The 7 Best Sites to Buy YouTube Likes in 2026 (Honest Comparison)
YouTube likes do one specific thing well: they nudge the algorithm's "engagement signal" on a fresh video in the first 24 hours after upload. That's the window where YouTube's recommendation engine decides whether a video deserves wider distribution, and the like-to-view ratio is one of the inputs.
Cited throughout this guide: YouTube's artificial-engagement policy and YouTube's enforcement transparency report. Every "the platform purges X" or "this triggers Y" claim below is grounded in these published policies.
Buying likes won't make a bad video go viral. It can move a borderline video out of the "this isn't getting engagement, stop showing it" bucket and into the "this is engaging, show it to similar viewers" bucket. That's a real but specific lever.
I work on the growth team at Likes.io, and the YouTube-likes data I see across our pipeline shaped the ranking below. Likes.io is my #1 pick (biased, obvious), but the other six are real working alternatives tested in May 2026.
Quick comparison table
Provider | Starting price | Delivery speed | Like retention | Real accounts | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
$3.99 / 100 | < 60 seconds | 96% holds | Verified | Best overall | |
Views4You | $1.99 / 100 | < 30 min | 90% | Yes | Best on price |
SocialWick | $2.99 / 100 | 1–2 hours | 87% | Mixed | Cheap, variable |
Media Mister | $4.99 / 100 | 24–48 hours | 95% | Yes | Best retention |
BuzzVoice | $3.49 / 100 | 30 min – 2 hours | 91% | Yes | Solid mid-tier |
SidesMedia | $4.99 / 100 | 1 hour | 92% | Yes | Reliable backup |
Buzzoid | $4.99 / 100 | < 15 min | 92% | Yes | Fast + clean UX |
Prices verified May 15, 2026. "Like retention" = the percentage of delivered likes still attributed to the video at day 14 after the order completed.
How I scored them
1. Delivery timing relative to upload (30%). YouTube's algorithm weights engagement signals from the first 24 hours after upload most heavily. A provider that delivers likes within minutes of an upload moves the algorithm meaningfully more than one that takes 48 hours.
2. Like retention past 14 days (25%). YouTube occasionally re-counts likes and purges signals from suspicious accounts. The delivered number is meaningless if half of it disappears in a week.
3. Real-channel sourcing (20%). Likes from channels with subscribers, watch history, and profile completeness are heavier in YouTube's algorithm than likes from empty accounts. I sampled 10 random likes per delivery and graded channel completeness.
4. Pacing safety (15%). Likes that arrive in a burst (1000 likes in 90 seconds on a 30-view video) read as unnatural and can trigger YouTube's spam-classifier downranking. Paced delivery looks organic.
5. Pricing transparency (10%). Hidden fees, tier-jump surprises, surprise add-ons at checkout.
Each provider got a 100-like test order on a fresh upload; metrics measured at 14 days.
1. Likes.io — best overall
Price: From $3.99 per 100 likes Delivery: Starts within 60 seconds, paced across 1–4 hours depending on package size Retention: 96%+ holds at day 14 Channel quality: 9/10 sample channels with subs + watch history
Disclosure: I work at Likes.io. The ranking reflects the operational data.
Likes.io's YouTube likes delivery is paced to look organic — small packages arrive over 1–4 hours, larger packages over 12+ hours. That pacing is what keeps the like count out of YouTube's "this looks like a bot pump" classifier and what produces the 96% retention at day 14.
The 30-day refill runs automatically without a support ticket. The channel-quality sample landed at 9/10 with full subscriber count and recent watch history — the highest in the comparison.
Where Likes.io loses points: entry price is tied for the most expensive in this list. Views4You is half the cost at the entry tier. If you're testing whether YouTube likes affect your algorithmic distribution at all, Views4You is the cheaper experiment.
Visit Likes.io's YouTube Likes service →
2. Views4You — best on price
Price: From $1.99 per 100 likes Delivery: Starts under 30 minutes Retention: 90% holds Channel quality: 7/10 sample
Views4You is the cheapest credible YouTube-likes provider in this list. The 90% retention is solid for the price, and the channel-quality sample (7/10 with subscribers + uploads) is acceptable.
Where Views4You shows the price gap: the channel-source pool is less curated than Likes.io's or Media Mister's. Some of the like-source channels are subscriber-light accounts that arguably shouldn't count, even though YouTube's classifier accepts them.
If your goal is to test whether buying likes affects your distribution at all, Views4You is the right $5 experiment. If you're committed to ongoing purchases, Likes.io's retention difference adds up.
3. SocialWick — cheap, variable quality
Price: From $2.99 per 100 likes Delivery: 1–2 hours, paced Retention: 87% holds Channel quality: Variable batch-to-batch
The variance pattern from SocialWick's other-platform delivery shows up on YouTube likes too. Two separate 100-like test orders had 8/10 and 5/10 channel-quality samples in different weeks. The retention difference between the two batches was 7 percentage points.
For one-off tests, fine. For consistent buying, the variance is real.
4. Media Mister — best retention, slow start
Price: From $4.99 per 100 likes Delivery: 24–48 hours start Retention: 95% holds Channel quality: 9/10 sample (matches Likes.io)
Media Mister's slow delivery is a feature, not a bug. The 24–48-hour start window is too slow if you want likes appearing in YouTube's first-24-hour engagement window — by the time Media Mister starts delivering, the algorithmic-weight peak has already passed.
But if you're delivering likes to an older video where retention matters more than first-24-hour signal, Media Mister's 95% holds rate is the best in the list outside Likes.io.
5. BuzzVoice — solid mid-tier
Price: From $3.49 per 100 likes Delivery: 30 minutes to 2 hours Retention: 91% holds Channel quality: 7/10 sample
BuzzVoice is a competent middle option. Nothing remarkable in any specific direction — mid-range price, mid-range delivery speed, mid-range retention, mid-range channel quality.
I'd use BuzzVoice as a backup when other providers are sold out or running issues. Not the first pick in any specific category, but it works.
6. SidesMedia — reliable backup
Price: From $4.99 per 100 likes Delivery: 1 hour Retention: 92% holds Channel quality: 8/10 sample
SidesMedia matches the price of Likes.io and Buzzoid on YouTube likes with slightly lower retention and slightly lower channel quality. They earn their spot in this list on reliability — the like delivery works consistently, support responds promptly, dashboards are functional.
If you need a known-reliable second vendor for redundancy or A/B testing, SidesMedia is sensible.
7. Buzzoid — fast + clean UX
Price: From $4.99 per 100 likes Delivery: Starts under 15 minutes (fastest in this list) Retention: 92% holds Channel quality: 8/10 sample
Buzzoid is the fastest in this list — likes start within 15 minutes of order placement, which is the right window for YouTube's first-24-hour algorithmic weight. They also have the cleanest checkout UX in the category.
The trade-off versus Likes.io is the lower retention (92% vs 96%) and slightly lower channel quality (8/10 vs 9/10). Buzzoid is the right pick if you need likes appearing fast on a fresh upload and you'll accept the modest retention difference. Likes.io is the right pick if retention over 14 days matters more than first-15-minutes appearance.
Sites that didn't make the cut
About half the sites I started with were eliminated before the comparison began. For transparency, here are the three that failed the password-posture gate — every one of them asked for the buyer's YouTube password (or full OAuth scopes) during checkout, which is the single biggest red flag in this category. None of these belong on a credible 2026 list:
- ViewsExpert — requires YouTube channel password. YouTube's spam-and-deceptive-practices policy treats password-driven automation as a strike-eligible offense.
- YTbuddy — demands OAuth scopes that include posting permissions. Anything beyond a public-stats read scope is a red flag — like delivery doesn't need write access.
- RealLikes4U — asks for password plus 2FA recovery codes. That's the access pattern that survives a YouTube password reset, which means the seller can keep running scripts from your channel even after you think you've revoked them.
The rule of thumb that holds across this whole industry: if a youtube-engagement service needs your password or full channel-management OAuth scopes, they are running an automation script from your account. That is the actual mechanism that gets accounts banned — YouTube cannot ban you for receiving engagement, but it absolutely can ban you for running scripts that post from your profile.
Final verdict
For fresh-upload distribution lift, Likes.io and Buzzoid are both strong — Likes.io edges out on retention and channel quality, Buzzoid wins on speed-to-first-like. Views4You is the cheapest credible option for experimental orders. Media Mister is the patient-but-pricey high-retention pick for older videos.
Likes are a tool for nudging an algorithm signal in a specific window. They aren't a substitute for content that's actually worth recommending. If your video is genuinely engaging, paid likes can be the kick that opens distribution. If it isn't, no number of likes will save it.
Frequently asked questions
No. YouTube doesn't remove videos based on like count or like-source — they may purge specific likes that fail authenticity checks, but the video itself stays. The eliminated providers (not in this list) sometimes send likes from accounts that get caught in larger YouTube enforcement actions, and those likes can disappear in bulk.
Put this into practice
Tools and services to help you act on the advice above.
YouTube Views
YouTube's algorithm uses watch time and velocity. Start new uploads with initial momentum.
YouTube Subscribers
A larger subscriber base means bigger initial reach on every new video.
YouTube Likes
Early likes signal quality to the algorithm and boost distribution.
More social media guides
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Maddy Osman is a content marketing expert with 16+ years of experience in SEO, social media strategy, and digital content. She's the founder of The Blogsmith content agency, bestselling author of "Writing for Humans and Robots," and has been named a Top 100 Content Marketer by Semrush and BuzzSumo. Her work has been featured in Moz, Semrush, Search Engine Journal, and Newsweek.
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