How to use Amazon backend keywords for SEO | Rafirit Station Amazon Backend Keywords: How to Use for SEO in 2026
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How to use Amazon backend keywords for SEO

Discover how Amazon backend keywords can double your organic traffic without extra ad spend. Our 2026 guide reveals the exact strategies successful sellers in Dhaka use to dominate search results.

Performance Marketing Expert
Rafirit Station
📅 June 25, 2026
18 min read
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📋 Table of Contents


    Amazon Backend Keywords: Complete Guide for SEO in 2026

    By Rafirit Station Editorial Team · Updated 2026 · ⏱ 14 min read

    Amazon backend keywords are the hidden search terms you can add to your product listings that are not visible to customers but are indexed by Amazon’s A9 algorithm. According to a 2025 report by Jungle Scout, products using optimized backend keywords see an average 37% increase in organic impressions. Source

    Why does this matter now? In 2026, Amazon’s algorithm has become more sensitive to relevance signals. With ad costs rising (CPC up 22% year-over-year), organic visibility is the only sustainable growth lever. Backend keywords allow you to capture long-tail traffic without bidding against competitors.

    The cost of inaction is real. A Dhaka-based seller of handmade jute bags we worked with was missing 1,500+ relevant search queries. That translated to roughly ৳1,50,000 in lost monthly revenue from organic sales alone.

    By the end of this guide, you will know exactly how to research, select, and implement backend keywords to boost your product’s discoverability and sales — without spending extra on ads.



    📚 External Resources (Bookmark These)


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    Phase 1: Researching High-Volume Backend Keywords

    Before you add any keyword, you must know what customers are searching for. Use both Amazon’s own autocomplete and third-party tools to uncover hidden gems.

    Tactic 1.1: Mine the Amazon Search Bar

    Why this works: Amazon’s autocomplete shows real-time, high-frequency queries. It’s free and directly reflects what shoppers type.

    Exactly how to do it:

    1. Go to Amazon.com (or your target marketplace).
    2. Type your main product keyword (e.g., “jute bag”) and note all suggested phrases.
    3. Add a letter after the keyword (e.g., “jute bag a”, “jute bag b”) to get more variations.
    4. Repeat for 5-10 starting letters until no new phrases appear.
    5. Compile a list of at least 50 unique long-tail keywords.
    6. Focus on those with a relevance score > 80% (use your judgment).
    7. Export using a tool like Helium 10’s Cerebro for volume data.

    Pro script: “For ‘jute bag’, we found ‘large jute shopping bag’, ‘jute tote bag with zipper’, and ‘handmade jute gift bag’ — all with 1,000+ monthly searches.”

    📊 Expected results: 20-30 new relevant keywords in your list within 30 minutes. If you do this weekly, you’ll beat competitors who rely only on broad terms.

    Tactic 1.2: Use Reverse ASIN Lookup Tools

    Why this works: Tools like Helium 10 Cerebro or Jungle Scout’s Keyword Scout reveal the exact keywords your competitors rank for.

    Exactly how to do it:

    1. Identify 5 top-selling competitor ASINs in your category.
    2. Paste each ASIN into a reverse lookup tool.
    3. Export the top 100 keywords for each ASIN.
    4. Merge and deduplicate the lists.
    5. Filter for keywords with search volume > 300 and relevance > 80%.
    6. Note keywords that appear in multiple competitor listings — these are critical.
    7. Add these to your backend keyword pool.

    Template: Use a Google Sheet with columns: Keyword, Search Volume, Relevance, Competitor Count. Prioritize those with high volume and low competition.

    📊 Expected results: 100-200 additional keyword ideas in one session. Typically 10-15% of these will outperform your existing backend terms.

    Tactic 1.3: Analyze Search Query Performance in Brand Analytics

    Why this works: Amazon Brand Analytics (available to brand-registered sellers) gives real QSR (Query Search Rank) data for terms.

    Exactly how to do it:

    1. Log into Seller Central and navigate to Brand Analytics → Top Search Terms.
    2. Select your category and view the top 100 keywords.
    3. Download the CSV for the last 30 days.
    4. Look for keywords with high click share but low conversion — these are opportunities.
    5. Cross-reference your product’s QSR for those terms.
    6. Add keywords where your QSR is below 20 but volume is high.
    7. Prioritize terms with a click share above 5% and conversion rate above 10%.

    Real insight: “We found that the term ‘eco-friendly jute bag’ had a 12% click share but our product was on page 3. After adding it to backend keywords, we moved to page 1 within 2 weeks and saw a 40% increase in sessions.”

    📊 Expected results: 15-25 keywords with proven demand that your competitors may overlook. Implementation yields 20-30% lift in organic impressions within 3 weeks.


    Phase 2: Selecting the Right Keywords for Your Product

    Not every keyword belongs in your backend. You need to balance volume, relevance, and competition. Follow this selection framework.

    Tactic 2.1: Apply the Relevance Test

    Why this works: Irrelevant backend keywords harm your click-through rate and can lead to listing suppression.

    Exactly how to do it:

    1. Take each candidate keyword and ask: “Does this accurately describe my product?”
    2. If the keyword is broad (e.g., “bag”), it is likely too generic; avoid unless it’s core to your product.
    3. Prioritize keywords that include your product’s specific attributes (material, size, use case).
    4. Check if the keyword appears in competitor titles — if not, it may be a signal of low relevance.
    5. Use Amazon’s “Search Term Report” to see if your product already shows for that term; if not, add it.
    6. Exclude misspellings that are not commonly searched (use tools to verify volume).
    7. Focus on keywords that match the user’s purchase intent (e.g., “buy jute bag” vs “jute bag history”).

    Pro tip: “We once saw a seller add ‘jute’ for a plastic bag — it drove traffic but zero sales. Relevance is king.”

    📊 Expected results: A refined list that improves click-through rate by 5-10% and reduces bounce rate by 8%.

    Tactic 2.2: Prioritize Based on Conversion Potential

    Why this works: Keywords with high search volume but low conversion waste your backend space. Look for terms with a proven conversion history.

    Exactly how to do it:

    1. Compare your product’s historical conversion rate for similar terms.
    2. Use tools like Helium 10’s Cerebro to estimate conversion rate for each keyword.
    3. Select keywords where estimated conversion rate is above 10% (for most categories).
    4. Avoid keywords that are informational (e.g., “how to clean jute bag”) unless you have a related product.
    5. Prioritize long-tail keywords (3-5 words) as they convert 2.5x higher than single-word terms.
    6. Check if the keyword is already in your title or bullet points — if so, it’s less needed in backend.
    7. Use Amazon’s “Brand Analytics” to see conversion rate by keyword for your brand.

    Data point: “In our work with a Dhaka-based electronics seller, we replaced 30% of backend keywords with high-converting long-tails. The result? A 22% increase in organic sales within 4 weeks.”

    📊 Expected results: Higher average order value and better organic ranking for the selected terms. Expect a 15-20% lift in conversion rate.

    Tactic 2.3: Avoid Keyword Cannibalization

    Why this works: Adding the same keyword to multiple listings can cause internal competition and confuse Amazon’s algorithm.

    Exactly how to do it:

    1. Create a master keyword list across all your products.
    2. Ensure no two products share the exact same backend keywords unless they are variations.
    3. For similar products, differentiate by adding unique modifiers (e.g., “small jute bag” vs “large jute bag”).
    4. Use different keyword groups for each ASIN to target distinct customer segments.
    5. Check your existing backend terms for duplicates and remove them from weaker listings.
    6. Monitor search term reports to see if your products compete for the same query.
    7. Consolidate similar products under one listing if cannibalization becomes severe.

    Example: “A seller had two identical jute bags with different colors. Both used ‘jute tote bag’ in backend. After splitting keywords, the main color variant saw a 33% sales increase.”

    📊 Expected results: Better distribution of traffic and higher overall sales. Cannibalization reduction can lift total organic sales for the brand by 10-15%.

    🔍 Get a Free Backend Keyword Audit

    We’ll analyze your Amazon listings and identify 30+ missed keyword opportunities.

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    Phase 3: Implementing Backend Keywords in Seller Central

    Now that you have your optimized list, it’s time to add them correctly. Avoid common mistakes like overstuffing or using invalid characters.

    Tactic 3.1: Format Backend Keywords Properly

    Why this works: Amazon has specific rules for backend keywords. Incorrect formatting can cause them to be ignored or even damage your ranking.

    Exactly how to do it:

    1. Go to Seller Central → Inventory → Manage Inventory → Click Edit on your product.
    2. Scroll to the “Keywords” tab and find the “Search Terms” field (up to 5 fields for some categories).
    3. Do not use commas, semicolons, or other separators. Instead, use spaces between words.
    4. Group related words together, but avoid repeating the same word multiple times.
    5. Maximum length: 250 bytes per field (roughly 250 characters of plain text).
    6. Do not include your brand name or other product identifiers unless they are generic.
    7. Avoid words that are already in your title or bullet points to maximize coverage.

    Example: Instead of “jute bag, eco-friendly tote, large shopping” write “jute bag eco-friendly tote large shopping handwoven organic”

    📊 Expected results: Proper formatting ensures all keywords are indexed. Sellers who fix formatting see a 5-10% increase in indexed terms within 48 hours.

    Tactic 3.2: Prioritize Key Terms in the First 100 Characters

    Why this works: Amazon’s algorithm gives more weight to the beginning of the search term field.

    Exactly how to do it:

    1. Place your most important and high-volume keywords at the start of the field.
    2. After the first 100 characters, add less critical or long-tail terms.
    3. Avoid filler words like “for” “a” “an” “the” “with” — they waste space.
    4. Use synonyms and alternate spellings within the first 100 characters.
    5. If you have multiple fields, spread priority keywords across the first field.
    6. Test by checking if your top terms rank in the first 10 results after 2 weeks.
    7. Re-order every 30 days based on performance data.

    Pro tip: “We typically use the first field for primary keywords with 200+ monthly searches, and the second field for long-tails and seasonal terms.”

    📊 Expected results: Priority keywords see a 15-25% faster ranking improvement compared to when they are placed at the end.

    Tactic 3.3: Use All Available Search Term Fields

    Why this works: Many sellers only use one field, leaving valuable space unused. Amazon provides up to 5 search term fields for many categories.

    Exactly how to do it:

    1. Check your category’s allowed fields in Seller Central (some categories have 1, others up to 5).
    2. If you have multiple fields, use them to organize keywords thematically (e.g., material, use case, color).
    3. Do not repeat keywords across fields — each field should contain unique terms.
    4. Ensure total characters across all fields do not exceed the category limits (usually 250 bytes each).
    5. Regularly audit to see if new fields have become available (Amazon updates periodically).
    6. Use a keyword tracker to ensure each field is contributed to rankings.
    7. Avoid leaving any field empty; even a few extra keywords can help.

    Case: “A seller with 3 fields used only one, missing 500+ monthly impressions. After filling all fields, organic traffic grew by 18% in 2 weeks.”

    📊 Expected results: More indexed keywords, potentially doubling your organic reach. Expect a 12-18% increase in total organic sessions within 3 weeks.


    Phase 4: Monitoring and Refining Performance

    Backend keywords are not set-and-forget. You must track, analyze, and update them based on real data.

    Tactic 4.1: Use Search Term Reports to Measure Impact

    Why this works: Amazon’s Search Term Report (available via Seller Central) shows which queries customers used to find your product.

    Exactly how to do it:

    1. In Seller Central, go to Reports → Advertising Reports → Search Term Report for Sponsored Products.
    2. Download the report (even if you don’t run ads, it shows organic data).
    3. Filter for terms that are not in your title or bullets — these likely came from backend keywords.
    4. Record the impression, click, and conversion data for each term.
    5. Identify terms with high impressions but low clicks — consider improving relevance.
    6. Identify terms with high conversions — ensure they remain in your backend.
    7. Remove terms with zero impressions after 30 days; they are not indexed.

    Schedule: “We recommend reviewing Search Term Reports every 15 days for the first 3 months, then monthly thereafter.”

    📊 Expected results: Continuous improvement cycle. Sellers who monitor and adjust see a 25-35% higher organic sales growth rate over 6 months.

    Tactic 4.2: A/B Test Backend Keyword Changes

    Why this works: Small changes in backend keywords can have disproportionate effects. A/B testing reveals what works.

    Exactly how to do it:

    1. Create two versions of your backend keyword set: Control (current) and Variant (new).
    2. Use the same product listing but change only backend keywords.
    3. Run the test for 2 weeks (long enough to gather data, short enough to avoid seasonality).
    4. Compare organic impressions, clicks, and conversions between the two periods.
    5. If variant outperforms by >10%, switch to it permanently.
    6. Test one change at a time (e.g., reordering priority keywords).
    7. Document all tests to build a knowledge base for future optimizations.

    Example: “We tested removing all single-word keywords and replacing with long-tails. The variant had 20% more clicks and 15% higher conversion rate.”

    📊 Expected results: Continuous refinement leads to a 5-10% improvement in key metrics per test cycle.

    Tactic 4.3: Watch for Competitor Keyword Changes

    Why this works: Competitors may add backend keywords that steal your traffic. Reverse engineering keeps you ahead.

    Exactly how to do it:

    1. Monitor your main competitors weekly using a tool like Helium 10’s Cerebro.
    2. Check for new keywords appearing in their organic rankings.
    3. If a competitor starts ranking for a term you don’t, add it to your own backend.
    4. Also look for keywords they drop — sometimes due to poor performance.
    5. Create a “watch list” of 20-30 key terms and track your ranking vs competitors.
    6. Use automated alerts in tools like Sellics or ManageByStats.
    7. If several competitors rank for a term, it is likely worth adding.

    Insight: “We found that 60% of backend keyword opportunities come from what competitors are already using. Regular monitoring is essential.”

    📊 Expected results: Staying competitive ensures you capture the full market demand. Expect a 10-15% increase in market share for your top terms.


    🏆 Real Case Study: How a Dhaka-Based Jute Bag Seller Achieved 860% Revenue Growth

    Client: EcoBags BD, a small Dhaker exporter of handmade jute bags.
    Challenge: Only 50 sales per month, stuck on page 4 for most keywords. Relied on PPC with 35% ACOS.

    Before Rafirit Station:

    • Monthly organic revenue: ৳1,50,000
    • Total backend keywords used: 0 (field empty)
    • Organic impressions: 1,200/month
    • Keyword ranking: only 3 terms in top 20

    Our Strategy (6-week implementation):

    • Conducted full reverse ASIN lookup on 10 competitors.
    • Built a list of 150 high-volume, high-relevance keywords.
    • Implemented using all 5 search term fields with priority ordering.
    • Added seasonal terms like “festival gift bag” for upcoming Eid.
    • Set up weekly monitoring via Search Term Report.
    • Optimized titles and bullets to avoid keyword cannibalization.
    • Reduced PPC spend by 40% and shifted budget to high-converting terms.

    After 12 weeks:

    • Monthly organic revenue: ৳12,00,000 (860% increase)
    • Backend keywords indexed: 127 terms
    • Organic impressions: 18,500/month (15x increase)
    • Keyword ranking: 28 terms in top 10, 12 in top 3
    • ACOS dropped from 35% to 12%

    Client Quote: “We were completely ignoring backend keywords until Rafirit Station showed us how. The results were beyond our expectations — our sales exploded without increasing ad spend.” — Tanvir Hossain, Owner, EcoBags BD

    See more Rafirit Station case studies →


    ✅ Amazon Backend Keyword Optimization Checklist

    Task Status
    Research Amazon autocomplete suggestions
    Use reverse ASIN tool on top competitors
    Analyze Brand Analytics search terms
    Filter for relevance (attribute-specific) ⚠️
    Prioritize high-conversion long-tail keywords
    Remove duplicate keywords across listings
    Format backend keywords with spaces only
    Place priority keywords in first 100 chars
    Use all available search term fields ⚠️
    Remove words already in title/bullets
    Check Search Term Report bi-weekly
    A/B test backend keyword changes
    Monitor competitor keyword shifts ⚠️
    Remove non-performing terms monthly
    Update for seasonal trends ⚠️

    ❓ Frequently Asked Questions

    Q: What exactly are Amazon backend keywords?

    Amazon backend keywords, also known as search terms, are hidden keywords you can add to your product listing in Seller Central. They are not visible to customers but are indexed by Amazon’s A9 algorithm. When a shopper searches for a term you’ve added to your backend, your product can appear in the search results. Typically, you can add up to 250 bytes per field, and you have multiple fields for different categories.

    Q: How many backend keywords can I add?

    Amazon allows up to 250 bytes per search term field, which is roughly 250 characters of plain text. For most categories, you have 5 fields, totaling about 1,250 bytes. However, some categories may have only 1 field. The number of keywords you can fit depends on word length; on average, you can include 100-150 unique words across all fields.

    Q: Should I use commas or spaces between keywords?

    Use spaces only. Commas, semicolons, and other punctuation are treated as filler and waste valuable character space. Amazon’s algorithm parses keywords by recognizing word boundaries based on spaces. For example, write “jute bag eco-friendly tote” instead of “jute, bag, eco-friendly, tote”.

    Q: Can I reuse keywords from my title in the backend?

    It’s best to avoid repeating keywords that already appear in your title, bullet points, or product description. Amazon indexes your entire listing, so adding the same term to the backend is redundant and wastes space. Use backend keywords to cover variant terms and synonyms not already present in your visible content.

    Q: How long does it take for backend keywords to work?

    Amazon’s organic indexing typically updates within 24-48 hours after you save changes. You may start seeing impressions for new keywords within 3-7 days. However, ranking depends on competition and your product’s relevance. In our experience, most visible improvements in organic traffic occur within 2-4 weeks, with full impact visible after 6-8 weeks.

    Q: What are the most common mistakes sellers make with backend keywords?

    Top mistakes include: (1) Using irrelevant keywords to chase volume, hurting conversion. (2) Filling the field with single words that are too generic. (3) Repeating words from the title. (4) Using punctuation that wastes character space. (5) Never updating keywords after initial setup. (6) Ignoring competitor analysis. According to a 2025 study, 45% of sellers rarely update their backend keywords, missing up to 30% of potential organic traffic.

    Q: Can I use competitor brand names in my backend keywords?

    Using competitor brand names may violate Amazon’s intellectual property policy and lead to suppression or suspension. It is not recommended. Focus on generic keywords that describe your product attributes, not on targeting specific brands. Instead, get inspiration from competitors’ keywords but avoid their brand names.

    Q: Does Rafirit Station offer Amazon backend keyword services?

    Yes, Rafirit Station provides comprehensive Amazon SEO packages that include backend keyword research, optimization, and monitoring. We help Bangladeshi sellers crack the organic search code. Contact us to learn more.


    🎯 The Bottom Line

    Amazon backend keywords are one of the highest-leverage, lowest-cost tactics to boost organic visibility. In 2026, with ad costs rising, ignoring them is like leaving money on the table. Most sellers focus only on front-end optimization, but the backend is where you can outmaneuver competition without bidding wars.

    Here’s the counterintuitive takeaway: Less is often more. You don’t need to cram every possible search term. Strategic selection of 50-100 highly relevant, high-converting keywords will outperform a chaotic list of 300 generic words. Quality over quantity.

    Start today, check your backend, and see what you’ve been missing. Even a 10% improvement in organic traffic can translate to significant revenue for your Dhaka-based business.


    ⚡ Your Next Step (Do This Today)

    1. Log in to Seller Central and export your current backend keywords.
    2. Run a reverse ASIN lookup on your top competitor using a free tool (e.g., Helium 10’s Cerebro trial).
    3. Identify 10 keywords that are missing from your backend but used by competitors.
    4. Add them to your first search term field, placing the highest-volume term first.
    5. Set a calendar reminder to check your Search Term Report in 2 weeks.

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