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Walmart integration
Walmart Marketplace and WFS, running alongside every other channel you sell on, with the same stock pool, the same order inbox, and the same profit math.
What you can do
- Walmart Marketplace orders land in Rilk as they're placed. No CSV import, no checking Seller Center between picks. The order is there when you walk to the pick station.
- Stock stays in lockstep with every other marketplace. Sell three units on Amazon and the Walmart listing drops by three — and vice versa. No more rationing inventory across channels because you don't trust the counts.
- Walmart Fulfillment Services (WFS) inventory tracked separately from your self-fulfilled stock, with neither double-counted. Send inbound to WFS from Rilk and watch it land on the listing.
- Walmart Buy Shipping for merchant-fulfilled orders — protected rates, on-time delivery credit, no separate label software.
- Item catalog management — listing titles, descriptions, images, attributes, and pricing pushed from one place. No more juggling spec sheets and flat files.
- Returns and refunds matched back to the original order, with restock, re-grade, or write-off paths.
- Multi-account support — run more than one Walmart seller account from one Rilk login.
What's supported
- Walmart Marketplace standard listings with full catalog management.
- WFS (Walmart Fulfillment Services) inbound shipments and inventory tracking, separated from self-fulfilled stock.
- Walmart Buy Shipping for merchant-fulfilled labels at Walmart-protected rates.
- Marketplace returns with full status tracking.
- Settlement and payment reports parsed and tied to per-order, per-unit profit.
- Catalog edits pushed live — titles, descriptions, images, attributes, prices.
- Listing suppression and active/inactive status visible on one screen.
- Multi-account support for sellers running more than one Walmart account.
Why use Rilk instead of Seller Center
Walmart Seller Center is good at what it does — running a Walmart storefront. The problem is that nobody actually runs only Walmart. Every Walmart seller we've worked with also sells on Amazon, runs at least one own-branded store, and ships from a real warehouse.
Rilk is the layer that ties Walmart to the rest of that picture. WFS stock and warehouse stock share the same per-unit cost history. A return on Walmart and a return on Amazon land in the same returns workflow. Walmart settlement money and Amazon settlement money roll up into one per-unit profit number that already accounts for fees, freight, and refunds.
You still open Seller Center for the things Walmart wants you to do there — performance metrics, content updates that need their console, dispute filings. You stop opening it for daily order, inventory, and shipping work.
Connecting Walmart
Setup runs in minutes. Log into Rilk, open Integrations, pick Walmart, click Connect, and authorize Rilk to access your Walmart Marketplace seller account. The first sync runs immediately and your live listings, recent orders, WFS inventory, and recent returns flow into Rilk.
If you run more than one Walmart account — for example, a primary seller account and a separate refurbished-only account — connect each one. Rilk treats them as separate channels under the same Rilk company.
Related capabilities
- Multi-channel sync — one stock pool across Amazon, Walmart, eBay, Shopify, and BackMarket.
- Shipping — buy and print labels for UPS, FedEx, USPS, and DHL alongside Walmart Buy Shipping.
- Returns — inspect, restock, re-grade, or write off, reconciled against the marketplace refund.
- Reporting — per-unit profit verified against settlement data.
