🎧 Real fans, never bots • ⚡ Starts fast • 🔒 No password needed • ♾️ Lifetime refill • 📣 Every release reaches them
🎧 Release day, and the notification barely reaches anyone
The track is done. Mixed, mastered, scheduled, live. This is meant to be the fun part. Instead the play count crawls, because Deezer only pushes a new release straight to people who already followed you before it dropped, and your number is thin enough that almost nobody got the ping. Somewhere out there an artist with no more talent than you has a profile people actually subscribe to, and their launch morning looks nothing like yours. Theirs opens to a crowd that was already waiting. Yours opens to silence. Nothing about the songs explains that gap. Who was already following, before either of you hit release, does.
Following is what turns release day into an actual audience
A stream or a like belongs to one track. A follow belongs to you, the artist, permanently, so every song you put out afterward reaches that same person automatically, with no search on their part required. That single mechanic decides whether launch day is loud or quiet. It also feeds Deezer’s own sense of who your profile is: the platform tracks how an artist is doing overall, not only how one upload performed, so a stronger following can carry your name toward listeners who never went looking for you directly. And it is the first figure a visitor notices on your profile, deciding in a glance whether you are an act worth a click or one to scroll straight past.
Why artists grow this number ahead of time
Almost nobody wants a second silent launch. Artists who build a following tend to do it early, on purpose, rather than fixing it after a drop falls flat. A page that still reads brand new leaves every new listener wondering if they would be the only one following, so a real number tells them plenty of people already stayed. Others are eyeing a competing act with several times their following and know that exact gap is what tips a fan toward one artist over the other. And plenty simply refuse to let the next release repeat the last one, so they grow the audience beforehand instead of hoping it shows up on its own.
🛡️ The honest answer to what happens after you order
People mostly want to know if Deezer pulls these back out later. It will not, and here is why: Deezer’s systems hunt for mass activity from fake or bot accounts, the kind that never opens the app, and that pattern is not what this delivers. The other question is whether it truly moves the needle, and the honest limit matters here too: a larger following puts your next drop in front of more real people the instant it lands, but it cannot convince someone to stay a fan of music that leaves them cold. You are paying for the crowd at the door. Whether they stick around once they hear it is still on the songs.
Genuine listeners, nothing that endangers your profile
Every name added is a real person on a working Deezer account, choosing to follow you, never an automated script mimicking one. That single fact separates a following that actually helps from one Deezer eventually claws back. Growth begins within seconds of checkout and continues in a steady climb afterward, matching the pace a genuine fanbase would build at, never one suspicious spike. The only thing needed from you is your public profile link; your login never enters the picture, so your account settings stay entirely under your own control throughout.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes, any listener can follow an artist profile with one tap. Doing so subscribes them to you specifically, so your future uploads land in their feed automatically instead of them needing to search your name again each time. A purchased follower is added the same way, through that same follow action.
Yes, each one runs on a working, logged-in Deezer account and taps follow the same way an organic fan would. There are no throwaway or automated profiles in the mix, which is precisely why the number sticks around instead of thinning out on its own weeks later.
No, they cover two different parts of your presence. A follower attaches to you as an artist permanently, so it carries into every future upload automatically. A like belongs to one specific track a listener already heard and chose to keep. Followers build tomorrow’s audience; likes prove today’s song already landed.
No, at no stage. Send over your artist profile URL and that covers everything on our end. Real fans then visit that page and tap follow just like any listener discovering you organically, meaning your password, email, and account settings stay completely out of the transaction.
The first ones land within seconds of checkout, and the rest arrive gradually rather than all at once. That gradual pace is deliberate: it looks like an audience building naturally over time, not a number that jumped overnight.
It is one of several inputs Deezer’s recommendation engine considers when choosing which artists to introduce to new listeners, alongside streaming numbers and how individual tracks perform. A stronger following supports that overall picture; it does not replace what the music itself has to do.
This sits inside Deezer’s usage policy, not any actual law, putting it alongside plenty of other artist-marketing services. Since a real person taps follow behind every single one added, none of the mass-produced fake-account activity that platforms actively hunt for shows up in the delivery.
No, and that is worth stating outright. What followers deliver is a real audience already tuned in the moment a new track drops, closing the gap a quiet profile struggles with. What they cannot do is talk someone into liking a song that does nothing for them. The crowd shows up; the music still has to land.
It is, through a lifetime refill attached to every order. If the number ever dips below what you paid for, it gets built back up at no extra charge, for as long as the profile stays yours. There is nothing to renew and no recurring fee involved.
Enough that someone landing on your page for the first time sees a following other people already committed to, rather than a page that looks untouched. Artists in a crowded genre tend to set that bar higher, since it is the exact number fans weigh against the other acts they are deciding between.

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