Quartile is a capable Amazon and retail-media ad platform, with AI bidding that spans Amazon, Walmart, and AMC integration. The reason sellers shop for alternatives usually comes down to fit: Quartile's pricing (a flat fee commonly from $895 up to $9,995 a month plus 2 to 5 percent of managed ad spend) and its enterprise lean make it a lot of platform for a smaller or mid-size seller.

The three alternatives below each fit a different profile, from a self-serve tool for a growing seller to an enterprise suite for a brand or agency running heavy spend. I have matched each to the kind of seller it actually suits.

Quick picks:

Best for growing Amazon and Walmart sellers: Teikametrics

Best enterprise and agency suite: Pacvue

Best self-serve tool that scales with spend: Perpetua

How to choose an Amazon PPC tool

Match pricing to your ad spend. Percentage-of-spend pricing is fine when your margins are healthy, but at high spend it becomes a large line item. Flat or tiered pricing is more predictable. Model the fee against your real monthly spend.

Marketplaces you sell on. If you are Amazon-plus-Walmart, most of these cover you. If you need broader retail media (Instacart, Target, and more), that narrows the field toward the enterprise suites.

Automation versus control. Some tools automate bidding almost entirely; others give you granular levers. Decide how hands-on you want to be before you judge a tool's dashboard.

Quartile alternatives compared at a glance

ToolBest forMarketplacesStarting priceRating
QuartileScaling multi-marketplace sellersAmazon, Walmart, retail media, AMC~$895 to $9,995/mo + 2 to 5% of spend4.1/5
TeikametricsGrowing Amazon/Walmart sellersAmazon, WalmartFrom ~$179/mo4.2/5
PacvueEnterprise and agenciesAmazon, Walmart, broad retail media~3 to 5% of ad spend (custom)4.3/5
PerpetuaSelf-serve, scales with spendAmazon, Walmart, InstacartFrom $250/mo4.2/5

Confirm current pricing with each vendor, since several use custom or spend-based models.

1. Teikametrics: best for growing sellers

Teikametrics is the most natural step down from Quartile for a seller who wants strong AI optimization without an enterprise commitment. Its Flywheel platform optimizes Amazon and Walmart ads and ties advertising to organic rank, and pricing is far more accessible: Essentials starts around $179 a month for up to $10,000 in ad spend, with Advanced around $1,430 a month for larger sellers. For a growing brand that finds Quartile's minimums too high, this is usually the answer, and it is an affiliate we cover in depth in the Teikametrics review.

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Pros

  • Accessible entry price from ~$179/mo
  • Flywheel ties ads to organic rank
  • Amazon and Walmart coverage
  • Strong fit for growing sellers

Cons

  • Fewer retail-media channels than the enterprise suites
  • Advanced tier jumps to ~$1,430/mo
  • Less hands-off than fully managed options

2. Pacvue: best for enterprise and agencies

If you are on the other side of Quartile, a large brand or agency that needs the broadest retail-media coverage and deep analytics, Pacvue is the enterprise answer. It spans Amazon, Walmart, and a wide set of retail-media networks with powerful automation and reporting, and it was acquired by Assembly in late 2025, deepening its agency-technology backing. Pricing is custom and typically runs about 3 to 5 percent of ad spend on annual contracts, so at $50,000 a month in spend you are looking at roughly $2,000 a month for the tool. It is more than a mid-size seller needs, and exactly right for enterprise scale.

Pros

  • Broadest retail-media coverage
  • Enterprise-grade automation and analytics
  • Strong for agencies managing many accounts

Cons

  • Custom, spend-based pricing gets expensive
  • Annual contracts with minimum terms
  • Overkill for smaller sellers

3. Perpetua: best self-serve tool

Perpetua is the self-serve pick that scales with your spend. Its tiers are transparent: Starter at $250 a month for up to $5,000 in monthly ad spend, a mid tier around $550 a month up to $30,000, and Pro at $1,100 a month up to $100,000, with a percentage-of-spend fee layered on above the thresholds. It covers Amazon, Walmart, and Instacart, and it is a favorite of hands-on sellers who want goal-based automation without an enterprise sales process. Note there is no annual billing or free trial, only monthly plans.

Pros

  • Transparent, tiered pricing from $250/mo
  • Goal-based automation, self-serve
  • Amazon, Walmart, and Instacart coverage

Cons

  • Percentage-of-spend fee kicks in above thresholds
  • No annual billing or free trial
  • Fewer channels than enterprise suites

Which Quartile alternative should you pick?

For a growing Amazon or Walmart seller, Teikametrics gives you strong AI optimization at an accessible price and is the most common step down from Quartile. For a large brand or agency that needs the widest retail-media coverage, Pacvue is the enterprise suite. For a hands-on seller who wants transparent, self-serve pricing that scales with spend, Perpetua fits. If you are still deciding whether Quartile itself is worth its minimums, the Quartile review covers the AI bidding and pricing, and the Amazon PPC roundup ranks the full field. Whatever you run, anchor the spend to a sensible ROAS target.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best Quartile alternative?

It depends on your size. Teikametrics is the best alternative for growing Amazon and Walmart sellers who want strong AI optimization at an accessible price from about $179 a month. Pacvue is the best enterprise and agency suite with the broadest retail-media coverage, and Perpetua is the best self-serve tool, with transparent tiered pricing from $250 a month that scales with your ad spend.

Is Teikametrics cheaper than Quartile?

Yes, considerably at the entry level. Teikametrics starts around $179 a month for up to $10,000 in ad spend, whereas Quartile typically runs a flat fee from about $895 up to $9,995 a month plus 2 to 5 percent of managed ad spend. For growing and mid-size sellers, Teikametrics is usually the more accessible choice, which is why it is the most common step down from Quartile.

Which Amazon PPC tool is best for large brands?

Pacvue is the strongest pick for large brands and agencies. It offers the broadest retail-media coverage across Amazon, Walmart, and many other networks, with enterprise-grade automation and analytics, and it is backed by agency-technology holding company Assembly. Its custom, percentage-of-spend pricing suits high ad spend, though it is more platform than smaller sellers need.

How is Amazon PPC software usually priced?

Most Amazon PPC platforms price in one of two ways: a percentage of managed ad spend (common with Quartile and Pacvue, often 2 to 5 percent), or flat and tiered monthly fees scaled to your spend level (Teikametrics and Perpetua). Percentage pricing becomes a large line item at high spend, so model the fee against your real monthly ad budget before choosing.

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