Cheap · Standard tier · Channel-safe
Cheap YouTube subscribers are the single highest-risk SMM purchase a creator can make, channel termination if YouTube detects bot subscriber accounts. Our Standard tier sits above the bot-floor and below the legitimate mid-tier, with every subscriber from a real Google account in good standing.
Every social platform fights bots, but YouTube is the only platform where buying the wrong tier of cheap subscribers can permanently terminate your channel, not just the followers, the entire channel. YouTube's Terms of Service explicitly prohibit artificial inflation of subscriber counts via inauthentic accounts, and the spam-actions team enforces by deactivating channels found to be in violation. Once a channel is terminated for ToS violations, you lose every video, every comment, every subscriber, every dollar of monetization, and every dollar of trailing AdSense balance under $100 (unpaid balance is forfeited).
The trigger isn't 'bought subscribers' in the abstract, YouTube can't reliably detect that a subscriber was paid for. The trigger is the SIGNATURE of bot-tier subscriber orders: subscriptions from datacenter IPs, identical user-agents across thousands of subs, accounts that subscribe but never watch a single video, mass-subscribe spikes outside the algorithm's expected velocity range. $0.99/1000 services match all four signatures because they have no choice, at that price point they ship from datacenter IPs at scale, run automated subscribe scripts, and never load actual videos. The signature gets caught.
Our Standard tier on YouTube subscribers does NOT match those signatures because the underlying accounts are real Google accounts run by real users on real devices. The subscription comes from a residential IP, a unique user-agent, an account with watch history of other videos, and a velocity curve paced over hours from rotating accounts. YouTube's spam-detection scoring reads the pattern as native organic growth, not as artificial inflation. Same Standard-tier price point, dramatically different channel-termination risk profile.
Our Standard tier on YouTube subscribers is the cheapest real-account tier we sell on the platform, meaningfully above the $0.99/1000 bot-tier floor and meaningfully below the Premium tier for engagement-verified accounts. The position is deliberate. Below Standard prices, no real-Google-account pool exists. The economics don't work: a Google account in good standing with watch history takes meaningfully more work to source than a freshly-registered shell account, and the per-account sourcing cost is the price floor for any real-tier delivery.
Standard-tier accounts pass the same five-point check as Premium: Google account in good standing with no recent strikes, watch history showing video views in the last 30 days, existing subscription list of at least 5 other channels, country/language tag from the account UI, and a clean device fingerprint. What changes between tiers isn't whether the account is real, it's the additional engagement filtering on Premium (active comment/like history on subscribed channels) that drives the price up.
Sizing rule on YouTube: ship subscriber quantities at roughly 5-15% of your existing subscriber count per delivery. New channels under 100 subs should stick to 50-100 per order. Channels in the 1K-10K range work best with 250-1,000 per order. Established channels past 100K can absorb 1K-5K packs. Over-ordering relative to your current count compresses the velocity curve into a window YouTube's algorithm reads as suspicious, and on YouTube specifically, that suspicion translates into reduced algorithmic distribution on your subsequent video publishes.
Bot-tier cheap services in the $0.99-$2/1000 range will, yes. Channel-termination risk on those orders is high, the underlying accounts are coordinated bots that match every signature YouTube's spam-actions team uses for ToS enforcement. Our Standard tier does NOT carry termination risk because the accounts are real Google accounts with watch history, residential IPs, unique user-agents, and paced delivery from rotating real users. The signature does not match the pattern YouTube terminates channels for.
Our Standard tier on YouTube subscribers is the cheapest real-Google-account tier in the market that we know of. We can't price below the per-account sourcing cost of a real Google account in good standing with watch history, that's the price floor. The $0.99/1000 services exist because they ship coordinated bot accounts with no watch history, which is exactly the pattern that terminates channels. Standard tier is the cheapest channel-safe price point.
Yes. The Standard tier is our cheapest price point but every account passes the same five-point vetting check as every other tier: Google account in good standing, watch history in the last 30 days, at least 5 existing channel subscriptions, country/language tag from the UI settings, and a clean device fingerprint with no cluster match. Standard-tier subscribers are real YouTube users, what changes between tiers isn't whether the account is real, it's the additional engagement filtering on Premium.
Subscriber count is one of two YPP threshold requirements (1,000 subscribers + 4,000 watch hours in the trailing 12 months, or 1,000 subs + 10M Shorts views). Our Standard-tier subscribers count toward the subscriber threshold. They do not directly count toward the watch-hours threshold, for that you need actual watch time on your videos. The YouTube Studio analytics flag suspicious subscriber bursts during YPP review; Standard-tier orders paced over hours don't trigger that flag because the velocity matches organic growth.
Standard-tier 30-day drop rate sits in the high single digits to low teens percentile range under normal YouTube spam-sweep conditions. Every drop inside the 30-day window is automatically refilled by our daily monitoring sweep. Compare to bot-tier services from $0.99/1000 markets: drops in the 60-90% range within the first sweep cycle, AND the trailing risk that the spam-detection signature on those bot subscribers gets attributed to your channel and dampens distribution on future videos.
If the subscribers are bots that don't watch your videos, yes. YouTube's algorithm watches the watch-time-per-subscriber ratio on your channel; a low ratio gets read as 'low-quality subscriber base' and dampens distribution to non-subscribers on your next videos. Our Standard-tier subscribers are real users with watch history; a percentage of them surface your videos in their subscription feed and watch them, which keeps the watch-time-per-sub ratio in the native range. Bot subscribers leave that ratio at zero.
Standard tier subscribers from real Google accounts. Channel-termination-safe pacing, watch-history vetted, 30-day refill on every order.