Real · Vetted accounts · Spam-filter safe
Real TikTok likes come from accounts a human scrolled the FYP from today. Profile pictures, posted videos, watch history. Every like passes the same 5-point vetting check we run on follower orders — no iframe-loop bots, no datacenter ping spam, no shadowban heuristic exposure.
A real like is a heart-tap from an account that an actual human is operating right now. The account has a profile photo, posted videos in a recognizable niche, a watch history of FYP scrolling in the last 7 days, and engagement activity (likes, comments, follows) across other creators. None of that is true of a bot like. Bot likes come from accounts created in batches — 100, 500, 5,000 at a time — that have no posts, no profile photo, no watch history. They tap your heart counter and TikTok's spam filter clears them in the next sweep.
Every TikTok like we deliver passes five checks: minimum account age past the floor TikTok's spam detector flags, multiple original videos on the account's profile, opened TikTok and had a normal FYP watch session in the last 7 days, language and region tag inferred from caption text, and no device-cluster match with other accounts in our delivery pool. Anything failing any one of the five gets evicted from the pool on the next weekly sweep before it can be assigned to another order.
The retention math is the only thing that matters. Real likes from vetted accounts hold at high-80s to low-90s percent over 30 days. Bot likes drop 50-80% in the same window because TikTok's integrity sweeps clear the underlying accounts. You pay for the count once. The count either stays or it doesn't. We refill any drops automatically inside the 30-day window so the count you ordered is the count you keep.
TikTok's For You Page ranker reads engagement velocity in the first 2-4 hours after upload as the decisive distribution signal. Likes contribute to that velocity, but only if they survive the platform's spam check that runs in parallel. Real likes survive the check; bot likes don't, and the ranker reads the velocity reversal as a flag.
The like-share-comment ratio matters as much as the absolute like count. A video with 50K likes, 3 comments, and zero shares triggers the low-quality-engagement heuristic and distribution dampens hard. Real-account likes come paired with the supporting watch-time and (in some delivery patterns) follow-through engagement that keeps the ratio in the natural range. Bot likes come isolated — likes only, no watch-time, no follow-through — which is the exact signature the heuristic was tuned for.
Pacing matters more on TikTok than on Instagram. Instant 5,000-like dumps within the first 5 minutes of upload trip the velocity-spike detector regardless of whether the underlying accounts are real. Our default pacing on TikTok orders front-loads inside the first 60-90 minutes (when the FYP probe window is open) but spreads across the window rather than dumping flat. The shape of the curve is what the ranker reads, not just the magnitude.
A real like comes from an account with a profile photo, posted videos, a watch history that proves a human runs it, and recent FYP activity. A fake like comes from a zero-post bot account created in batches — same device cluster, copy-paste bio, no watch history. TikTok's spam filter clears the second category in the next sweep. Real likes don't get cleared because the underlying account isn't flagged.
Two checks. First, tap the heart count under any video that received our delivery and scroll the liker list — every account has a profile photo, a username that doesn't end in 8 random digits, and videos on their feed. Second, watch the count over 30 days: real-like services hold at 88-92% of the delivered total; bot services drop 50-80% in the first month as TikTok sweeps the spam accounts.
No — not from real-account paced delivery. The TikTok 'shadowban' heuristic is tuned for the bot-pattern signature: instant 50K-like dumps from same-IP datacenter ranges, zero watch-time on every like, no follow-through engagement, identical user-agent strings. Real-account delivery doesn't match any of those. The dampening creators call shadowbans usually traces back to bot-tier engagement, single low-watch-through videos pulling the account baseline down, or community-guideline strikes — not to real-account paced orders.
They contribute to the engagement-velocity signal the FYP ranker reads in the first 2-4 hours after upload. If your video clears the velocity threshold (above-baseline-for-your-niche-and-account-size), the ranker expands distribution in steep lifts. Real likes paced inside the probe window directly help that math; bot likes don't because they get cleared before the ranker reads the post's day-1 score.
Standard tier starts within 1-3 minutes and paces over 60-90 minutes depending on package size. Premium and Ultra tiers pace slower (4-12 hours) because the underlying account pool is smaller — there are fewer 90+ day vetted accounts than fresh accounts. Faster isn't always better on TikTok: the platform reads instant 5K-like dumps as a bot-pattern signal regardless of whether the underlying accounts are real.
Refilled automatically by the daily monitoring sweep. Real-account drops happen rarely (a few percent per month is normal TikTok-wide audience attrition) and the refill credit covers any shortfall against the original delivery count for 30 days. No support ticket needed; the sweep checks each order's like count daily and tops up automatically when the count slips below the delivered total.
Standard tier from $1.99, Premium from $4.99, Ultra from $19.99 — all sourced from the same vetted pool. Tier difference is account age and engagement history, not bot-vs-real. Every tier is real.