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Amazon Secures NLRB Agreement on Joint Employer Status with Delivery Service Partners
By MGN Editorial•June 4, 2026 at 12:00 AM
Amazon has reached a deal with the National Labor Relations Board that effectively resolves questions over whether the e-commerce giant qualifies as a joint employer with its Delivery Service Partners, a ruling with significant implications for last-mile logistics operators.
Amazon has secured a significant legal and regulatory victory after reaching an agreement with the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) that should settle the long-running question of whether the company holds joint employer status with its network of Delivery Service Partners (DSPs), according to FreightWaves.
The deal carries substantial consequences for the broader logistics and freight delivery sector, where the classification of employer relationships between large platform operators and their contracted carriers has been a contentious and evolving legal battleground.
**What Is at Stake**
Amazon's DSP programme comprises hundreds of small, independently operated delivery companies that collectively handle a significant portion of Amazon's last-mile parcel delivery volume across the United States. A finding of joint employer status would have exposed Amazon to collective bargaining obligations and potential liability for labour practices across those partner businesses — a scenario the company has consistently sought to avoid.
The NLRB's joint employer standard has been subject to considerable regulatory flux in recent years, with the definition of what constitutes sufficient control over workers shifting under successive administrations. Amazon's agreement with the board appears to draw a clearer boundary, affirming the independent operational status of its DSP partners relative to Amazon's own workforce obligations.
**Broader Industry Implications**
The outcome is being closely watched by freight and logistics operators who rely on similar asset-light, contractor-based delivery models. A ruling against Amazon could have set a precedent compelling other large shippers and platform-based logistics providers to reassess their contractual structures with independent carriers and owner-operators.
For maritime and intermodal freight stakeholders, the case echoes ongoing debates around port drayage contractors and the classification of independent truckers operating within supply chain networks — issues that directly affect port productivity and labour relations at major US gateway ports.
The agreement is expected to provide Amazon with greater operational certainty as it continues to expand its proprietary logistics infrastructure, which increasingly competes with traditional freight and parcel carriers across domestic supply chains.
*Source: FreightWaves*
#last-mile delivery#logistics#NLRB#Amazon DSP#labour relations#supply chain#freight regulation
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