👥 Real people, never bots • ⚡ Starts fast • 🔒 No password needed • ♾️ Lifetime refill • 👀 Keeps your event resurfacing
👀 Your event is live, and almost nobody has tapped anything
The page is up. Details are right, the photo looks good, you shared it in the group chat and a couple of pages. You check back and the Interested count reads 6. Not Going, just Interested, the easy one-tap button that costs someone nothing. Even that is barely moving. This is the quieter problem behind a new event: it is not that people are refusing to come, it is that almost nobody has flagged the event as something to keep an eye on. A thin Interested count does not just look bare. It means Facebook has almost no signal to act on, so the event mostly stops with the handful of people who already had the link.
Interested is the button that gets your event reshown, not just the one that looks good
Interested is the lowest bar of the three responses, a tap that means someone glanced at the event and thought maybe, keep me posted. That low bar is exactly why it matters. Facebook treats every Interested tap as a signal the event is worth surfacing again, so it keeps popping back into feeds, the Events tab, and reminder notifications, for people who tapped it and others who look similar. Going says someone already decided. Interested is the wider net, quietly expanding who sees the event in the first place, well before anyone is ready to commit. A page with a real Interested count gets worked by the algorithm on repeat. A page with six taps gets shown once and forgotten.
Why organizers build this number on purpose
The reasons trace back to that flat number sitting there. Some want the event to read as something a real community is already circling, since people commit to things other people are circling. Others are watching how a similar event nearby racked up hundreds of Interested taps within days and know that gap is what a browsing visitor compares first. A few are building a list on purpose, since everyone who taps Interested becomes someone they can message or retarget later, a warm list instead of a cold one. And plenty just want Facebook’s own feed to keep doing the reshowing work instead of the event dying quietly after day one.
🛡️ The one worry that actually matters here
Forget whether the taps look fake for a second. The bigger question buyers chew on is simpler: does a wall of Interested actually mean anything, or is it just a vanity number? Here is the honest limit. Interested was built as a maybe-button, so even organic taps sit well below eventual attendance, always. Buying more of them does not manufacture a headcount. What it does is put your event in front of far more real people and keep pulling it back into view, which gives it a genuine shot at turning some of that traffic into Going responses and guests later. It is a distribution boost, not a finish line.
Real accounts, and nothing that risks the page you built
Every bad story about bought Interested taps comes back to bot accounts, junk profiles that never behave like an actual user and stand out the moment someone checks the list. We skip them entirely. What lands on your event are real people using their own Facebook accounts, tapping Interested the same way an organic visitor would, so nothing looks staged. Your event link is all we need; nobody asks for a password. Buying event responses sits in terms-of-service territory, not criminal territory. A lifetime refill backs every order too, holding the count you paid for in place and topping it back up free for as long as your event page is live.
Frequently Asked Questions
It is the lighter of the two response buttons, a one-tap way to say a person noticed the event and wants updates without committing to attend. It sits below Going in weight, but Facebook still counts it as a real signal that the event is worth another look.
Interested is the low-effort tap for anyone who is curious, undecided, or just wants updates without committing to anything. Going is the firmer commitment. Because the bar is lower, Interested pulls in a wider crowd, which is exactly what makes it useful for reach before people are ready to decide.
Yes, only real profiles with real activity behind them, not bot or bulk accounts. Nothing in how they tap Interested differs from an ordinary user browsing into your event and clicking the button, so the count blends in with what is already there.
Yes. Facebook reuses a rising Interested count as a reason to resurface the event in feeds, in the Events tab, and in reminder notifications, including to people who look similar to those who already tapped it. A flat count gives the feed little reason to bring the event back.
Yes, Facebook lets hosts message everyone marked Interested or Going through the event’s own tools. That makes the Interested list a direct channel for reminders, updates, or a nudge toward buying a ticket, not just a number sitting on the page.
No, an event link is the only thing we ask for. Real people find that link and tap Interested the same way a curious scroller stumbles onto any event, so there is never a moment where your password or account settings come into play.
The first taps show up within a few hours of checkout, based on our current delivery speed, and the rest roll in gradually after that. A small order is done same day; bigger counts spread across several days, so you get a realistic window before you order, not a guess.
Yes. This falls under Facebook’s terms of service, not any kind of law, and since real accounts are doing the tapping instead of bots, there is no odd pattern for their systems to notice. Your event page is not touched or edited in any way beyond the Interested count itself.
No, and we say that plainly. Interested was built as a maybe, not a headcount, so even organic taps run well below eventual attendance. A strong count widens how many real people see and reconsider your event, which gives it a genuine shot at turning into Going responses and guests, but it does not guarantee anyone walks through the door.
No. It works best as one part of getting the word out, alongside things like direct invites, ads, or an email list, not as the only push. Think of it as widening the net Facebook casts for you, while the rest of your marketing does the converting.
The number you buy is locked to your event page for as long as that page exists, no renewal date to track. If the count ever dips below what you paid for, we top it back up at no extra cost, automatically, for the life of the event.



Juliya –
very much benefited after taking your service