👥 Real people, never bots • ⚡ Starts instantly • 🔒 No password needed • ♾️ Lifetime refill • 👍 Instant social proof
👀 Watched by plenty, liked by almost nobody
Here is the quiet problem. Your video is pulling views, but the like count underneath sits at 7. To the next person who lands on it, that reads one way: people watched this and did not think it was worth a tap. A thin like count makes even a good video look unloved, and unloved videos get the scroll. You are not short on quality. You are short on the first small sign that says this one is worth someone’s time.
A like is a public vote, and two audiences read it
A like is the fastest judgment a viewer can make, and it does not stay private. Two very different audiences check it. Real people scan the count to decide whether your video is worth a few minutes, because something others approved of feels safe to click. YouTube reads it too, as an engagement signal, when it decides which videos to push into search and the suggested column. So a healthy like count works in two places at once: on the human deciding whether to press play, and on the system deciding whether to show your video to strangers at all.
Why creators reach for a head start
Almost nobody buying likes is trying to cheat. A brand-new upload starts at zero, and zero is the hardest number to grow from, because the people who might like it are waiting to see that others already did. Some creators are lining up next to rivals whose videos show thousands of likes and refuse to look like the weak option. Some are pushing a launch, a music drop, or client work where the first impression has to land. And some just want to nudge the algorithm into giving a good video the test run it has not earned yet. The like count is simply the bar you clear so real viewers give you a fair look.
🛡️ “But do bought likes just disappear?”
It is the top worry, and the honest answer has three parts. First, likes that vanish are almost always bot likes: YouTube runs sweeps that strip automated activity, so cheap panels watch their numbers melt. Ours come from real people signed in to real accounts, which is the kind YouTube keeps. Second, a sudden flood of fake taps can make your retention look off and cool the algorithm on your video, so real likes arriving at a believable pace matter. Third, the honest limit: likes lift a video people already enjoy, they will not carry one that viewers quit early. Give them something worth watching and they do their job. And if any like we deliver ever does slip off, the lifetime refill puts it straight back, free.
Real accounts, and nothing that can touch your channel
Everything that scares people about buying likes traces back to bots: throwaway accounts leave a footprint YouTube is built to spot, they get wiped, and they drag your numbers down. So we work with real people only. We never ask for your password, because liking a public video never needs access to your channel, which keeps your account entirely your own. Real people, zero account access, and a guarantee in writing.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. Those checks are built to catch automated bot likes with no real account behind them. A like from a real person signed in to their own profile reads as ordinary engagement, so it is not the kind those systems flag.
Real people, each signed in to their own account. A like can only be placed from a logged-in profile, so every one is tied to an actual person. Bots are the exact thing YouTube chases and deletes, which is why we never touch them.
Real likes arriving at a natural pace read as genuine engagement, one of the signals YouTube weighs when it picks which videos to push wider. They work with your reach, and pair best with a video that already holds attention.
Yes, in the plain sense that no law bans it. The realistic worst case is the platform stripping fake likes, which is exactly what using real accounts is built to avoid.
No. YouTube keeps likes anonymous, even from you as the channel owner. You will watch the total climb on the video and in Studio, but no public list of names exists. The people who like your video stay private, and so does the fact that you ordered.
They help by signalling engagement, which can earn your video more test impressions. But likes are one input, not the whole engine: watch time and how long people stay decide how far it travels. Likes open the door, retention walks through it.
They begin within minutes of your order and land at a steady, natural pace rather than all at once, which is healthier for your video than an overnight spike. Each package shows its own delivery window before you buy.
Never. All we need is your video link. Real people like it from their own accounts the same way any viewer would, so there is no reason to sign in to yours. Your login, settings, and uploads are never touched at any point.
Rarely. Free-likes sites run on swaps, so you have to like and follow strangers first, and many ask you to log in with Google, which is how accounts get hijacked. The likes themselves are throwaway profiles that get wiped. A couple of dollars for real ones skips all of that.
If any likes we deliver ever drop off your count, message support and we add them back at no cost, for as long as you own the channel. There is no expiry and no renewal fee. You pay once, and the guarantee stays attached to that order.



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