If you’re signing up for an Amazon seller account and Amazon suddenly asks you for a letter of authorization, you’re not alone.
This catches a lot of product brands off guard. You’re trying to set up your own seller account for your own company, and then Amazon asks for a document that sounds like something a reseller would need. So naturally, people get confused.
They wonder:
- “Why do I need to authorize myself?”
- “Does Amazon think I’m not the brand owner?”
- “What exactly am I supposed to write?”
- “Is this the same thing as Brand Registry?”
- “Can I just upload an invoice or reseller agreement?”
The good news is that this is usually a very fixable problem. You just need the right document with the right information, and it needs to match what you entered in the Amazon seller account application.
I used to show people how to use a letter of authorization template manually. That template has been used hundreds of times and works well, as long as the correct information is entered. Now I’ve made it faster by creating a custom GPT that can generate the letter of authorization for you, explain the information it needs, and even review an existing letter if Amazon already rejected yours.
What Is an Amazon Letter of Authorization?
An Amazon letter of authorization, often called an LOA, is a document that tells Amazon that the person applying for the seller account has permission to act on behalf of the company or brand.
In this situation, the confusing part is that the signer and the point of contact are often the same person.
For example, let’s say you own an LLC and you are signing up for an Amazon seller account for that LLC. Amazon may still ask for a letter of authorization showing that your company authorizes you to open and manage the seller account.
That feels strange because you own the company. But Amazon is trying to verify that the person submitting the application is allowed to act for the business listed in the application.
So the letter is basically saying:
- The company exists.
- This is the company’s legal name.
- This is the company’s address.
- This is the person authorized to act on behalf of the company.
- This person is allowed to open or manage the Amazon seller account for the brand.
This is why the details have to match the seller application. The letter is not just a generic permission letter. It has to line up with the exact company and contact information Amazon already has.
Why Amazon Asks Brand Owners to Authorize Their Own Company
This is the part that makes people think something is wrong.
A brand owner might think, “I’m not a reseller. I own the brand. Why is Amazon asking me for authorization?”
In many cases, Amazon is not necessarily saying you are a reseller. Amazon is trying to verify that the seller account application is connected to the real business and that the person listed as the point of contact has authority to act for that business.
That’s why the letter of authorization should not be treated as a marketing document, a brand story, or a general explanation of who you are.
It is a verification document.
Amazon wants the document to show the business name and the point of contact name as provided during registration. That means the business name, address, point of contact, and other information need to match what you entered in the application. For related seller account verification issues, you may also want to read our guide on what to do when an Amazon seller account application gets rejected.
The most common mistake is that the letter is technically “close,” but one of the important fields does not match.
For example:
- The legal company name is slightly different.
- The address is formatted differently or uses a different location.
- The point of contact name is not the same person listed in the application.
- The signer information is incomplete.
- The company registration number is wrong.
- The date is too old.
- The letter is not signed.
Amazon’s system and review teams are looking for consistency. If the document creates more questions than it answers, it can get rejected.
What Amazon Is Checking For in the LOA
The exact situation can vary, but in this seller account setup context, the letter should generally make it easy for Amazon to confirm a few things.
1. The Letter Is on Business Letterhead
Amazon expects the letter of authorization to be on a business letterhead and include the business name and point of contact name as provided during registration.
That does not mean the design has to be fancy. It can be simple.
If you have a logo, put the logo at the top. If you do not have a logo, a simple letterhead with the company name and address is usually better than trying to over-design it.
The goal is not to impress Amazon. The goal is to make the document clear and credible.
2. The Business Name Matches the Seller Application
The company name should be the legal company name used in the seller account application.
If your legal entity is “ABC Products LLC,” do not casually write “ABC Products” in one place, “ABC Products, LLC” in another place, and your brand name somewhere else as if they are all interchangeable.
Amazon may treat those as different names.
The brand name can be included separately, but the company name should match the legal business name from the seller account application.
3. The Point of Contact Matches the Seller Application
The person being authorized in the letter should be the same person listed as the point of contact in the Amazon seller account application.
This is one of the most important details.
If the application says the point of contact is Sarah Johnson, the letter should authorize Sarah Johnson. If the letter authorizes a different person, or uses a nickname, or only includes a partial name, that can create problems.
4. The Address Matches the Seller Application
The company address on the letter should match the company address used in the application.
Do not use an old office address, a warehouse address, a home address, or a mailing address unless that is actually the address you used in the Amazon application.
Again, the issue is consistency.
5. The Letter Is Dated Recently Enough
The date of the letter of authorization needs to be current. In the prep notes, the LOA date should be within 6 months or 180 days.
So do not reuse an old letter from a year ago.
Even if the information is otherwise correct, an old date can cause Amazon to reject it.
6. The Letter Is Signed
The letter should be signed by a representative of the company. Often, this is the same person listed as the point of contact.
In plain English, the person is signing on behalf of the company and saying that the point of contact has permission to open or manage the seller account.
This is one of those things that seems obvious, but people miss it. They generate the document, download it, and upload it without signing it.
Do not do that.
Generate the letter, review it, sign it, save the signed version, and then upload that signed version to Amazon.
Quick Reference: What Amazon Is Usually Checking
| What Amazon Is Checking | What It Means | Common Mistake |
|---|---|---|
| Business name | The legal company name on the letter should match the seller account application. | Using the brand name instead of the legal entity name. |
| Point of contact | The person being authorized should match the point of contact in the application. | Authorizing a different person, nickname, assistant, or agency contact. |
| Company address | The address should match the business address used in the application. | Using a warehouse, old office, home address, or website address that does not match. |
| Business letterhead | The letter should look like it came from the company. | Uploading a plain document with no company name, logo, or letterhead. |
| Recent date | The letter should be current, within 6 months or 180 days. | Reusing an old LOA from a previous attempt. |
| Signature | The letter should be signed by an authorized company representative. | Uploading the unsigned draft generated from a template or GPT. |
| Correct document type | The document should be an actual letter of authorization. | Uploading an invoice, reseller agreement, purchase order, or other unrelated document. |
The Fastest Way to Create the Letter of Authorization
The fastest way is to use the custom GPT I built specifically for this Amazon seller account LOA situation.
The reason this is helpful is that the letter of authorization has to be specific to this use case. A generic AI prompt might create a letter that looks professional but is meant for a different situation.
For example, regular ChatGPT might generate:
- A reseller authorization letter.
- A distributor authorization letter.
- An intellectual property permission letter.
- A Brand Registry support letter.
- A generic employee authorization letter.
Those might look fine, but they may not match what Amazon is asking for when you are signing up for your own seller account as a brand.
The custom GPT is built around this exact scenario: a brand or company trying to complete the Amazon seller account application and needing a correctly formatted letter of authorization. It knows what information to ask for, what common mistakes to check, and how to structure the letter so it is simple and usable.
That does not mean you can ignore the details. The GPT can format the letter and guide you, but you still have to provide accurate information.
If you give it the wrong legal company name, wrong address, wrong registration number, or wrong point of contact, it can still produce a letter with the wrong information.
The tool makes the process faster. It does not magically know your company records unless you provide them correctly.
Why Use the Custom GPT Instead of Regular ChatGPT?
I would not recommend just opening regular ChatGPT and asking it to “write me an Amazon letter of authorization.”
You might get something that sounds good, but that does not mean it is right for this situation.
The custom GPT is better because it is built for one specific use case. It is not trying to guess which type of authorization letter you need. It is not mixing together different types of Amazon documents. It is not pulling from inconsistent information online and trying to average it out.
It is designed for the situation where a brand is signing up for its own Amazon seller account and Amazon asks for a letter of authorization.
That matters because Amazon terminology can be confusing. “Letter of authorization” can mean different things depending on the context.
A letter of authorization for opening a seller account is not necessarily the same thing as a distributor authorization letter. It is not necessarily the same thing as a Brand Registry document. It is not necessarily the same thing as a reseller agreement.
So the danger with a generic AI response is not that it will write badly. The danger is that it will write the wrong kind of document.
If you want the manual version of this process, you can also use our Amazon letter of authorization template for seller account verification.
What Information You Need Before Using the GPT
Before using the GPT, gather the information you entered or plan to enter in the Amazon seller account application.
You want the letter to match the application, not just your memory of the company details.
Here’s the information the GPT needs:
- Legal company name
- Entity type, such as LLC, Corporation, Inc., etc.
- State where the company is registered
- Company or entity registration number, not EIN
- Admin seller account email used for the seller account application
- Brand name of the products you want to sell
- Point of contact name used in the seller account application
- Signer name
- Signer title
- Company address used in the seller account application
- Website URL, if available
- Signer email
- Signer phone number
- Date for the letter
Those fields are not random. They are there because Amazon is trying to connect the letter to the seller application and the business behind it.
Information to Gather Before Generating Your LOA
| Information Needed | Where to Find It | Important Note |
|---|---|---|
| Legal company name | Seller application, formation documents, state registration records | Use the legal entity name, not just the brand name. |
| Entity type | Formation documents or state business registration | Examples include LLC, Corporation, Inc., or similar. |
| State where company is registered | State business registry or formation documents | This may be different from the state where you operate. |
| Company/entity registration number | State business registry or formation documents | This is not the EIN. Do not guess. |
| Admin seller account email | Amazon seller account login/application | This is usually the email used to start the seller application. |
| Brand name | Product packaging, website, trademark records, or application details | If there is no separate brand name, use the company name. |
| Point of contact name | Amazon seller account application | This should match exactly. |
| Signer name and title | Internal company records | Use someone authorized to sign for the company. |
| Company address | Amazon seller account application | Match the application address as closely as possible. |
| Website URL | Company website | Include it if available. |
| Signer email and phone | Company contact records | Use contact details that are actively monitored. |
| Date for the letter | Current date | Make sure the letter is not older than 6 months or 180 days. |
Let’s go through the ones that most often confuse people.
Legal Company Name
Use the legal company name that matches the company in the Amazon seller account application.
This is not always the same as the brand name.
For example, your brand might be “PeakTrail Gear,” but your legal company name might be “PeakTrail Products LLC.”
In that case, the legal company name should be “PeakTrail Products LLC.” The brand name can be listed separately as the brand of products you want to sell.
If you do not have a separate brand name, you can usually use the company name again for the brand name field.
Entity Type
The entity type is the legal structure of the business.
For example:
- LLC
- Corporation
- Inc.
- Limited
- Partnership
Whatever your actual entity type is, use the same type that applies to your registered company.
Do not guess. Look at your formation documents, state registration, or business records.
State Where the Company Is Registered
This should be the state where the company is legally registered.
For U.S. companies, this is often the state where the LLC or corporation was formed. It might not be the same as the state where you currently operate, ship products, or have a warehouse.
For example, a company might be registered in Delaware but have its office in California.
Use the registration state for the legal entity.
Company Registration Number, Not EIN
This is one of the biggest points of confusion.
Your company registration number is not the same as your EIN.
Your EIN is issued by the IRS for tax purposes. Your company registration number is generally connected to your entity registration with the state or business registry.
Amazon may ask for business registration details as part of the seller account process, and the letter should match the company/entity registration number used in that application. If you are not sure what this number is, read our full guide on what Amazon means by company registration number.
If you are not sure what your company registration number is, do not just enter your EIN because it is the only number you can find quickly.
That is a common mistake.
Instead, check your state business registration records, entity formation documents, or the business registry where your company is registered. The custom GPT can also help prompt you on where to look and help you think through whether you are looking at the right number.
But again, the GPT cannot make the number true. You need to verify it.
Admin Seller Account Email
This is the email address used for the Amazon seller account application.
Usually, this is the email you used to log in before starting the seller account setup process.
Do not use a random customer service email unless that is actually the email being used for the application.
If the signer email and admin seller account email are the same, that can be fine. But they are still two separate pieces of information.
Brand Name of the Products You Want to Sell
This should be the brand name for the products you plan to sell on Amazon.
If the brand name is different from the legal company name, include the brand name.
If you do not have a separate brand name, you can use the company name again.
The goal is to make it clear which brand or product line the seller account is being opened for.
Also, do not confuse this seller account LOA with Brand Registry. Brand Registry is a separate Amazon process for proving brand ownership and unlocking additional brand tools. If that is what you are working on next, here is a separate guide on how Amazon Brand Registry works and what it does not do.
Point of Contact Name
This should match the point of contact used in the seller account application.
This is not a place to casually substitute another employee, assistant, agency contact, or owner unless that person is actually listed as the point of contact in the application.
If Amazon asks for a letter that includes the point of contact name as provided during registration, then the name in the letter should match the name in the application.
Signer Name and Signer Title
The signer is the person signing the letter on behalf of the company.
Often this is the owner, CEO, president, manager, managing member, director, or another authorized representative.
The signer title should be the person’s real title.
For example:
- Owner
- CEO
- President
- Managing Member
- Director of Ecommerce
- Operations Manager
Do not use a title that sounds better if it is not accurate. Use the title that reasonably reflects the person’s authority at the company.
Company Address
Use the company address from the seller account application.
This is important enough to repeat.
Do not use a different address just because it is more convenient or because it appears on your website. If Amazon is comparing the letter to the application, the address needs to line up.
Website URL
If you have a website, include it.
If you do not have a website, that does not necessarily mean you cannot create the letter. But if you have one, it helps make the company and brand easier to identify.
Signer Email and Phone Number
Use the signer’s real email and phone number.
A company email is ideal if you have one. If the signer email is the same as the admin seller account email, that is usually okay.
The phone number should be one the company or signer can actually be reached at if needed.
Amazon may validate a letter of authorization by contacting the relevant rights owner or business identified in the application, so do not put information that no one monitors.
Date for the Letter
Use the current date or a recent date.
The letter should not be older than 6 months or 180 days.
If you generated a letter months ago and are now resubmitting, create a new one with a current date and review the rest of the details again.
What the GPT Produces
The custom GPT creates a simple letter of authorization using the information you provide.
If you have a logo, it can include the logo at the top. If not, it can create a basic letterhead for the company.
The document does not need to be beautiful. It needs to be clear, accurate, and signed.
A simple document that matches the seller application is better than a fancy document with mismatched information.
After the GPT creates the letter, you should read it carefully. Do not just download and upload it.
Check every field:
- Is the legal company name correct?
- Is the entity type correct?
- Is the state correct?
- Is the company registration number correct?
- Is the admin email correct?
- Is the brand name correct?
- Is the point of contact exactly right?
- Is the signer name and title right?
- Does the address match the seller application?
- Is the website URL correct?
- Is the signer email correct?
- Is the phone number correct?
- Is the date current?
Then sign it.
What Not to Upload as a Letter of Authorization
Do not assume that any business document will satisfy the LOA request.
Amazon has listed common examples of documents that are not acceptable as letters of authorization in some authorization contexts, including invoices, inventory documents, distribution rights or reseller agreements, receipts, order confirmations, commercial or customs invoices, bills of lading, sales orders, purchase orders, quotes, or pro-forma invoices.
That is important because some sellers panic and start uploading whatever business documents they have available.
An invoice does not authorize the point of contact to open a seller account.
A purchase order does not show that the person in the application is authorized to act for the company.
A reseller agreement is a different type of document.
A receipt does not prove what Amazon is asking you to prove.
If Amazon asks for a letter of authorization, create a letter of authorization.
PDF, Word Document, Screenshot, or Scanned Image?
Amazon’s accepted formats can vary depending on the exact verification workflow, marketplace, and request. In general, for this situation, I would recommend submitting a signed PDF or a clean scanned image rather than a Word document or email screenshot.
A PDF is usually cleaner.
- It is harder to accidentally edit.
- It looks more official.
- It preserves the formatting.
- It is easier for Amazon to review.
If you print and sign it, a scanned image can also work as long as it is clear, readable, and shows the full document.
You Must Sign the Letter Before Uploading It
This is a simple step, but do not skip it.
The GPT can create the letter. It can format the letter. It can help you review the letter. But you still need to sign it.
You have a few options.
Option 1: Print, Sign, and Scan It
You can print the letter, sign it with a pen, and scan it.
This is probably the most traditional method.
You can also take a photo of the signed letter, but the photo needs to be very good.
If you take a photo, make sure:
- All text is clear and readable.
- Nothing is blurry.
- The whole page is visible.
- All four corners of the document are showing.
- There are no shadows blocking the text.
- The signature is visible.
Do not upload a crooked, blurry photo where part of the page is cut off. That just creates another reason for Amazon to reject it.
Option 2: Sign It on a Mac Using Preview
If you are on a Mac, you can open the PDF in Preview.
If it opens in Chrome by default, select “Open With” and choose Preview.
Then use the signature tool. You can click the signature icon, create a signature, place it in the signature area, and save the PDF.
After saving, open the file again and make sure the signature is actually there.
This is especially important if you do not use electronic signatures very often.
Option 3: Sign It on Windows Using Adobe Acrobat Reader
If you are on Windows and have Adobe Acrobat Reader, you can open the PDF and use Fill & Sign.
Depending on the version, it may appear in the right-hand pane or under the Tools tab. Then you can draw or create your signature and place it on the document.
Again, after signing, save it and reopen it to make sure the signature stayed on the file.
What If You Already Have a Letter and Amazon Rejected It?
You can also use the custom GPT to review an existing letter of authorization.
This is useful if you already tried submitting an LOA and Amazon rejected it, but you are not sure why.
In that case, the issue is often one of the details:
- The business name does not match.
- The address does not match.
- The point of contact is wrong.
- The company registration number is actually the EIN.
- The letter is too old.
- The signer information is incomplete.
- The letter is not on letterhead.
- The document is not signed.
- The letter is written for the wrong type of authorization.
The GPT can help you check for those common problems and create a corrected version if needed.
That is one of the reasons this is faster than using a blank template. A template is helpful, but it does not always explain what each field means. The GPT can prompt you through the information and help you understand what you are entering.
What If the Template Asks for a Seller ID?
Some older templates may include a seller ID field.
If you are still in the application process and do not have a seller ID yet, you may need to remove that part of the sentence or skip that field.
Do not invent a seller ID.
Do not use a random number.
Do not use your EIN.
Do not use your company registration number in the seller ID field.
If you do not have a seller ID yet, the letter should be written in a way that still authorizes the point of contact to open the seller account without pretending a seller ID already exists.
Common Mistakes That Cause LOA Problems
Here are the mistakes I would check before uploading the letter.
Using the EIN Instead of the Company Registration Number
This is probably one of the most common issues.
The company registration number is not your EIN. The EIN is from the IRS. The company registration number is usually tied to your state or entity registration.
If you are unsure, slow down and verify it before submitting.
Using the Brand Name Instead of the Legal Company Name
Your brand name and legal company name may be different.
Amazon needs to understand both, but they should not be mixed up.
Use the legal company name where the letter asks for the company name. Use the brand name where the letter asks for the brand.
Not Matching the Point of Contact
If the point of contact in the seller application is one person and the LOA authorizes someone else, that can create a rejection.
The point of contact name should match.
Not Matching the Address
Use the same company address as the seller account application.
Do not switch between office, warehouse, home, registered agent, and mailing addresses unless you know exactly what Amazon is asking for and what you entered.
Uploading an Unsigned Letter
A letter of authorization should be signed.
Do not upload the unsigned draft.
Uploading a Word Document When a Signed PDF Would Be Cleaner
Even if a Word document might be accepted in some situations, a signed PDF is usually a cleaner choice.
Using an Old Date
The date should be within 6 months or 180 days.
If the letter is old, update it.
Uploading the Wrong Type of Authorization Letter
A reseller authorization letter is not the same as a seller account setup LOA.
A distributor agreement is not the same as this LOA.
An invoice is not the same as this LOA.
Use the document Amazon is actually asking for.
Common LOA Problems and How to Fix Them
| Problem | Why It Can Cause a Rejection | What to Do Instead |
|---|---|---|
| EIN entered as the company registration number | Amazon may be looking for the entity registration number, not the IRS tax ID. | Check the state business registry or formation documents for the company/entity registration number. |
| Brand name used as company name | Amazon may not be able to match the letter to the legal business in the application. | Use the legal company name where the letter asks for the company name. |
| Different point of contact | Amazon expects the LOA to authorize the person listed in the seller application. | Use the same point of contact name shown in the application. |
| Different address | Address mismatches create verification problems. | Use the same business address entered in the seller account application. |
| Letter is not signed | An unsigned document does not clearly authorize anyone. | Sign the PDF electronically or print, sign, and scan it. |
| Old letter date | Amazon may reject a letter that is outside the accepted date window. | Generate a new letter with a current date. |
| Wrong document uploaded | Invoices, purchase orders, receipts, and reseller agreements are not the same as an LOA. | Upload a signed letter of authorization. |
| Blurry photo or scan | Amazon reviewers may not be able to read or verify the document. | Use a clear PDF or high-quality scan showing all four corners of the page. |
How the Custom GPT Access Works
The custom GPT is available through a link.
To get it, you do have to enter your email address. That lets me email you the template and follow up to ask whether it worked.
And yes, you can unsubscribe if you do not want more emails.
The reason I like being able to follow up is that Amazon changes things. If Amazon adds more requirements or if brands start seeing a new type of rejection, I can update the tool and the instructions. I also send other useful information for brands that are starting to sell on Amazon, especially around account setup, seller application issues, and common Seller Central problems.
The point is to make this faster and easier, not to make you dig through generic information while you are stuck mid-application.
If you are earlier in the process and trying to understand the overall launch timeline, this guide on the first 3 months selling on Amazon may also be helpful.
Step-by-Step: How I Would Handle This
Here’s the practical process I’d follow if Amazon asked for a letter of authorization during seller account setup.
Step 1: Open Your Seller Account Application Information
Before creating the letter, look at the information in the Amazon seller account application.
You want the LOA to match the application.
Do not rely on memory.
Step 2: Gather the Required Company Information
Collect the legal company name, entity type, registration state, company registration number, address, point of contact, admin email, brand name, signer information, website, phone number, and date.
Step 3: Use the Custom GPT to Generate the Letter
Enter the information into the custom GPT.
Let it create the letter.
If you have a logo, include it. If not, use a simple letterhead.
Step 4: Review Every Field
Compare the letter against the seller application.
This is where you catch the problems before Amazon does.
Step 5: Sign the Letter
Sign it electronically or physically.
If signing physically, scan it or take a high-quality photo showing the whole page.
If signing electronically, save the file and reopen it to make sure the signature is visible.
Step 6: Upload the Signed Version to Amazon
Upload the signed PDF or clean scanned image.
Do not accidentally upload the unsigned draft.
Step 7: Keep a Copy
Save a copy of the signed LOA for your records.
If Amazon asks again or if you need to reference what was submitted, you will have it.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is an Amazon letter of authorization?
An Amazon letter of authorization is a document showing that the person applying for or managing the seller account has permission to act on behalf of the company or brand.
In the seller account application process, it usually needs to connect the business name, point of contact, signer, and company details together clearly.
Why is Amazon asking me for a letter of authorization if I own the brand?
Amazon may still need to verify that the person applying for the seller account is authorized to act for the legal business.
Even if you own the company, Amazon may ask for documentation that connects you, the company, and the seller account application.
Is the company registration number the same as the EIN?
No.
The EIN is issued by the IRS. The company registration number is generally connected to your legal entity registration, often through the state or business registry. The LOA should use the company/entity registration number requested in the seller application, not the EIN.
Does the letter need to be signed?
Yes. The letter should be signed by an authorized representative of the company.
Do not upload an unsigned draft.
Can I use a Word document?
In some situations Amazon may allow Word documents, but I would generally recommend using a signed PDF or a clean scanned image instead. It looks cleaner, preserves the formatting, and reduces the chance that something gets changed or displayed incorrectly.
Can I take a picture of the signed letter?
Yes, but only if it is a high-quality picture.
All text should be readable, the image should not be blurry, and all four corners of the document should be visible.
Can I sign the PDF electronically?
Yes.
On a Mac, you can use Preview. On Windows, you can use Adobe Acrobat Reader’s Fill & Sign tool. After signing, save the file and reopen it to confirm the signature is actually there.
What if Amazon already rejected my letter of authorization?
Use the custom GPT to review the letter and check for common issues.
The most likely problems are mismatched business information, wrong point of contact, wrong registration number, missing signature, old date, or a letter written for the wrong type of authorization.
Can I upload an invoice instead?
No. Invoices, inventory documents, purchase orders, receipts, reseller agreements, and similar business documents are not the same as a letter of authorization.
Does the LOA have to be fancy?
No.
It should be professional, clear, accurate, on business letterhead, and signed.
A simple letter that matches the application is better than a fancy letter with inconsistent information.
Final Thoughts
An Amazon letter of authorization feels more confusing than it really is.
Most of the time, the issue is not that the brand cannot provide the document. The issue is that Amazon is asking for a very specific type of document, and the details need to match the seller account application.
That is why I built the custom GPT. It makes the process faster, helps you avoid the common mistakes, and gives you a clean letter you can review, sign, and upload.
Just remember: the GPT can create the document, but you are still responsible for giving it accurate information and checking the final letter before submitting it.
If you want a walkthrough, the video above covers this step-by-step. And if you’ve got a quick question about your situation, leave a comment on the video and I’ll try to point you in the right direction.
If your situation is more complex and you want professional help, reach out to us at customerservice@fivestarcommerce.com or schedule an info call using the Schedule info call button on our website.