FBA Bundling and Kitting Service
Multipacks, product sets, grouped SKUs, and prep kits assembled to your spec from Great Falls, Montana — with bundle labeling, FNSKU labeling, and shipment prep for Amazon fulfillment centers.
High Plains Prep & Pack offers an FBA bundling and kitting service for Amazon sellers who turn individual components into a single sellable unit before shipping to FBA. Whether it’s a clean two-pack of the same SKU, a curated multi-SKU gift set, or a prep kit of accessories, we receive the components, assemble against your bundle spec, label as one unit, and prepare the shipment for Amazon receiving.
Related services
Bundles vs kits — how we use the terms
Different sellers use the terms differently. For clarity on our floor we use them like this:
- Bundle / multipack. Two or more units of the same SKU, or a fixed set of related SKUs, sold as a single FBA listing under one FNSKU.
- Kit. A set of components assembled into a finished sellable unit — usually involving a primary product plus accessories or inserts — that ships under one FNSKU.
- Grouped SKU. Multiple distinct SKUs handled together for a campaign, promo, or kitting workflow even when they will not necessarily ship as a single FBA unit.
Whichever you’re building, the workflow is the same: tight spec, accurate counts, clean labeling, and documentation that lets you audit later.
What we assemble
- Multipacks. Two-packs, four-packs, six-packs of the same SKU, banded or bagged as a single unit.
- Product sets. Multi-SKU sets — a tool plus its consumables, a candle plus its trim, a primary product plus a small accessory.
- Grouped SKUs. Components handled together for kitting workflows, promos, or campaigns.
- Prep kits. Light component assembly that creates a single sellable unit when none of the components are FBA-ready on their own.
- Inserts and value-adds. Brand inserts, thank-you cards, or simple add-ons inserted per your spec.
What we handle
Bundle assembly
Multi-unit bundles assembled to your spec with consistent counts and orientation. Banded, sleeved, or bagged as required.
Kit assembly
Multi-component kits built to a written spec sheet. Components verified against the spec before sealing.
Bundle labeling
Bundle-marker stickers ("Do Not Separate" / "Ready to Ship as Set"), or seller-provided bundle labels applied where Amazon’s bundling guidance calls for them.
FNSKU labeling
Apply your provided FNSKU labels on the outside of the bundled or kitted unit for clean scanning at Amazon receive.
Poly bagging or wrap
Suffocation-warning poly bagging, shrink-band, or bubble-wrap where the bundle or kit needs it. Specialty supplies billed separately.
Quality checks
Component counts, visible damage checks, expiration/lot date checks where applicable, and exception reports with photo evidence.
Shipment organization
Cartonization, outbound box labels, and shipment plan reconciliation before outbound to Amazon fulfillment centers.
Outbound support
Prepare outbound cartons and hand off to your chosen carrier for delivery to Amazon fulfillment centers.
How a bundling or kitting job runs
- You submit an intake request describing the bundle or kit, components, expected volume, and timing.
- You send a written bundle spec sheet: components per unit, orientation, packaging, bundle labels, FNSKU.
- We confirm acceptance after a capacity and supplies review — bundling/kitting is billed per assembled unit and specialty supplies are quoted separately.
- Components arrive. We photograph inbound condition, open, and count each component SKU against the spec.
- We assemble each bundle or kit to spec, apply bundle labeling and FNSKU labels, and bag or wrap where required.
- We cartonize, apply outbound box labels, and stage for carrier handoff.
- You receive a completion update with counts, exceptions, and outbound tracking.
When bundling versus kitting is the right call
Bundling and kitting sound similar but solve different problems. A bundle is usually multiple units of the same SKU offered as a single ASIN — a four-pack of socks, three bottles of the same supplement, a two-pack of accessories. A kit is multiple different components packaged together to ship as one unit — a starter set, a gift set, a multi-part product where the seller has chosen to use a single FNSKU.
Both share the same operational risk: every assembly step is a chance for a miscount, a missed component, or a packaging mistake to cost you reimbursements later. We treat them the same way regardless of label: read the spec, follow it exactly, count twice, and pause when something does not match.
What to send us
Send the following before your shipment arrives:
- Bundle or kit spec sheet — every component, every quantity, the assembled-unit FNSKU.
- Sample photos of the finished product where possible.
- Packaging instructions: outer polybag, inner separator, branded sleeve, or none.
- Per-component receiving plan (separate inbound, single inbound, mixed cartons).
- Shipment plan, packing list, FNSKU labels for the assembled unit, and inbound tracking numbers.
How bundling and kitting fit with our other services
An assembled unit almost always needs poly bagging and an FNSKU label after assembly — covered in our FNSKU labeling service. Quality checks are doubly important on bundles and kits because a single missed component on the floor becomes a wave of customer complaints downstream. Outbound cartonization and box labeling are described in FBA shipment prep.
Intake required before shipping inventory. Submitting an intake request does not guarantee acceptance. We review capacity, item type, timeline, bundle complexity, and required prep before approving shipments. Do not ship inventory until High Plains confirms acceptance and provides next-step instructions.
What we do not promise
Careful bundling and kitting gives a shipment its best chance at smooth Amazon receiving, but the final acceptance decision is Amazon’s. We do not guarantee Amazon acceptance, Amazon receiving speed, inbound defect outcomes, reimbursement decisions, listing-creation outcomes, or any specific account-health effect. We do not create listings, design bundles, source missing components, or decide whether a particular bundle complies with Amazon’s bundling policy — those are seller decisions. The seller remains responsible for product eligibility, listing accuracy, packaging policy compliance, and Amazon compliance under their seller agreement. We control the workmanship on our floor — component counts, assembly accuracy, label placement, and documentation — and hold ourselves to a high bar on exactly that.
Where we are
High Plains Prep & Pack operates from 700 1st Ave S, Great Falls, MT 59401. Reach us at info@highplainsprep.com or 406-454-3333. Listed on Amazon Service Provider Network under FBA Prep & Packaging.
High Plains Prep & Pack is an independent prep service and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or partnered with Amazon.com, Inc. Service availability is subject to a signed agreement and applicable insurance and licensing. Amazon receiving outcomes depend on shipment plan accuracy, product eligibility, bundling and packaging policy compliance, account health, and Amazon’s own receiving processes — not all of which we control.