Twenty-eight years of platform building, on one filterable page.
Amazon.com was founded in Bellevue, Washington in July 1994 and completed its first material acquisition — Junglee — in August 1998, alongside the same-year purchases of PlanetAll and IMDb. Between that starting point and today, Amazon has completed more than 100 material acquisitions, five of which fundamentally reshaped the company: the 2009 acquisition of Zappos for ~$1.2B (the culture-preserving deal that taught Amazon how to run a distinct brand), the 2012 acquisition of Kiva Systems for ~$775M (the robotics foundation for the fulfillment-center network that today runs the largest e-commerce logistics operation on earth), the 2014 acquisition of Twitch for ~$970M (the video-gaming livestream franchise), the 2017 acquisition of Whole Foods Market for ~$13.7B (the pivot into physical retail and grocery), and the 2022 closing of the MGM Studios acquisition for ~$8.45B (4,000+ films including the James Bond franchise, delivered into Prime Video). A sixth landmark — the 2023 closing of One Medical for ~$3.9B — anchors Amazon's healthcare franchise alongside PillPack (2018). Amazon has also been notable for what it did not acquire — the 2022 announced $1.7B iRobot / Roomba deal was abandoned in January 2024 after EU competition-authority pushback, one of the highest-profile antitrust reversals of the cycle. This page catalogs the record: the transformative deals, the strategic tuck-ins that built AWS and Alexa, the flagship shutdowns (Diapers.com/Quidsi, Amazon Restaurants, Amazon Care), the strategic minority investments (Rivian, Anthropic $8B combined), and the pending pipeline. It is intentionally a living reference — as new deals close the row is added and the roll-ups reflow. Nothing here is investment advice. Everything here is a fact-checkable practitioner reference for a very specific question — what does twenty-eight years of Amazon capital allocation actually look like in list form?
Nine columns. Year of announcement or close. Target company. Segment at time of the transaction (Retail / E-commerce, Marketplace, Logistics / Robotics, AWS / Cloud, Devices / Alexa, Ring / Home Security, Media / Studios, Prime Video / Twitch, Grocery / Whole Foods, Healthcare, Advertising, AI, International, Corporate). Approximate consideration in USD (illustrative where deal size was undisclosed — marked "n/d" for not-disclosed or "approx"). Deal structure. Counterparty type. Integration status — whether the target was folded into an Amazon product or run as a separate operating unit. Distinctive notes. Current fate — Continuing, Absorbed, Divested, Shut down, Withdrawn, or Pending.
Sort and filter. Click any column header to sort. Use the decade, segment, structure, fate, and search filters to isolate a slice. The search box matches target names and notes.
What counts as an acquisition. This record includes whole-company purchases, controlling-stake purchases, licensing / acqui-hire structures that materially shaped an Amazon business line, and the strategic minority investments (Rivian, Anthropic) that are large enough to be material to the capital-allocation record even though they are not acquisitions in the accounting sense. The record does not attempt to catalog the very long tail of small acqui-hires and code-and-team buyouts that never received public deal disclosures — the point of the page is the strategic record, not an audit of every talent transaction.
Fate marker. A CONTINUING fate means the target is still operated as a recognizable brand or product inside Amazon (Zappos, Twitch, Whole Foods, Ring, IMDb, AWS-native tuck-ins). ABSORBED means the target's technology was folded into an Amazon service and the brand retired (Junglee into Marketplace, Kiva into Amazon Robotics, Elemental into AWS Elemental, Ivona into Alexa). DIVESTED means the target was sold or its assets transferred out. SHUT DOWN means the acquired product was discontinued (Diapers.com/Quidsi 2017, Amazon Restaurants 2019, Amazon Care 2022). WITHDRAWN means the deal was announced but abandoned before closing (iRobot / Roomba, January 2024). PENDING means announced but not yet closed. The fate roll-up below tallies the pattern — Amazon is famous for both spectacular hits and cleanly-executed reversals.
Every material Amazon acquisition since Junglee in 1998 — through IMDb, Alexa Internet, Audible, Zappos, Kiva Systems, Twitch, Elemental, Ring, Whole Foods, PillPack, MGM Studios, One Medical, and the strategic Anthropic $8B investment position. Sortable by year, segment, deal size, structure, and fate — with the hit-and-miss pattern flagged across twenty-eight years of platform building. Every row is a fact-checkable reference. This is a living dataset — updated whenever Amazon closes a new deal.
| Year | Target | Segment | Consideration | Structure | Counterparty | Integration | Notes | Fate |
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Roll-ups reflect the acquisitions cataloged in the table above. Where consideration is undisclosed, the deal is included in count-based roll-ups but excluded from dollar-based totals. Dollar figures are illustrative aggregates — the point is directional, not audit-grade. Minority investments (Rivian, Anthropic) are noted separately from operating acquisitions.
Whole-company and majority-stake acquisitions only. Figures are illustrative aggregates in USD-equivalent. The 2016-2020 window is dominated by Whole Foods (~$13.7B) and PillPack (~$753M) and Ring (~$1B); the 2021-2026 window by MGM Studios (~$8.45B) and One Medical (~$3.9B) and the Anthropic strategic investment (~$8B combined). The 1998-2001 window built the marketplace foundation; the 2011-2015 window built the logistics and content spine (Kiva, Twitch, Elemental).
Whole-company purchases dominate. Amazon historically prefers full control — the classic pattern is a whole-company acquisition of a small or medium team, folded into an Amazon service within 12 to 36 months, unless the target has distinctive brand equity (Zappos, Twitch, Whole Foods, Ring, IMDb) in which case it is preserved as a standalone brand. Minority stakes (Rivian, Anthropic) are unusual for Amazon and are used strategically to secure supply, capacity, or model access.
E-commerce and Marketplace dominate the earliest years. Devices / Alexa and Media / Studios were the durable acquisition destinations from 2013 through the 2010s. AWS / Cloud and Ring / Home Security scaled with the late-2010s consumer-hardware and enterprise-software cycles. Healthcare (PillPack, One Medical) and AI (Anthropic, Diamond Dogs / Covariant) are the defining 2020s categories.
The signature Amazon acquisition risk profile. Roughly half of material acquisitions remain visible today as continuing brands or products (Zappos, Twitch, Whole Foods, Ring, IMDb, MGM Studios, One Medical). A meaningful share were absorbed as technology (Junglee, Kiva into Amazon Robotics, Elemental into AWS, Ivona into Alexa, Audible into Prime). The remainder were divested or shut down (Diapers.com/Quidsi 2017, Amazon Restaurants 2019, Amazon Care 2022, Fabric.com 2022) or withdrawn before closing (iRobot 2024). Amazon is unafraid to reverse, which is itself a form of capital discipline.
An acquisition record is a lagging indicator. The leading indicator is the current pipeline — the strategic minority positions that may or may not graduate into full acquisitions, the acqui-hire and licensing patterns that have become the standard mechanism for absorbing frontier-AI talent, and the standalone Amazon operating units (Kuiper, Zoox, AWS, Prime Video, Ads) that continue to scale independently. Watching where Amazon is deploying today is watching where the acquisition record goes next.
Amazon committed $4 billion to Anthropic in September 2023 followed by a further $4 billion in November 2024, for a total of ~$8 billion. Anthropic remains an independent company — not classified as an acquisition — but the position is a structural signal about how Amazon is anchoring frontier-AI capacity into AWS Bedrock and Trainium / Inferentia silicon. Alphabet is the other major strategic Anthropic investor.
Amazon holds a significant minority equity position in Rivian following a $700M lead investment in the 2019 pre-IPO round, plus the Rivian electric-van supply agreement for the Amazon delivery fleet. Rivian remains an independent public company. Amazon has periodically taken impairments on the position but the electric-van commercial relationship continues.
Amazon's 2024 arrangement with Adept AI (licensing model access and hiring the founding team into Amazon AGI without acquiring the company outright) mirrors the Character.AI / Google template. It has become the leading pattern for absorbing frontier-AI capability without triggering full antitrust review. Similar structures are the indicator of how the AI-lab consolidation cycle will resolve.
Project Kuiper is Amazon's low-Earth-orbit satellite broadband effort, competing with SpaceX Starlink. Kuiper is internally incubated — not an acquisition — but the launch-services procurement (Blue Origin, ULA, Arianespace, SpaceX) and the ground-station network build represent a substantial multi-billion-dollar deployment adjacent to the acquisition record.
Zoox was acquired in 2020 for ~$1.2B and remains an independent Amazon subsidiary developing purpose-built autonomous-vehicle technology. Commercial ride-hail pilots underway. Zoox represents the internal-incubation-plus-acquisition hybrid that has become common in Amazon's Other Bets equivalent portfolio.
Amazon continues small-to-medium international acquisitions in India (MX Player 2024 for streaming content), the Middle East (Souq.com 2017 integration ongoing), and Latin America. Individual deals below public disclosure thresholds; aggregate cadence reflected in the record as ongoing.
Every acquisition on this page is a candidate for a full practitioner case memo. These are the companion references and adjacent reads.
Educational reference. Not investment advice. Not a solicitation. Not affiliated with or endorsed by Amazon.com, Inc., Amazon Web Services, Whole Foods Market, Ring, Twitch, IMDb, Zappos, MGM Studios, One Medical, PillPack, or any Amazon subsidiary, officer, director, or shareholder. The Baratelli Institute publishes under the Lowe v. SEC publisher exception; neutral positioning maintained throughout. Deal figures cited in this catalog are sourced primarily to Amazon Form 10-K and 10-Q filings, contemporaneous press releases, contemporaneous press coverage (Wall Street Journal, New York Times, Financial Times, Bloomberg, Reuters, The Information, TechCrunch, GeekWire), and standard reference works on Amazon's history. Dollar amounts are approximate. Where a specific transaction date or figure is not publicly disclosed, the row is flagged with "approx" or "n/d" (not disclosed) rather than fabricating precision. The iRobot transaction is listed as withdrawn — it was announced August 2022 and abandoned January 2024 after EU competition-authority concerns. Anthropic and Rivian positions are strategic minority investments, not acquisitions, and are noted as such. Corrections welcome via the link in the footer.
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