Over 800,000 price drops a month. That's the number FlipAlert throws at you right on the product page, and honestly, the first time I read it I thought it was marketing fluff.
I've been doing Amazon arbitrage long enough to know the tools that promise everything and deliver a slow, clunky spreadsheet dressed up in a dashboard. So I came into this one skeptical.
But 422 members on a free extension and 865 across the store, with three reviews averaging a perfect 5 stars, made me curious enough to dig in properly.
Here's what I actually found.
👉 Grab the 7-day free trial and test it yourself before committing a dollar
If you're new to this corner of reselling, A2A stands for Amazon-to-Amazon arbitrage. The basic idea: you find a product listed on Amazon at a temporarily discounted price, buy it through that listing, and resell it through your own Amazon seller account at the regular market price. A2W (Amazon-to-Walmart) follows the same logic but flips the destination marketplace.
It sounds simple. The execution is where most people lose hours and money.
I've spent entire afternoons manually cross-referencing Keepa charts, checking price history, hunting for the elusive window where a product dipped just long enough to be worth buying. You miss more than you catch. The arbitrage window can close in the time it takes to verify a single lead. That grind is real, and anyone who's done A2A seriously knows the specific frustration of a great dip you spotted two hours too late.
FlipAlert is built to solve exactly that bottleneck. It's a Chrome extension and membership software combo that surfaces price drops automatically, overlays current Walmart prices directly onto Keepa Deals and Product Finder, and lets you filter those leads by keyword, profit margin, ROI, category, and more. The idea is to replace the manual hunting with a filtered, real-time feed so you're reacting to opportunities instead of chasing them.
One thing I genuinely didn't expect was how much you get before paying anything. The FlipAlert Chrome Extension is completely free to join, works in minutes according to the description, and covers some legitimately useful ground: Amazon order tracking in one place, Walmart price overlays on Keepa, and limited access to the A2A and A2W software.
For someone just getting started with Amazon arbitrage, this is a low-risk way to understand the workflow before committing to a paid plan. Most tools in this niche want your credit card before you've seen a single lead. The free entry point here feels like confidence, not a bait-and-switch.
The 422 members on the free tier (versus 12 on the Canada membership) also tells me a lot of people are using it as an on-ramp. That's healthy for the ecosystem around the tool.
Join the free extension and see how it overlays on your existing Keepa workflow
The core product is the FlipAlert Membership USA (and a Canada variant) at $97 per month, with a 7-day free trial attached to both.
At that price point, you're not in cheap territory. For context, $97/month means you need to find deals that net you more than that in margin just to break even on the tool. In A2A, that's actually not a high bar if the lead flow is real, but it's worth being clear-eyed about.
What you're getting for that $97, based on the listed highlights:
Access to 800,000+ profitable price drops monthly. That's the headline number. They also mention 500,000+ monthly price drops in a slightly different framing, so the exact figure may vary based on filters applied. Either way, the volume is significant.
Custom tasks with granular filters. You can filter by keywords, profit amount, ROI percentage, and category. This is the feature that actually separates a useful tool from a firehose of noise. Raw leads without filtering is just another kind of manual work.
A2A and A2W leads unlocked. The free tier gives you limited access; the paid tier opens it fully.
The 7-day trial is the right move here. Use it to run your own filters, pull leads in categories you actually source, and see what the real-world margin looks like on the deals surfaced. Don't judge the tool on theoretical volume; judge it on how many actionable leads land in your actual workflow during that week.
Credibility matters a lot in reselling tools because the space is full of people selling courses about selling courses. FlipAlert's founding team stands out a bit differently.
Saul has reportedly purchased over $1,000,000 worth of A2A products to sell on Amazon. He's also co-owner of The Buy Box and hosted something called the A2A Challenge. That's not a random influencer who picked up a side hustle last year. That's someone who has been in the operational trenches of this model, dealing with actual inventory, actual margins, and the actual headaches that come with scaling A2A sourcing.
Jack brings five years of software development experience specifically for Amazon sellers. That matters because seller tools built by people who've never actually sold tend to feel like they were built for a hypothetical user. When the developer has five years of context from Amazon sellers, the edge cases get handled.
The combination of an operator with deep sourcing experience and a dedicated developer is a stronger founding team than most tools in this niche can claim. That doesn't guarantee the product is perfect, but it does suggest the priorities are right.
Three reviews, all five stars, across the FlipAlert Membership USA. That's a small sample. I won't pretend otherwise.
But perfect scores with zero noise in a niche that tends to produce loud complaints when tools don't deliver is at least a clean starting signal. The people who have reviewed it seem genuinely satisfied, not just reflexively positive. The store has been operating since 2024, so we're not looking at years of accumulated data yet; this is a relatively new entrant.
I'll be honest: I'd want to see 20 or 30 reviews before calling this definitively proven. What I can say is that the early signal is clean, the founding team has real operational credibility, and the free trial structure means you're not betting $97 blind.
🔍 Check the current reviews and member count yourself before making a call
At the time I checked, both paid memberships were priced identically. The Canada membership is a separate product with its own 12-member base, presumably because the lead inventory and sourcing context differs by marketplace.
The 7-day trial is the real value decision point here. If you can break even on a single solid lead during that week, the monthly math becomes a lot easier to justify. Given that A2A margins on good deals can run 20-40% ROI in practice, $97 is recoverable in a handful of transactions if the leads are quality.
One thing worth knowing before you commit: keep an eye on any discount popup when you first land on the Whop page. These platforms often surface a welcome discount for new visitors that disappears if you navigate away. Worth catching if it appears.
This tool makes most sense for someone who is already doing Amazon arbitrage or actively trying to start. If you understand Keepa, already have a seller account set up, and you're spending real time manually sourcing leads, the value proposition is direct: more leads, faster, with filters that cut the noise.
It's less obviously useful if you're still figuring out whether A2A is the right model for you. In that case, start with the free extension. It gives you enough of a taste to understand the workflow without any financial commitment.
The Canada membership serving only 12 members right now is interesting. That's either a very early-stage market or a reflection of how much smaller the Canadian A2A market is compared to US. If you're a Canadian seller, it's probably worth reaching out to the team for specifics on lead volume before committing.
The review count is thin. Three reviews tell me the early adopters are happy, but I'd genuinely like to see more data before calling it definitively reliable at scale.
The price is real money. $97/month requires you to be sourcing actively enough to justify it. If you're a casual seller doing two or three deals a month, the math gets tight. This is a tool for people who are serious about volume.
And the tool is relatively new, operating since 2024. That means there's less long-term track record to evaluate. That's not necessarily a problem given the team's background, but it's honest context.
Here's where I land on FlipAlert after digging through the product structure, the team background, and the early user feedback.
The core problem it solves is real. The manual grind of A2A sourcing, the hours of cross-referencing price history while leads expire, that's a genuine time sink that the right tool can legitimately compress. The fact that Saul has actually done over a million dollars in A2A purchasing himself means the product was built by someone who felt that pain firsthand, not someone who heard about it secondhand.
The free extension is a no-brainer starting point. And the 7-day trial on the paid membership means you're not taking a blind leap at $97. Test the leads against your actual categories during that week. If you find three or four actionable deals with solid ROI, the math tells you everything you need to know.
If you've ever closed a Keepa tab in frustration because the price window you were watching already closed, FlipAlert is probably worth your seven days.
Start your free trial now and run it against your real sourcing workflow
Quick note: Amazon arbitrage involves real financial risk, including potential losses on inventory, marketplace policy changes, and margin compression. Nothing in this review constitutes professional financial or business advice. Do your own due diligence before investing in tools or inventory.