even when you compare ChatGPT to other platforms, it holds up well. Walmart charges between 6% and 15%, TikTok Shop takes around 8%, and Etsy sits at roughly 6.5%. But here’s the key difference: none of those platforms offer visibility without ongoing effort or spend.

    Walmart and Amazon both prioritize paid placements. TikTok Shop demands nonstop content creation to stay relevant. Etsy remains focused on handmade goods and has seen slowing growth. ChatGPT, at least for now, allows broader product categories without forcing sellers into ads or content churn.

    Of course, discovery doesn’t magically disappear as a challenge. With over a million merchants in the mix, being selected by OpenAI’s recommendation system becomes the new bottleneck. That competition will only increase as more sellers opt in.

    There’s also a structural shift worth paying attention to.

    OpenAI has said it’s testing ads, but it’s been clear that ads won’t affect ChatGPT’s answers and will always be clearly labeled. That’s a sharp contrast to Amazon, where sponsored listings dominate search results and blend into organic placements.

    In 2024 alone, Amazon sellers spent $56.2 billion on ads because unpaid visibility kept shrinking. If OpenAI sticks to its stated approach, sellers may finally have a system where organic discovery exists alongside ads instead of being buried by them.

    So how big could this actually get?

    Even conservative assumptions paint a meaningful picture. If just 2% of ChatGPT’s estimated 3.9 billion annual product queries convert, with an average order value of $70, that’s around $5.5 billion in gross merchandise volume.

    That’s roughly half the size of Etsy’s global marketplace and still less than 1% of Amazon’s third-party GMV. Small in comparison, yes—but far from insignificant.

    The real appeal right now is speed and leverage.

    Traffic is growing quickly, fees are low, and the checkout option is opt-in. Sellers can test the channel without moving inventory or rebuilding their operations.

    Google and Microsoft currently don’t charge extra fees for chatbot checkout beyond Shopify’s standard processing. Still, it’s likely those zero-fee models are temporary land grabs rather than long-term strategies.

    The big question is whether conversational shopping becomes a habit. If it does, the confirmed 4% fee makes the opportunity very real.

    For the first time in years, sellers have access to an organic discovery channel at scale, something Amazon’s ad-heavy ecosystem largely erased.

    OpenAI has already said ads are coming, so monetization is inevitable.

    What remains to be seen is whether this stays a fundamentally different model… or slowly turns into the same scarcity-driven system sellers are trying to escape.

    Either way, this is a channel worth watching closely, and for many, worth testing early.

    Our summary is based on a recent Marketplace Pulse article. Check them out if you don’t already subscribe.

    As always, ask us anything. If we don’t know the answer, we’ll know someone who does!

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