👥 Real people, never bots • ⚡ Starts fast • 🔒 No password needed • ♾️ Lifetime refill • 🔁 Reaches feeds past your own
🔁 A good mix that goes nowhere past your own crowd
You uploaded the mix. The tracklist is tight, the transitions are clean, and the plays trickle in from people who already follow you. Then it stalls. Nobody outside your circle ever hears it, because nobody reposted it anywhere new. A play just means someone pressed the button. A share means a real listener liked it enough to put it in front of their own followers, and that is the one thing your mix is missing. Without it, even a great set stays parked inside the same small audience, while a weaker mix that got passed around a few times reaches more new ears than yours ever will.
A share is the one action that moves you past your own audience
Plays, likes, and followers all live inside your own bubble; a share is different, because it puts your mix in front of someone else’s followers, people who never had a reason to find you otherwise. Mixcloud also watches which mixes get reshared when it decides what to surface on Trending and Popular pages, so shares are one of the clearest signals that a set is worth spreading, not just worth a quick listen. A mix sitting at a handful of shares reads as background noise. One climbing steadily past that reads as something other DJs and listeners are actively passing along, the kind of momentum that pulls a mix into new networks on its own.
Why DJs and creators actually buy shares
The reasons are practical, not vain. A mix with real momentum behind it is far more likely to catch a booker’s eye or land a spot on someone else’s playlist, because a set that looks like it is already traveling is an easier one to trust. Others are dropping a mix days before a release or a gig and want it circulating in new feeds before the date arrives, not building slowly from zero. And plenty of DJs are simply tired of watching strong work sit still next to a rival’s mix that keeps getting passed around, when the actual quality gap between the two sets is small. In every case, the goal is the same: get the mix moving past the people who already follow you.
🛡️ What people ask after they order, answered straight
Two questions come up right after someone buys, and both deserve a straight answer. First, who is doing the sharing. These are real people on genuine Mixcloud accounts, the same kind of account that presses share organically, never bot profiles that Mixcloud can spot and strip out. Your login stays with you the entire time, since nothing about the order touches your account settings. Second, whether shares alone are enough. They put your mix in front of real new feeds, which is precisely the exposure a stuck mix is missing, but they will not carry a set nobody wants to keep listening to. Shares open the door into new circles; what happens once people are inside that door comes down to the mix itself.
Real accounts, and nothing that puts your page at risk
Most bad stories around bought engagement trace back to bots, throwaway profiles that Mixcloud purges on sight, taking your shares with them. We do not use them. Every share comes from a real account behaving the way an organic share would, added at a measured pace so the count climbs like it grew on its own. All we need is the link to your mix, nothing about your login. A lifetime refill also backs the order, so if any share you paid for ever falls away, we put it straight back at no charge, for as long as the mix is yours.
Frequently Asked Questions
A play only counts a listen from someone already looking at your mix. A share is a real person reposting it onto their own profile, which puts it in front of their followers too, people who had no other way of finding your mix. That is the step that moves a set past its original audience.
Yes. Each share comes from an actual Mixcloud account choosing to repost, the same action a genuine fan takes, not a bot profile built only to inflate a number. That is why the shares hold up as real activity on your mix rather than a hollow count.
Reshare activity is one of the signals Mixcloud’s discovery pages read when surfacing mixes, alongside plays and listener behavior. A set with real shares behind it looks like something people are actively passing along, which is a stronger discovery signal than plays sitting still on their own.
No, never. We only need the link to the specific mix you want shared. Real accounts handle the reposting themselves, exactly like an organic listener would, which means your password and account settings are never part of the order.
They begin landing shortly after you check out, then continue at a measured, steady pace rather than all at once, so the growth on your mix looks the way an organic reshare wave naturally would.
Because every share comes from a genuine account instead of a bot, there is nothing suspicious for Mixcloud to flag in the first place.
A follower subscribes to your profile going forward, so they see whatever you upload next. A share is tied to one specific mix and sends that single set into a completely different group of people’s feeds right now. Shares build reach for a mix today; followers build your fanbase over time.
Yes. Getting a mix circulating in new feeds a few days ahead of a release or a booking means more people encounter it before the date arrives, rather than your promotion starting from a standing stop. A set that already looks like it is moving gives a booker or a new listener an easier reason to press play.
Shares put your mix in front of real new listeners, which is the exposure a stuck set is missing, but the mix still has to earn the next listen once people arrive. Think of shares as opening the door into new feeds; a strong set is what keeps people in the room after they walk through it.
Yes. Every share you order is locked to that mix for good, with no expiry date and nothing further to pay. On the rare chance the number ever slips, we add the difference back at no cost, since this is a one-time purchase we stand behind, not a subscription that bills again.

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