From $1.99 · Standard tier · Page-follower delivery
Cheap Facebook followers should clear the same eligibility gate as expensive ones — that is the entire point of the order. Our Standard tier from $1.99 ships real-account followers from the same vetted pool our top tiers use, with the price difference coming from filtering depth rather than from any cut to account quality. The ranker reads follower count from the page-eligibility check, not from how much you paid per follower.
Facebook's News Feed ranker runs a binary eligibility check before deciding whether to surface a page's posts to its followers at all. The check reads two inputs: total page follower count and recent posting cadence. Pages that fall below an internal follower threshold (estimated to sit around 1,000 followers for most page categories) effectively drop off the eligibility list entirely — meaning the next post you publish surfaces to zero of your existing followers, not even the ones who deliberately hit the follow button last month. This is the trap pages fall into when they let follower count stagnate while focusing on engagement metrics instead.
The page-eligibility signal does not weight followers by how much you paid for them. A real-account follower acquired through our Standard tier counts identically to a real-account follower acquired through Premium NA, in terms of moving the page across the eligibility threshold. What the higher tiers buy you is filtering — Active tier followers are profiles that have engaged with Facebook in the last 7 days, Premium NA is geo-verified US/CA inventory — and that filtering matters for specific use cases like brand-deal pitches or US-targeted advertising. For pages that just need to clear the eligibility gate, cheap real followers do that job at the lowest unit cost we can ship.
The 2018 page-follower fork is what makes this even possible at low prices. Before that change, page likes and page followers were the same signal — liking a page automatically meant following it. Facebook split them so users could like a page (signaling general endorsement) without subscribing to its posts (the follow). That split created two separate inventory pools on the vendor side, and page-follower inventory turns out to be slightly cheaper to source than page-like inventory because the underlying accounts are more interchangeable across pages without raising heuristic flags. Standard tier passes that cost saving through.
Standard tier ships real-account followers paced over a 12 to 48 hour window depending on order size, with no instant flat dumps. The pacing matches the velocity curve of an organic Facebook follower base growing through ad reach or shared content — the curve Meta's spam heuristic was tuned to read as legitimate. Cheap-vendor account-farm orders typically front-load delivery aggressively, dumping all the followers in the first 30 minutes because their fake accounts cannot afford to sit idle in a queue. The flat-dump pattern is exactly what the heuristic flags first.
Every Standard tier follower passes the same five-point vetting check our top tiers use: minimum 60-day account age, real profile photo, posting history visible, friend graph not isolated, no device-cluster match with other accounts in the pool. Profiles that fail re-verification on the weekly sweep get evicted from the pool before they can be reassigned to another order. That is how Standard maintains 91 to 94 percent retention at the 30-day mark — the cheap price point reflects pool size and operational scale, not a relaxation of the vetting criteria.
The followers do not appear with engagement automatically. Page followers are a credibility-and-eligibility signal, not a per-post engagement signal — they unlock distribution to your existing followers, but they do not generate likes or comments on individual posts. To pair the eligibility lift with post-level engagement, most page operators run a follower order alongside small page-like and post-engagement orders on recent posts. The combined signal moves both the slow-decay credibility score and the fast-decay per-post engagement score in the same order cycle.
Yes — Facebook split page likes and page followers in 2018, and they have been separate signals ever since. A page like is an endorsement signal that contributes to the page's slow-moving trust score. A page follower is a feed-eligibility signal that controls whether the page's next post surfaces in followers' feeds at all. Most growth services treat them as interchangeable; we ship them as separate SKUs because they move different parts of the ranker's decision tree, and choosing the right one depends on where your bottleneck is.
The price floor for real-account Facebook follower delivery sits around $0.02 per follower at small package sizes, dropping toward $0.005 to $0.008 per follower at large quantities where vetting cost amortizes. Anything cheaper than that is bot inventory — coordinated account farms, stock-photo profile shells, datacenter-IP signups. Our Standard tier sits right at this real-account floor, which is why it represents the best unit economics for pages just trying to clear the feed-eligibility threshold.
Yes, if the order brings your total follower count above the page-eligibility threshold for your page category. The ranker reads total follower count as one of the inputs to the eligibility binary — once you clear the threshold, your posts start surfacing in followers' feeds again. The exact threshold varies by page category and by recent posting cadence, but most pages see meaningful eligibility improvement once they are in the 1,000 to 2,500 follower range. Standard tier orders are sized to clear that gate without paying for filtering you do not need.
Standard tier retention sits at 91 to 94 percent measured at 30 days post-delivery, comparable to the 1 to 3 percent monthly attrition every Facebook page sees from genuine user deactivations. Drops below that retention floor inside the 30-day refill window get refilled automatically by our daily monitoring sweep. Cheap account-farm orders from other vendors lose 40 to 70 percent in the same window because Meta's integrity sweeps clear the obvious bot patterns; we do not ship those.
Standard tier starts within 2 to 6 hours of order confirmation and paces over a 12 to 48 hour window for typical package sizes. Larger orders (5,000 plus followers) pace over 2 to 5 days because the velocity curve has to stay below the level where Facebook's anti-spam heuristic registers a coordinated influx. The pacing is the cheapest defense against trips on the spike detector — flat dumps from real accounts still trip it because the velocity shape is what gets read, not just the account quality.
Depends on which signal is your bottleneck. If your page is below the feed-eligibility threshold and your posts are getting near-zero reach, run a follower order first to clear that gate. If your page is past eligibility but conversion-rate from page visits is low because the like count looks thin, run a page-like order first to thicken the credibility signal. Most operators with budget for both run them sequentially over a 7 to 14 day window so the velocity stays organic-shaped on both signals.
Standard tier from $1.99 — real-account Facebook page followers paced for organic-looking velocity curves, vetted from the same pool our top tiers use, and refilled automatically through 30 days. Cheap because volume, not quality.