The Kafkaesque Nightmare of Amazon’s Red-Text Purgatory
It started the way any standard business morning does. I logged into Amazon Seller Central to check for new orders, expecting the usual operational checklist. Instead, the screen greeted me with a digital heart attack in the form of a glaring banner:
Good morning, this store is currently AT RISK:
⚠️ Investigate account health risk
A critical event has occurred causing your account to be at risk of deactivation
Notice the tone here. This isn’t a polite corporate nudge like, "Hey, we noticed some data fields could use an update." No, it is a literal, existential threat to pull the plug on my business infrastructure.
I clicked the bright yellow warning, the one adorned with a hostile orange triangle exclamation mark, and the system redirected me to an Account Health page slapped with yet another warning:
⚠️ "Your seller-fulfilled offers are at risk of deactivation"
Scrolling down to the "All Issues" dashboard, the damage report showed 46 Listing Policy Violations and 4 Restricted Product Policy Violations. Determined to clear the board, I hit the Edit button on the very first product to fix whatever bureaucratic box the algorithm wanted me to check.
The Hidden-Error Trap
The page loaded, and the interface immediately auto-centered my screen onto a mandatory field in the Offer tab called Import Designation. The field was completely blank, underscored by an angry string of red text:
90220: 'Import Designation' is required but missing.
I clicked the dropdown, selected "Made in the USA," and assumed that was the end of it. I scrolled all the way to the bottom of the page and confidently clicked Save and finish.
The system rejected it instantly with a pop-up error message telling me there was one item requiring my attention and instructing me to click OK to find it. I clicked the button.
The screen jerked away from the Offer tab and pivoted over to the Product Details tab, centering precisely on the Bullet Point text field. Beneath it sat a brand new, terrifying red error message:
99300: Bullet Point contains false/promotional claims or external links. Update content to comply with Product detail page policy before resubmitting.
Here is the genuinely interesting discovery: The 99300 error message does not actually exist on the page until AFTER you clear the Import Designation error.
If you navigate directly to the Product Details page first, the text box looks entirely normal, featuring no red text, no policy warnings, and no alerts. The database forces you to first clear Error 90220 on the Offer tab, try to save the listing, and only then does the automated validator wake up to inform you that you cannot save because of a completely different error that it chose to hide until you jumped through the first hoop.
Error 90220 blocks your progress. You fix it. Error 99300 suddenly appears. It was hidden the entire time, functioning like a structural software bug rather than a seller mistake.
Proving the Impossible Against the Machine
The system flagged three entirely innocent product descriptions as high-level policy violations.
- The first allegedly non-compliant bullet point was: "Single item Halloween costume for that spooky girl"
- A second product read: "Join the club of dragon aficionados and let this t-shirt be your membership badge."
- A third product stated: "Make seagulls envy your beach style with a t-shirt that screams, 'Beach better have my money!'"
After front-line support later suggested the word "Halloween" might be a restricted holiday reference triggering a promotional claim flag, I removed it. Error 99300 remained.
I replaced the entire bullet point. Error 99300 remained.
I replaced it with completely generic product text, entering "Cotton tank top." Error 99300 remained.
At that point, the content itself could no longer be the cause of the rejection. The validation system was hard-locked, rejecting submissions regardless of the text entered.
Enter the Support Human Firewall
Realizing my Seller Central UI was broken, I did what any desperate business owner does: I picked up the phone to call Selling Partner Support.
The phone rep, Niel Mark P., was a masterclass in absurd workarounds. I walked him through the entire technical layout: the missing import designations, the cascading errors, and the fact that the text fields were rejecting 100% compliant descriptions. I explained that the database feed was essentially choking on its own compliance flags and that the Save button literally didn't function regardless of the words entered.
His solution for a clearly broken, glitched web interface? He told me I would need to download a blank product listing template, manually enter all of my product data into the spreadsheet, and upload it via flat file. Because why fix a broken button on a website when you can force the user to rebuild their entire catalog on a spreadsheet from scratch?
Frustrated by the brick wall of phone support, I opened up a live chat case, hoping a paper trail and a different medium would find someone with actual system access.
Enter Milena.
I opened the chat by explaining that I needed someone on their end to look at the products triggering compliance issues and fix them from the backend, because the interface was erroring out on my end and refusing to save edits.
Milena’s first automated script checkpoint: "Can you please provide the affected ASINs?"
So I gave her the data, dropping the block of flagged tank tops into the chat. Seven minutes of absolute radio silence pass. I pinged her to ask what was next.
Milena returned, proud of her data-processing skills: "I was extracting the affected ASIN. Here is the list..." and proceeded to copy-paste the exact 46 strings of text I just handed her right back to me.
When I asked what steps we were taking to solve this, she told me she would review the listings and be back. Another five minutes ticked away while she investigated. When she finally emerged, she read back the current bullet points of the first ASIN verbatim and gave her assessment about the word "Halloween" being a potential promotional claim violation.
I typed back: "OK but let me be clear, I have changed the text and it won't let me save. So we're not looking for 'What violates it now,' we're looking at, 'How do I fix this.'"
Her response? "Can you please share a screenshot of the error that you are getting?"
I pointed out that the screenshot was already attached to the case file, and I copy-pasted the exact text of the 99300 error code directly into the window.
"I checked the previous screenshot," she typed back without skipping a beat, "however I need a screenshot of the current issue that is reflecting now."
I took another screenshot of the exact same error code, uploaded it again, and stated the blatant reality that no phrase worked. Her defense was that this was a required part of her troubleshooting steps, followed by the ultimate punchline: "Can you try to add a different word instead of costume, just to confirm if it displays the same erorr>"
To be fair, by the end of the conversation I no longer believed Milena was the problem. She appeared to be trapped inside a support workflow that required her to document specific troubleshooting steps and collect rigid evidence before she was allowed to escalate the issue. The frustrating part wasn't the person. It was the broken system she was operating inside.
The End Result
After nearly an hour of screenshots, error codes, test submissions, and repeated explanations that the problem persisted regardless of the text entered, the issue was finally escalated to Amazon leadership under Case ID 20811746941.
Which raises an obvious question: If the solution was always escalation, why did it require an hour of proving that "Cotton tank top" is not a promotional claim?
The real story isn't that Amazon made a mistake. The real story is that Amazon designed a process where sellers must first prove the impossible before anyone is allowed to acknowledge the possibility that the software itself might be wrong.
Amazon Error Codes & Searchable Terms Encountered
For other online sellers caught in this exact troubleshooting maze, here are the searchable error terms, system flags, and codes associated with this validation glitch:
- Error 99300: Bullet Point contains false/promotional claims or external links. Update content to comply with Product detail page policy before resubmitting.
- Error 90220: 'Import Designation' is required but missing.
- Policy Type: Product Attribute Misuse / Listing Policy Violations.
- Account Health Warnings: Your seller-fulfilled offers are at risk of deactivation / A critical event has occurred causing your account to be at risk of deactivation.
- System Behavior: Amazon Seller Central won't save listing after clearing the Import Designation missing attribute, causing a stale compliance flag to hard-lock the product details tab.