The moment you lose them: “Be the first to comment”
Here is how it usually goes. Someone taps your post from a share or a group feed, reads the caption, then glances underneath to see what other people said about it. What they find is the empty prompt Facebook displays when a thread has zero replies. That silence answers the question for them, and they move on without reacting, without following, and without clicking whatever the post was promoting.
Likes cannot rescue that moment. A reaction count says people approved; a comment thread says people showed up and talked. Facebook’s feed also tends to circulate posts that spark replies, since a reply takes more effort than a passive thumbs up, and effort is what ranking systems generally reward. Seeding the thread changes what the next visitor walks into: an ongoing discussion instead of a dead room. And ongoing discussions attract genuine replies far more readily than silent ones ever do.
What you get and how fast it arrives
Every pack on this page delivers comments to one public Facebook post: a status update, a photo, a video, or a Reel, anything with a link that works while logged out. Orders enter processing in about 13 hours, with delivery paced at 1k-2k comments per day, so the 1,000 pack completes within a day of kicking off and smaller sizes finish in a fraction of that time. The order form takes the post URL and stops there. Your password stays yours, no app gets installed, and admin access never enters the picture.
The ladder
- 10 comments for $0.99, the cheapest way to test quality on a live post
- 25 for $3.25 or 50 for $6.50, enough to fill the visible thread under a personal or small-page post
- 100 for $13 and 250 for $32.50, sized for pages with established audiences
- 500 for $65 and 1,000 for $130, built for launches, giveaways, and ad-driven pushes
Pricing runs flat at 13 cents per comment across the whole ladder, and the 10-pack actually dips below that. No refill guarantee is attached to this service. The low rate exists precisely because we sell it on turnaround and price rather than on long-term warranties.
The honest part
People weighing whether to buy Facebook comments also ask about the risks, and that question deserves a straight answer. Buying engagement conflicts with Facebook’s terms of service, which parks it in policy territory, a terms-of-service question rather than a criminal one, and the downside discussed most often is inauthentic activity getting filtered out. Match quantities to your audience, because 1,000 comments under a page with 80 followers convinces nobody. At sensible ratios, a seeded thread does one narrow job extremely well: it stops the bounce at the exact second a visitor checks whether anyone else cared.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the risks of buying Facebook comments?
The structural one is platform policy: inauthentic engagement conflicts with Facebook’s terms, so buying comments is generally treated as a terms-of-service matter, not a criminal one. The outcome discussed most often is filtered or removed engagement rather than lost pages. There is also a quality risk: panels that post obvious spam text make a thread read worse than silence would.
Is buying comments a better idea than buying likes?
They solve different problems. A like tally registers as background approval most visitors barely notice, while the comment section is the part of a post people actually stop and read. Plenty of buyers combine the two, because a discussion with matching reactions looks more coherent than either signal on its own.
What kind of money do 10,000 Facebook views bring in?
There is no fixed figure, because Facebook pays through monetization programs where rates depend on region, niche, watch time, and current ad demand. The same 10,000 views can earn very different amounts on two different pages. Engagement connects to that math indirectly: threads with activity tend to travel further in the feed, and reach is what views are built from.
How do people make $500 a day on Facebook?
Not through comments alone. Earners at that level run monetized video, affiliate offers, storefronts, or sponsored content in front of genuine audiences. A purchased thread plays a small supporting part by keeping fresh posts from looking abandoned while an audience is still forming, nothing more.
What is the cheapest way to try this service?
The 10-comment pack at $0.99, which also happens to cost the least per comment of any tier. It exists as a test: put it on one live post and judge the quality before committing further. Everything above the starter runs 13 cents per comment, straight multiplication all the way up.
How fast will my comments arrive?
Expect a start roughly 13 hours after checkout. Delivery then proceeds at 1k-2k comments a day, meaning a 100-pack wraps in a couple of hours of active delivery and the full 1,000 needs at most a day once underway.
Do you refill comments that drop?
No, and we would rather state that plainly than hide it in fine print. Skipping the warranty is part of how a 10-pack stays at 99 cents and a 1,000 pack stays at $130. If an order arrives visibly short of its count, contact support with your order number and post link.
Will you ever ask for my Facebook login details?
Never. We ask for exactly one piece of information, the URL of the post receiving the comments. Nothing in the process touches your login, your admin roles, or your connected apps.
What are the steps for getting an order in?
Choose a quantity, paste the link to your post at checkout, and complete payment. Set the post to public before ordering, since private content cannot be reached. From there the roughly 13-hour start window applies, and delivery follows at the standard pace.
What size of Facebook Comments is right for me?
Scale to your audience. Profiles and small pages sit comfortably in the 10 to 50 range, mid-sized pages carry 100 to 250 without raising eyebrows, and 500 or 1,000 belongs under advertising campaigns, giveaways, and launch announcements. A thread that dwarfs the page behind it works against you.
Can I split one order across several posts?
Each order attaches to a single post link. Covering a week of content means ordering a pack per post, and several 25s spread across a posting schedule generally does more good than one large dump on a single update.
Do these work on Reels, photos, and videos?
Yes, provided the content carries its own public Facebook URL. Photos, Reels, videos, and plain status posts all qualify when the link opens without a login prompt. Anything locked behind privacy settings will not process.
Can I get comments from a specific country?
This product has no country filter; the seven packs above are its entire catalog. Buyers chasing geo-specific engagement usually handle location through ad targeting and use purchased comments only to keep a thread from sitting at zero.



