Bulk subscription · Real-account per-video rates
Cheap auto-likes on TikTok means bulk-subscription pricing that lets the per-video real-account rate drop to numbers manual orders can't match — but still floored above the iframe-bot tier. The 30-day commitment is what lets us pre-allocate pool capacity and pass the savings down.
Pay-as-you-go like orders carry the full per-video acquisition cost — every order has to be processed, queued, and routed independently. Subscription orders pre-allocate pool capacity for a 30-day window, which lets us batch the routing, smooth the scheduling against demand spikes, and pass the operational savings into a lower per-video rate. The per-video price on the cheapest subscription tier sits 30-50% below the equivalent one-off order on the same like quantity.
The pool economics also change at scale. A 30-day commitment from a creator posting daily means we know the demand profile in advance and can stage delivery against the slack hours when our pool capacity is underused. One-off orders compete for capacity at the moment they're placed, which prices in the queue position. Subscription orders price against the average, which is meaningfully lower.
Where the price floor still holds: real-account inventory has a floor below which delivery is not economically possible regardless of subscription cadence. The iframe-bot vendors selling auto-like 'subscriptions' at $5/month for 1,000 likes per video are shipping coordinated bot dumps that get cleared by TikTok's spam filter and trip the anti-spam heuristic on your account. Cheap-subscription real-account auto-likes work; cheap-subscription bot-tier auto-likes destroy your distribution.
Three levers move the price within the auto-likes family: per-video like quantity, daily upload cap, and account-quality tier. Cheap typically means low quantity (100-250 likes per video), low daily cap (1-2 per day), and Standard tier (general vetted pool). Premium subscriptions move up on all three: higher quantity (1K-5K per video), higher cap (5-10 per day), Active or Premium NA tier (engagement-filtered or geo-verified pools).
The cheap configuration is right for creators just starting to layer engagement on top of organic activity, or for niches where the FYP probe-window threshold is naturally low (less competitive niches, longer-format content, smaller-audience accounts). For high-stakes content or competitive niches where the probe-window threshold is steeper, the cheap tier underperforms and the math tilts toward standard.
All cheap-tier orders still ship from the vetted real-account pool with paced probe-window-aware delivery — the cuts are on quantity and source-account filtering, not on real-vs-bot status. We don't have a tier below real because we don't ship that inventory.
100 likes per video, 1 video per day cap, Standard tier. Pricing scales with quantity and daily cap; the entry-level configuration runs at the lowest monthly rate that still sustains real-account delivery (i.e., above the iframe-bot price floor). For lower price points, the math doesn't work — you'd be in coordinated-bot territory.
Per-video, the subscription rate runs 30-50% below the one-off equivalent on the same like quantity. The savings come from pool-allocation efficiency: a 30-day commitment lets us batch the routing and stage delivery against pool slack hours, which we can't do for one-off orders that have to compete for capacity at order time. The break-even vs one-off ordering is roughly 8-10 videos per month.
Yes. The cheap tier is the cheapest sustainable price for real-account auto-like delivery on TikTok. What changes between cheap and standard isn't real-vs-bot status — it's like quantity per video, daily upload cap, and account-quality tier. We don't ship a sub-real tier because the bot economics don't survive TikTok's spam filter.
Yes. The probe-window timing logic is identical across all tiers — auto-detect spawns the order within 60-90 seconds of new-upload detection, delivery starts in 2-5 minutes, and the bulk lands inside the FYP 2-4 hour probe window. The like quantity is what changes between tiers, not the delivery shape.
Niche and account-size dependent. Sub-niche creators with under 5K followers see meaningful FYP movement at 100-200 likes per video. Mid-size creators in competitive niches usually need 500+ to clear the probe-window threshold. The cheap configuration covers the first scenario; for the second, the standard or premium tier pays back. Order analytics in your dashboard show whether the like quantity is clearing the threshold.
Yes. Mid-cycle upgrades prorate against the remaining subscription days — you pay the price difference for the remaining days, the new quantity kicks in immediately on the next auto-detected upload. Downgrades work the same way at next cycle (no prorated refund mid-cycle, but the lower rate applies on renewal).
Bulk-subscription real-account rates that manual orders can't match, paced delivery inside every probe window, no iframe-bot exposure. The cheapest sustainable real-account auto-likes on TikTok.