👥 Real followers, never bots • ⚡ Starts instantly • 🔒 No password needed • ♾️ Lifetime refill • 🔔 Your next drop reaches someone
🔔 You drop the track, and nobody gets pinged
The release is finally live. You picked the art, wrote the caption, hit publish, and now you watch the artist page for a wave of new followers to show up. Almost nothing moves. It is not that the song is weak. It is that your Tidal profile has 30 followers, so there was barely anyone to even notify you dropped something new. All that work, and no one was waiting to hear it. The follower count under your artist name does not just look thin to a visitor scrolling past. It is the literal list Tidal checks before it tells anyone a new track exists.
Followers are the notify-list your release depends on
A follower is a real person who tapped Follow on your artist profile, putting them on the short list Tidal alerts the moment you release something new. It is a different job from a stream or a listener count: those measure who played a track after finding it, while followers decide who hears about the track at all, before a single play happens. Build that list to a few thousand and a release goes out to a real crowd on day one. Leave it at a few dozen and you are relying on luck or an algorithm to get anyone to notice. The number also sits right under your artist name, so a visitor sizing you up in the first two seconds reads it as proof that people already chose to keep up with you.
Why artists actually build this number
The reasons trace back to wanting a release to land. Some artists have a drop scheduled and cannot stand the idea of it going out to almost nobody again, so they build the notify-list before the countdown starts. Others are looking sideways at an act on the same bill whose profile shows thousands of followers, and know that number is what a booker or fan compares before deciding who is worth the click. Labels and sponsors size up a profile the same way, checking for an existing audience before they commit a budget. Underneath it all is the same wish: stop releasing music into a room where nobody was told the door opened.
🛡️ The worry after you order, answered straight
Two questions come up once someone is ready to buy. The first is whether these are genuine people or a shortcut that falls apart. They are real accounts that follow your page the same way any fan does, not bot profiles built to inflate a number and vanish. The second is whether it actually changes anything, and here is the honest limit. A bigger follower base means far more people sit on Tidal’s notify-list for your next release, which is exactly what a quiet profile is missing. It does not force anyone to stream the track once pinged, and it will not turn a rough song into a hit. The followers open the door on release day; the music still has to hold whoever walks through it.
Real people, and nothing that puts your page at risk
The bad name this kind of service has comes almost entirely from bots, junk accounts platforms quietly purge, taking your number down with them. We build none of that. Every follower you get is a genuine person on a real Tidal account, arriving at a steady pace rather than in one obvious spike, so growth looks like an artist gaining fans, not a number switched on overnight. All we ever need is your public artist link, never your login, so your account settings stay in your hands. A lifetime refill stands behind every order too: if the count ever dips, we add the difference back free, for as long as the profile is yours.
Frequently Asked Questions
It is someone who chose to subscribe to your artist page, landing them on Tidal’s alert list for whatever you release next. That subscription stands on its own, apart from any individual stream or play.
No. A monthly listener counts someone who actually streamed your music recently, while a follower is someone who chose to keep getting told about your future releases, whether or not they have played a track this month. Followers build the notify-list; listeners measure recent listening.
Yes, indirectly. A larger, active follower base is one of the signals Tidal’s recommendation and search results weigh, alongside listening activity, when deciding whose profile to surface to people who were not searching for your name directly.
Yes. Each one is a genuine person on an active Tidal account who follows your artist page the same way an organic fan would, not a bot profile created purely to inflate a count.
No, never. All we need is the link to your public artist profile. Real people find that profile and tap Follow themselves, so your account credentials are never part of the process.
Within moments of ordering. A smaller order is typically done inside a day, while larger orders roll out gradually over the following days or weeks so the growth reads as a real fanbase forming, not a number that jumped overnight.
Yes. Building a following this way sits under Tidal’s terms of service, the same category as most artist-growth tactics, rather than anything the law is concerned with. Because real people are behind every follow instead of bots, there is nothing artificial for Tidal to flag on your profile.
Yes, that is the core function of following an artist on Tidal. Each follower sits on the list Tidal alerts about your new releases, which is exactly why growing that list before a drop matters more than growing it after.
Every follower you order is locked to your profile for good, with no expiry date and nothing to renew. Should the count ever dip below what you paid for, we add the difference back at no cost, for as long as the artist profile stays yours.
Enough that the profile stops reading as untouched and a release actually has people to reach on day one. A few hundred lifts a brand-new act off zero, while artists competing in a crowded genre often build further to keep pace with acts fans are already comparing them against.

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