👥 Real viewers, never bots • ⏱️ Real monetizable watch time • 🔒 No password needed • ♾️ Lifetime refill • 🎬 Works on your long video
⏱️ You are chasing monetization, and the 60-day clock keeps rolling
You open the Professional Dashboard and check the same screen again. Followers, close. A few qualifying long videos, up. The bar still glowing red is watch time, and it is a long way from the line. Facebook measures your watch minutes over a rolling 60 days, so every day that passes without enough views, the earliest days drop off the back and you lose ground you already earned. The threshold is big on purpose, and organic minutes trickle in slowly. You refresh the number, watching the window roll forward while eligibility stays out of reach. That specific gap, climbing but not counted, is what this package helps close.
What Facebook watch time really is, and why it decides eligibility
Facebook watch time is the total minutes people spend actually watching your videos. For in-stream ads, the money format that pays you for views, Facebook wants 600,000 watch minutes across a recent 60-day stretch, which is 10,000 watch hours, on top of your follower and content rules. Minutes only stack up on real viewing of long content, which is why this works on a video at least a few minutes long and does its best on one to three hour uploads. A short clip cannot bank enough minutes per view to matter. A long video can. This package sends real watch time to that long video so the minutes Facebook counts climb toward the threshold instead of crawling far beneath it.
Why creators reach for this during the monetization push
The reason is almost always the same, and it is not vanity. People come here in the middle of the monetization run, with the deadline pressure real and organic minutes coming in too slowly to make the window. Some watched a previous attempt reset because the 60 days rolled faster than the count could build, and they refuse to lose another cycle. Others have the followers and videos in place and simply need the watch-minute total to climb toward the line, so they can flip in-stream ads on and earn from views they already get. It is a package to move one specific bar, not a number to show off.
🛡️ The worries after you order, answered straight
The honest fear here is whether the time actually counts, because bot views do not, and everyone has read that. The watch time you get comes from real people viewing a real long-form video, which is the kind of viewing Facebook measures, not empty impressions that never register. Your password never comes into it, so an order cannot reach your account controls. Now the limit we will state plainly: the full requirement is large, so a package moves you along the ladder rather than clearing the whole bar at once, and you need a genuinely long video, ideally one to three hours, for the minutes to accrue. It does not invent an audience for a weak channel or hand you the follower and content rules Facebook also checks. It moves the one metric it moves, honestly.
Real viewers, and nothing that puts your page at risk
Almost every scare story about bought watch time traces back to bots and fake view farms, the stuff that never counts and can draw a review. We leave all of that out. What you get is real watch time from real people on the video you point us to, the same viewing that happens organically, just faster. Delivery starts shortly after checkout and builds up steadily over the following days rather than dumping in one suspicious spike, because natural-looking pacing matters on a monetization run. All we need is the link to your video, never a login.
Frequently Asked Questions
For in-stream ads, Facebook looks for 600,000 watch minutes on your videos across a recent 60-day period, which works out to 10,000 watch hours. That sits alongside separate follower and content requirements, so it is one of a few boxes. This package is built to move that watch-minute total toward the line.
They count when they come from real people watching real long-form video, which is what you get here, because that is the viewing Facebook measures. What never counts is bot traffic, fake view farms, or minutes from boosted and crossposted content. Since every hour is genuine viewing on your own video, it registers the way organic watch time does.
Watch minutes only build up while someone is actually watching, so a two-minute clip banks almost nothing per view. A long video, ideally one to three hours, lets each viewer add real minutes, which is how the count climbs fast enough to matter against a 10,000-hour target. On short videos this simply cannot move the number.
Facebook totals the minutes people spend watching your videos over a rolling 60-day window, then checks that total against 600,000 minutes. Because the window rolls, older minutes age out over time, which is why the count can feel like it slips back if new viewing slows down.
Facebook asks for at least 5,000 followers for in-stream ads, along with the watch-time total and a handful of active videos on your Page. This package only moves the watch-time side, so make sure your follower count is where it needs to be as well. If followers are the gap, that is a separate service.
Open the Professional Dashboard or Creator Studio, go to the Monetization or Eligibility section, and Facebook shows your in-stream progress including watch minutes against the requirement. Checking it there tells you exactly how many minutes you still need before you order.
Yes, because the watch time is real viewing from real people on your video, not the bot activity that draws reviews. The delivery is paced to build up naturally rather than spike, and we never touch your login, so the order stays well clear of your account controls. Real viewing on a real video is exactly what Facebook wants to see.
It moves the watch-time total, which is usually the hardest bar to reach, but Facebook also checks your follower count, your active videos, and content eligibility separately. Think of this as pushing one big requirement forward, not the whole approval, so make sure your other boxes are in order too.
Delivery starts shortly after you share your video link and then builds up over the following days rather than all at once, which keeps the pacing natural on a monetization run. Larger amounts take longer to complete than small ones, and each option shows its own timeframe before you order.
Just the public link to the long video you want the watch time on. No password, no account access, nothing else. Real people open that video and watch it, exactly as an organic viewer would, so none of your account controls are ever involved.
Yes. The watch time you buy stays counted on your video, and if any ever falls off we put it back free for as long as you own the page. It is a one-time purchase we protect, not a subscription that bills again.
It works best pointed at a single long video, because concentrating the minutes on one qualifying upload is what pushes the count efficiently. If you have more than one long video and want to spread it, reach out first so we can set the order up the right way.


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