Expand your assortment with pesticide products
Hi,
Looking to grow your catalog with products in a new category? Customers are searching for cleaning, gardening and pest control items. Now, you can fulfill them with safe handling and fast delivery by Walmart Fulfillment Services (WFS) thanks to built-in compliance workflows through UL Solutions.1
Sellers using WFS see 50% GMV growth, on average, for items with the ‘Fulfilled by Walmart’ tag and delivery promises of two days or less.2What are pesticides?
A pesticide is any product advertised to kill, repel or prevent the growth of any living organism, including plants, insects, rodents and microorganisms. Here are a few examples:
- Mosquito repellents, bug sprays, and flea and tick control products
- Lawn care products, fertilizer and weed killers
- Disinfectants, sanitizers and anti-bacterial cleaners
How do I fulfill pesticides through WFS?
- Create a UL Solutions account.
- Submit product images and required documentation.
- Receive an approved lab test from UL Solutions.
- Add approved items to your WFS catalog.
Check out Marketplace Learn for a full overview of how to fulfill pesticide products through WFS.
Thanks,
The Walmart Marketplace team
Damn Lantern Flies are back in my yard so need some.
Year 4 @Pepper_Thine_Angus - Still waiting for a break…
I found one this week inside my window, on the sill.
Good news is I have tons of pesticides listed on Amazon…
Someone has the Blue Origin itch?
![]()
Jeff has blown up so many seller’s lives.
Now he knows how they feel.
Glad nobody was hurt, other than his ego.
Wonder who’s paying for the completely destroyed launch pad / facility?
Hear it will take a year or more to rebuild.
I’m sure they have insurance.
There are actually Space Insurance companies.
But at least in the case of a similar Space X mishap a few years ago, the Launch Insurance does not kick in until the rocket clears the launch tower. Any explosion or other issue prior to that is not covered. Space X ended up eating the cost of not only their rocket, but also the commercial payload.
I suspect a similar outcome here (although insurance often has multiple layers; there may very well be insurance against the insurance not paying out, and maybe even insurance against THAT insurance policy not paying)
which is why that ‘oops we didn’t deliver the satellite into the orbit we meant to’ got paid out by insurance.

