In this article

An Amazon delivery worker pulls a delivery cart full of packages during its annual Prime Day promotion in New York City, June 21, 2021.
Brendan McDermid | Reuters

Amazon’s big annual sale, Prime Day, will return on July 12 and 13, the company announced on Thursday.

The event is also a big revenue driver for other retail sites, which often offer competing discounts to consumers. Last year, total e-commerce sales during the two-day shopping event topped $11 billion, according to Adobe Analytics. That figure was even slightly higher than Cyber Monday totals in 2020, though that represents a 24-hour period rather than a 48-hour one.

Amazon’s sale starts at 3 a.m. Eastern Time on July 12 and runs for 48 hours in several countries, including Poland and Sweden for the first time. It will host the event for other countries like India, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, later in the summer.

Amazon said more third-party sellers will participate this year. Some sellers told CNBC last year they saw the event as an opportunity to raise brand awareness even if they didn’t cut prices, sometimes due to already high consumer spending or supply chain issues. Amazon’s announcement of Prime Day results in 2021 was relatively muted in tone compared to previous years.

Prime members will have access to early deals beginning on June 21, including up to 55% on some Amazon devices like the second-generation Echo Show 5, Kindle Paperwhite and eero mesh WiFi routers.

Fire TV smart TVs will start at $89.99, a 47% savings.

Members can also save 20% on some items at Amazon Fresh stores in the U.S. beginning on June 29. Amazon said this benefit will be available year-round to Prime members paying with the Amazon app or a card registered to their account.

Amazon will also hold a sweepstakes for prizes including Super Bowl tickets, a cast meet-and-greet for Prime Video’s new Lord of the Rings series and Amazon gift cards. Every dollar spent on eligible small business products between June 21 and July 11 will give customers the chance to win the prizes.

Subscribe to CNBC on YouTube.

WATCH: Amazon drivers describe pressures and pitfalls of delivering for a DSP

You May Also Like

Twitter cuts a large number of contract workers without giving internal teams a heads up

In this photo illustration a Twitter logo seen displayed on a smartphone…

After creators flocked to Instagram Threads, Meta’s challenge is to keep them from fleeing

In this article META Follow your favorite stocksCREATE FREE ACCOUNT Jaap Arriens…
iPhone 16 Pro Max Review: Apple’s Crown Jewel?

iPhone 16 Pro Max Review: Apple’s Crown Jewel?

Alright, it’s that time of the year! Apple finally took the plunge…

How Roku used the Netflix playbook to beat bigger players and rule streaming video

In this article ROKU Anthony Wood of Roku and Reed Hastings of…