From $1.99 · Standard tier · Real-account vetting
Cheap Facebook page likes mean two completely different products in this market. Most low-cost vendors ship datacenter bots and account-farm shells that look like a number on your page until Meta's next integrity sweep wipes them out. Our Standard tier from $1.99 ships real-account page likes that pass the same five-point vetting check our top tiers use — cheaper because of pool volume, not because we cut quality.
There is a unit-economics floor below which a vendor cannot ship real-account Facebook page likes and still pay for them. Maintaining a vetted pool of Facebook profiles with stable account ages, real profile photos, posting histories, and friend graphs costs roughly 9 to 14 times what a throwaway shell account costs to spin up. Vendors selling 5,000 page likes for $4.99 ($0.001 per like) are not paying for vetted-account work — the math literally does not allow it. They are shipping account-farm bots: profiles created in coordinated batches, often with rotated stock photos and copy-paste bios, sometimes from the same datacenter IP range across hundreds of profiles.
Account-farm page likes look fine on the page-likes counter for the first few weeks. The number ticks up, the page looks more credible to a casual visitor, and on the surface the order delivered. Then Meta runs a routine integrity pass — these run quarterly with smaller weekly sweeps in between — and the account-farm shells get caught and removed in batches. A 5,000-like cheap order can lose 40 to 70 percent of its delivered likes inside the first 90 days, and the page is left looking worse than it started because the like-count drop is itself a negative signal Facebook's page-quality scorer reads.
Our Standard tier at $1.99 for 100 real-account page likes is the cheapest price point we know of in the legitimate market. Below that, you are in account-farm territory by definition. Above that, additional filtering (profiles that have engaged in the last 7 days, US/CA geo-verified pools) drives the price up because the eligible inventory is smaller. For most pages just trying to clear the early credibility threshold without paying premium tier prices, Standard is the right tier — and the per-like price drops further on larger packages because vetting cost amortizes across volume.
Facebook's page quality scorer reads page like history as a slow-decay signal — likes that hold over months feed into the trust score the News Feed ranker uses when deciding whether to surface a page's posts to followers at all. Real-account likes hold indefinitely, modulo the 1 to 3 percent monthly attrition every Facebook page has from accounts that genuinely deactivate. Account-farm likes get wiped in batches and the page-quality scorer reads the wipe pattern as a negative trust signal, which then dampens organic post reach for weeks afterward.
The trailing damage is the part most cheap-vendor buyers do not anticipate. Once Meta's anti-spam heuristic correlates a page with bulk fake-account engagement (it does this automatically, with no human review), the page lands in a soft-flag state where new posts get artificially low feed eligibility. The fix takes 30 to 60 days of clean posting and engagement to clear, assuming you do not trip the heuristic again. Real-account orders never trigger the heuristic in the first place because the engagement profile looks like organic likes from real Facebook users, which is what they are.
There is also a visibility-side cost most buyers miss. Brands evaluating advertising partnerships, ad-account specialists looking at a page's quality score, and even casual visitors who scroll the page's followers list will see the bot pattern within seconds — accounts with zero photos, no posts, generic names, and no friends are immediately recognizable as throwaway shells. Real-account page likes pass that visual audit because the underlying accounts have real profile photos, real posting histories, and real friend graphs. Cheap on Likes.io does not mean cheap-looking; it means cheap-because-volume.
Our entry-level package starts at $1.99 for 100 real-account page likes — the cheapest price point we ship and the price floor below which real-account delivery is not economically possible in this market. Larger packages bring the per-like cost down further because vetting work amortizes across volume, but the floor for real-account delivery sits at our Standard tier. Anything cheaper than this from any vendor is account-farm bots by mathematical necessity.
Because they are not selling real-account likes. A 10,000-page-like order at $5 works out to $0.0005 per like — roughly 1/4000th the cost of vetting a real Facebook profile. That price point can only ship account-farm shells: profiles created in coordinated batches, often with stock photo headshots and identical bio templates, sometimes flagged in Meta's next quarterly integrity sweep within days of delivery. The sticker price looks like a deal. The real cost is the soft-flag dampening applied to your page when the bot pattern gets detected.
Real-account page likes from our Standard tier do — measured retention sits around 91 to 94 percent at the 30-day mark, with attrition primarily from accounts that genuinely deactivate (normal Facebook user churn). Account-farm likes from cheap-vendor sources typically lose 40 to 70 percent of the original order in the first 90 days as Meta's quarterly integrity passes catch and remove them in batches. Our 30-day refill guarantee covers any drops below the retention threshold during the protection window.
Bot-tier page likes can. Meta's Business Manager runs a quality scorer on the pages tied to ad accounts, and one of its inputs is the integrity-sweep history of the page's followers — pages that lose large chunks of their like base in sweeps get scored down, which raises ad CPMs and reduces audience quality scores. Real-account orders from our Standard tier do not get caught in sweeps, so they do not affect your ad-account quality score negatively. Cheap-and-real is the only path that keeps both your page credibility and your ad-account economics intact.
Standard tier starts within 2 to 4 hours of order confirmation and paces over a 12 to 36 hour window for typical packages, with larger orders (5,000 plus) pacing across 2 to 4 days. The pacing is not a delivery delay — it is a deliberate velocity curve designed to look like organic page-like growth instead of an instant flat dump, which is one of the patterns Meta's anti-spam heuristic was tuned to flag. Front-loading or instant delivery on page likes is exactly the failure mode you want to avoid.
Per-like price drops as quantity increases, so larger packages do represent better unit economics — a 100-like package at $1.99 is $0.0199 per like, while a 5,000-like package at the same Standard tier works out to roughly $0.005 per like. But size the order to your page's organic baseline. A page with 200 organic likes jumping to 5,200 likes overnight looks unnatural to both human visitors and Facebook's heuristic, even with real-account delivery. A safer rule of thumb is to keep the order at no more than 5 to 10 times your current organic like count, then run another order after the page has settled and posted new content.
Standard tier from $1.99 for real-account Facebook page likes — paced delivery, vetted profiles, and 30-day refill on every order. Cheap because of pool volume, not because we cut corners on quality.