Real · Watch-time verified · Channel-safe
YouTube subscribers are the hardest social signal to fake on any platform. The algorithm watches retention and watch-time per subscriber on every video you publish. Bots don't watch videos. Real subscribers do, which is why our Real tier is the only kind of subscriber order YouTube's algorithm actually rewards.
Every social platform fights some version of the bot problem, but YouTube's defense is the strongest because YouTube measures behavior, not just account existence. Instagram counts followers as a number on your profile. YouTube counts subscribers as a number too, but the algorithm separately tracks what those subscribers actually do, do they open the YouTube app, do they see your videos in their subscription feed, do they click your videos, do they watch past the first 30 seconds, do they watch to the end. Each of those signals feeds the algorithmic-reach engine that determines whether your next video gets pushed to non-subscribers.
A bot subscriber moves the visible counter on your channel page but contributes zero to any of those behavior signals. Worse, a channel with a high subscriber count and a low watch-time-per-subscriber ratio looks suspicious to the algorithm, YouTube's spam-detection scoring reads that pattern as 'likely purchased subscribers' and dampens distribution on your future videos. The visible counter went up, the algorithmic reach went down. Net negative.
Real subscribers from our delivery pool are accounts run by actual humans who open YouTube on a regular schedule. When you publish a new video, a percentage of them see it in their subscription feed (YouTube's algorithm shows different videos to different subscribers, so 100% reach is impossible for any channel). A percentage of those click. A percentage of those watch past the first 30 seconds. The watch-time-per-subscriber ratio looks native because the subscribers are native. Your algorithmic reach scales with your subscriber count rather than getting capped by it.
Every account in our YouTube subscribers Real tier passes all five of these checks before being assigned to your channel: a Google account in good standing (no recent strikes, no suspension history), a YouTube watch history showing video views in the last 30 days, an existing subscription list of at least 5 other channels (real users follow multiple creators, not just one), a country/language tag pulled from the account's UI settings, and a device fingerprint that's not part of a cluster running 100+ subscriptions from the same hardware.
The watch-history requirement is the single most important filter. YouTube's spam-detection sweeps look for accounts that subscribe but never watch, that pattern is the signature of a sub-only bot, and YouTube clears those subscriptions in batches when sweeps run. Accounts in our Real tier have active recent watch history, which means YouTube reads them as engaged users rather than spam, and the subscriptions stick.
The verification you can do yourself: after delivery, your YouTube Studio analytics will show your subscriber-to-view ratio improving on subsequent video publishes, real subscribers contribute to the views-from-subscriptions metric in your analytics, bot subscribers contribute zero to it. If you order from a cheap-shell service and your views-from-subscriptions stays flat after delivery, that's the test confirming the subscribers were bots.
Sourcing economics. A YouTube account with active watch history, an existing subscription list, a clean Google-account standing, and a real device fingerprint takes more work to source than an Instagram or X account because YouTube requires the underlying Google account to be in good standing, and Google accounts get cleared by Google's spam systems independently of YouTube's. The eligible-account pool is smaller, so the per-subscriber cost is higher than equivalent-tier follower products on other platforms.
A percentage will. YouTube's algorithm shows different videos to different subscribers based on their watch history and the algorithm's scoring of your video, so 100% subscriber reach on any video is impossible for any channel, even MrBeast's videos surface to about 10-20% of his subscribers in the first 24 hours. Real subscribers from our pool show up in the 5-15% reach range on a published video's first 24 hours, which matches the native organic baseline for a channel of equivalent size. Bot subscribers contribute zero to that reach.
Real-tier subscribers paced over hours from rotating real-account IPs are channel-safe. YouTube's terms-of-service violations on the spam-actions list are about coordinated inauthentic behavior, datacenter IP dumps, identical user-agents, view-but-don't-watch bot patterns, sub-only bots that never watch videos. Real-tier orders don't match any of those signatures because the underlying accounts are real users with watch histories. Cheap shell-tier subscriber services DO match those signatures, which is why they trigger channel terminations.
Measured 30-day retention on the Real tier is in the high 80s to low 90s percentile range. Real subscribers stay indefinitely unless they unsubscribe (normal attrition runs about 1-3% per month across YouTube as a platform) or the underlying Google account gets cleared by Google's spam systems (rare for vetted accounts). Every drop inside the 30-day window is refilled automatically by our daily monitoring sweep. After 30 days, drops follow normal channel attrition.
Subscriber count is one of two YouTube Partner Program threshold requirements (1,000 subscribers + 4,000 watch hours in the trailing 12 months, or 1,000 subs + 10M Shorts views). Our 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 existing videos, which real subscribers contribute to passively when they see your videos in their subscription feed. Pair a subscriber order with a YouTube views order on your existing videos for a faster monetization path.
Three checks. First: your YouTube Studio analytics will show subscribers contributing to the 'views from subscriptions' traffic source on your subsequent videos, real subscribers contribute, bots don't. Second: real subscribers contribute to the average-view-duration metric on your videos because a percentage of them watch; bot subscribers leave that metric flat. Third: visible audit, click into your subscriber list (the Channels tab on accounts where it's public), and real subscriber profiles show subscription histories of multiple channels, real avatars, and account ages past a year. Bots show single-channel subscription lists, default avatars, and recent account-creation dates.
Three tiers, watch-history vetted, 30-day refill on every order. Choose a subscriber pack that matches your channel's growth curve.