Real accounts · Vetted pool · Subscription quality
Auto-likes from the same vetted-account pool we use for one-off orders. The subscription rotates accounts so the same likers don't repeat across your posts — looks organic to anyone scrolling your liker list. No bot hearts, no integrity-sweep purges.
Bot auto-like services have a structural problem one-off bot orders don't: every new post you publish gets the same bot-account treatment, so your account's average liker quality stays low across your entire content history. One-off bot orders create one bad post; bot auto-subscriptions create a 30-post pattern that the algorithm reads as account-level low quality.
Meta's account-level quality score reads engagement source over time. An account whose recent 20 posts all received likes from the same low-quality account cluster gets flagged as botted and gets a permanent reach handicap. The damage doesn't reverse when you cancel the subscription — the historical engagement profile is on record.
Real-account auto-likes don't have this problem. The underlying accounts pass spam-filter heuristics, the rotation prevents the same accounts from over-engaging with your profile, and the engagement-source-quality signal stays in your account's good band across the full subscription window.
Two rules. First, no individual account in our vetted pool engages with the same target account more than 3 times in a 30-day window. The auto-subscription system enforces this by maintaining a per-target rotation table — when a post needs likes, the picker excludes any account that's already engaged with this account recently and pulls from the larger fresh-rotation pool.
Second, the per-post like distribution randomizes across the available pool. If your subscription delivers 100 likes per post and you post daily, that's 3,000 individual likes across 30 days. Those come from 800–2,000 different real accounts (depending on configured rotation density), not 100 accounts that show up on every post. Anyone scrolling your liker list across multiple posts sees variety — what natural-engagement accounts always show.
The combination produces an engagement signal that the algorithm reads as natural-quality across time. The account-level quality score stays high; the per-post engagement velocity moves; the social-proof on each post matches your follower base. All without the recognizability problem that bot-tier auto services create over their subscription window.
Same five-point vetted pool, different rotation logic. The auto-system runs its own per-target rotation table to prevent same-account-multiple-times patterns across your subscription window.
No — capped at 3 engagements per account per 30-day window. Across a daily-posting subscription, your liker list will show 800–2,000 different accounts depending on the configured rotation density.
Independent. Rotation tracks our pool's accounts only — your organic followers' likes are invisible to the rotation system. If an organic follower happens to like your post, the auto-likes layer on top without conflict.
Not directly — the liker list on Instagram doesn't distinguish source. From inside your dashboard you can see per-post auto-delivery counts (e.g., "100 auto-likes delivered to post X at 14:32 UTC"), but the visible liker list mixes auto-likes with organic likes the same way Instagram natively presents them.
30-day refill on every post's like-count. Real-account drops happen rarely (1–3% per month per Instagram's natural attrition rate); the daily monitoring sweep catches drops and tops them up automatically. Counts you see at delivery are counts you keep.
Vetted-account pools lose 1–4% in major sweeps (versus 30–60% for bot pools). Any post-level drops from a sweep get refilled within 24 hours by the daily sweep. The subscription continues normally; you don't notice the integrity sweep happened.
Real accounts, rotation logic, account-level quality maintained across the full subscription. The right shape of auto-engagement.