👥 Real listeners, never bots • ⚡ Starts fast • 🔒 No password needed • ♾️ Lifetime refill • 🎧 Curators check this number first
🎧 They check the number before they press play
Someone lands on your Tidal artist profile: a curator building a playlist, a fan a friend just told about you, maybe a label scout doing the rounds. Before they hit play on a single track, their eyes go straight to one line under your name: monthly listeners. If it reads low, the decision is already halfway made, without your music getting a fair hearing. That is the quiet unfairness of a thin number. You could have the strongest track of your career sitting right there, and it still gets skipped because the profile looks like nobody has checked it out first.
Monthly listeners are the trust signal your whole profile leans on
Monthly listeners count the actual unique people who played your music recently, and it sits front and center on your artist page for exactly that reason: it is the fastest read anyone has on whether you are worth their time. It is not the same as a play count racking up from one song on repeat. It is distinct people choosing your music, and Tidal’s own recommendation and search results lean on that signal when deciding who else to show your name to. A stronger number nudges you higher in those results and puts you in front of listeners who were never going to dig you out of an endless new-release list on their own. The count becomes the proof that opens the door to being found at all.
Why artists actually go build this number
The reasons come back to being taken seriously, not to any single trick. Some artists are staring at a rival on the same bill with a monthly listener count that dwarfs theirs, and know a booker or a fan comparing the two will follow the bigger crowd. Some have a release coming up and want the profile to already look like it has an audience before the promo push sends people to check it out. Others just want the visibility to catch up with the recommendation and chart mechanics that reward listener volume, since more monthly listeners feeds into better placement and, over time, better payouts. Underneath it all is the same wish: to stop being the profile that looks empty next to everyone else’s.
🛡️ The worry after you order, answered straight
Two questions come up once someone is ready to commit, and both deserve a direct answer. The first is whether these are real people or some shortcut that will not hold up. They are genuine Tidal listeners on real accounts, counted the same way any organic listener is, not a bot script pretending to stream. The second is whether it actually works, and here is the honest limit: a bigger monthly listener number gets your profile past that first glance and into more recommendation slots, which is precisely what a quiet profile is missing. It cannot make a track people do not enjoy suddenly land. The number opens the door; your music still has to hold whoever walks through it.
Real people, and nothing that puts your artist page at risk
The bad reputation this kind of service has earned elsewhere comes from bot traffic: fake plays that platforms strip out the moment they audit an account, taking your number back down with them. We do not touch that approach. Every listener you get is a real person on a real Tidal account, arriving steadily rather than in one suspicious spike, so your growth looks like growth. We only ever need your artist link, never your login, so your account settings stay entirely yours.
Frequently Asked Questions
It is the count of unique people who played your music on Tidal recently, shown right on your artist profile. It counts distinct listeners, not total plays, so one fan streaming a track ten times still only adds one to this number.
No. Plays add up every single stream, so a small fan base replaying a track can push plays high. Monthly listeners only grows when a new, distinct person presses play, which is why it reads as the real size of your audience.
It is the fastest proof that other people already chose your music, before anyone has to listen and judge for themselves. A curator scanning dozens of submissions a day uses it to decide which profile gets the actual play.
Yes. Tidal’s recommendation and search results weigh listener volume when deciding whose music to surface to new people, so a stronger count can help place you in front of listeners who were not searching for your name directly.
Yes. They are genuine Tidal accounts playing your music, counted the exact same way any organic listener is, not a script or a bot loop. That is what keeps the number holding up under normal use.
It starts moving within moments of ordering. A smaller order is usually done inside a day, while a large six-figure order rolls out gradually over several weeks so the growth looks natural rather than an obvious spike.
No, never. A link to your public artist page is all we require. Genuine listeners locate your tracks and stream them the way any real fan naturally would, keeping your account details completely out of the process.
Both platforms use the same idea, a count of unique recent listeners on your artist page, but Tidal’s smaller overall user base means a given listener count can carry more weight relative to your genre peers than the same number would on a far larger platform.
Indirectly, yes. Tidal’s payout model and chart placement both respond to listener activity, so a larger, active monthly audience feeds into the same visibility mechanics that influence how widely, and how often, your music gets played and paid out.
It is covered for life. Monthly listeners naturally shift month to month for every artist as people’s habits change, so if your purchased count ever falls below what you paid for, we add the difference back at no cost, for as long as the profile stays yours.

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