The US-headquartered online firm said it was looking for a range of staff, including software developers and warehouse employees.
The jobs will be created at Amazon's head office in London, as well as in the Edinburgh customer service centre and in three new warehouses.
The UK market is Amazon's second-largest outside the US, after Germany.
"We are creating thousands of new UK jobs including hundreds of apprenticeship opportunities as we continue to innovate for our customers and provide them with even faster delivery, more selection and better value," said Doug Gurr, the head of Amazon's UK business.
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Its three new warehouses, or so-called "fulfilment centres", are to open up in Tilbury, Doncaster and Daventry across Britain. The extra warehouse space will be used to cope with existing growth and to speed-up deliveries, Amazon said.
It will also handle deliveries for third-party retailers, who sell through Amazon's website and use Amazon for deliveries. By the end of this year, Amazon will have 24,000 employees in the UK - a hike of 26 per cent from the current levels.
Britain's House of Lords today begins debating a bill empowering Prime Minister Theresa May to kickstart Brexit. The bill gives May the right to trigger Article 50 of the EU's Lisbon Treaty, the formal procedure to start negotiations on leaving the bloc.