Buying Facebook post likes has a bad reputation, and I understand why. Many people see it as fake engagement or a useless shortcut, and some providers make promises that are hard to trust.
So I tested 20 different Facebook likes providers myself.
I wanted to see what really happens when you buy Facebook post likes.
Do they actually show up? Do they stay after a few days? Do the profiles look normal, or do they instantly look suspicious? And most importantly, can bought likes support a post in any useful way, or is it just money thrown at a number on a screen?
For each order, I tracked whether the likes arrived, how fast they came in, how many stayed and how real the profiles looked.
I was not looking for the cheapest or fastest option. I wanted to find out which providers delivered Facebook likes that looked believable and actually stuck around.
Experiment Summary
For this test, I bought Facebook post likes from 20 different providers and tracked what happened after each order.
I kept the process the same for every site because I did not want the results to come down to luck, timing or different package sizes.
Each provider was tested with the same type of service, the same order size and the same tracking period.
Here is the basic setup:
- Providers tested: 20
- Providers reviewed in detail: 5
- Service tested: Facebook post likes
- Package size per provider: 100 likes
- Total likes ordered: 2,000 likes
- Total amount spent: $83.47
- Tracking period: 14 days
- Profiles checked per provider: 50 profiles
- Main scoring factors: retention, profile quality, delivery reliability, support, price/value and website safety
The biggest thing I cared about was not just whether the likes arrived. I wanted to know what stayed.
A provider could look great on day one, but if half the likes disappeared a few days later, that told me a lot more than the delivery speed ever could.
How I Tested the 20 Facebook Likes Providers
To keep the test fair, I used the same process for every provider.
I ordered the same type of service, used the same package size and tracked each order over the same 14-day period. I also used the same basic checks for delivery, retention and profile quality.
Here is what I tracked for each provider:
- Starting like count: how many likes the post had before the order
- First delivery: when the first new likes appeared
- Full delivery: when the order appeared to be complete
- 24-hour count: how many likes were still visible after one day
- 3-day count: how many likes were still visible after three days
- 7-day count: the main retention checkpoint
- 14-day count: the final retention checkpoint
- Profile sample: 50 profiles checked for quality
I also saved screenshots during the process, including the
- package page
- checkout page
- post before delivery
- post after delivery
This made it easier to compare each provider using the same evidence instead of relying only on how the website described its own service.
The Minimum Standard for Making the List
After testing all 20 providers, I did not want to include a site just because the order technically arrived.
That would have made the results too shallow. A provider could deliver 100 likes quickly, but if many of them disappeared, the profiles looked suspicious, or the checkout process felt unclear, I did not think it deserved a full recommendation.
To make the final list, a provider had to meet most of the standards that actually matter after you place an order.
That meant:
- the order had to be delivered successfully
- the likes had to stay at an acceptable level after the tracking period
- the profiles had to look believable enough
- the site had to explain what was being sold clearly
- the checkout process had to feel safe
- the provider could not ask for my Facebook password
- the final value had to make sense after retention was considered
I did not expect every provider to be perfect. That would not be realistic.
But I did expect the top sites to avoid the biggest red flags and perform well in the areas that affect the final result.
The Top 5 Sites to Buy Facebook Followers From the Test
After going through all 20 orders, only five providers made the final cut.
These were the sites that performed best across the main things I cared about: delivery, retention, profile quality, price and safety.
Some were stronger in one area than another, but all five gave me enough confidence to include them in the detailed review section.
The top 5 Facebook likes providers from this test were:
- Bulkoid
- ViralHQ
- MediaMister
- Famety
- Poprey
I’ll go through each one using the same format, so the comparison stays fair.
I’ll cover what I ordered, how much I paid, how fast the likes arrived, how many stayed after 14 days, what the profiles looked like and whether the final value made sense.
1. Bulkoid
Test Snapshot:
- Order: 100 Facebook post likes for $4.90
- Starting point: The post had 23 likes before ordering
- Delivery: Full order delivered in 1 hour
- Final count after delivery: 123 total likes
- 14-day result: 122 total likes remained
- Retention: 99 out of 100 purchased likes stayed
- Cost per retained like: $0.049
- Profile quality: Strong. Profiles had English names and realistic pictures
- Final score: 9.5/10
What happened during the test
I found Bulkoid through a few existing online rankings for buying Facebook likes. Still, I wanted to test it myself because a ranking only tells part of the story.
Bulkoid was one of the cleanest results from the whole test. The post started with 23 likes, and after ordering 100 Facebook post likes, the full order arrived in about 1 hour. That brought the post to 123 total likes after delivery.
The stronger part was what happened later. After 14 days, only one purchased like had dropped, leaving the post at 122 total likes. That gave Bulkoid a 99% retention rate, which made the result feel stable rather than just fast.
Profile quality
The profile sample looked believable overall. The accounts had English names and realistic pictures, which helped the engagement feel more natural on the post.
They were not all perfect profiles, but they did not look like obvious empty or spam-style accounts either. For Facebook post likes, that balance matters because suspicious profiles can make the engagement look worse, even when the number itself goes up.
Value for money
At $4.90 for 100 likes, Bulkoid also held up well on value. Since 99 of the purchased likes were still visible after 14 days, the cost per retained like came out to about $0.049.
That is why the result felt fair. The price was not only about what I paid at checkout, but about how much of the order was still there after the tracking period.
Verdict
Bulkoid made the top five because it performed well in the areas that mattered most: delivery, retention, profile quality and value.
The order arrived quickly, the profiles looked believable enough and only one like dropped after 14 days. Based on this test, Bulkoid was one of the safest picks for Facebook post likes that actually stayed.
2. ViralHQ
Test Snapshot
- Order: 100 Facebook post likes for $4.70
- Starting point: The post had 10 likes before ordering
- Delivery: First half delivered in 20 minutes, full order delivered in 40 minutes
- Final count after delivery: 110 total likes
- 14-day result: 107 total likes remained
- Retention: 97 out of 100 purchased likes stayed
- Cost per retained like: $0.048
- Profile quality: Good. Profiles had English names, but around 5% did not have a profile photo
- Final score: 9/10
What happened during the test
ViralHQ delivered quickly. The post started with 10 likes, the first half of the order arrived in about 20 minutes and the full 100 likes were delivered in around 40 minutes.
After delivery, the post reached 110 total likes. After 14 days, it had 107 likes left, meaning only three purchased likes dropped during the tracking period.
Profile quality
The profile sample was good overall. Most accounts had English names and profile pictures, which made the engagement look believable on the post.
Around 5% of the profiles did not have a profile photo, so the quality was not perfect. Still, the sample did not feel obviously fake or low quality.
Value for money
At $4.70 for 100 likes, ViralHQ offered strong value. With 97 likes still visible after 14 days, the cost per retained like came out to about $0.048.
The small drop affected the final value slightly, but the result was still solid for the price.
Verdict
ViralHQ made the top five because it delivered fast, kept 97% retention after 14 days and had good enough profile quality.
It was not the cleanest result in the test, but it performed well across the areas that mattered mos
3. Media Mister
Test Snapshot
- Order: 100 Facebook post likes for $4.00
- Starting point: The post had 18 likes before ordering
- Delivery: Full order delivered in 1 hour and 15 minutes
- Final count after delivery: 118 total likes
- 14-day result: 116 total likes remained
- Retention: 98 out of 100 purchased likes stayed
- Cost per retained like: $0.041
- Profile quality: Good. Profiles had a mix of English and foreign names, but the profile photos looked realistic
- Final score: 8.7/10
What happened during the test
Media Mister delivered the full order in 1 hour and 15 minutes. The post started with 18 likes, and after the 100 purchased likes arrived, it reached 118 total likes.
After 14 days, the post had 116 likes left. That means only two purchased likes dropped during the tracking period, giving Media Mister a 98% retention rate.
Profile quality
The profile sample looked good overall. The accounts had a mix of English and foreign names, so the audience did not feel as uniform as some other providers.
Still, the profile photos looked realistic, which helped the likes feel believable on the post. The sample did not look perfect, but it also did not raise any major red flags.
Value for money
At $4.00 for 100 likes, Media Mister was one of the cheaper providers in the top five.
Since 98 likes stayed after 14 days, the cost per retained like came out to about $0.041. That made it a strong value result, especially because the retention stayed high through the full tracking period.
Verdict
Media Mister made the top five because it combined a low price with strong retention.
The delivery was a little slower than some providers, but the order still arrived within a reasonable time, and only two likes dropped after 14 days. Overall, it was a solid result for the price.
4. Famety
Test Snapshot
- Order: 100 Facebook post likes for $1.10
- Starting point: The post had 12 likes before ordering
- Delivery: Full order delivered in 5 hours
- Final count after delivery: 112 total likes
- 14-day result: 103 total likes remained
- Retention: 91 out of 100 purchased likes stayed
- Cost per retained like: $0.012
- Profile quality: Good. Profiles had English names and realistic photos
- Final score: 8.4/10
What happened during the test
Famety was the cheapest provider in the top five, but the result also showed some tradeoffs. The order took around 5 hours to complete, which was slower than the stronger performers.
The post started with 12 likes and reached 112 after delivery. After 14 days, it had 103 likes left, meaning nine purchased likes dropped. That gave Famety a 91% retention rate.
Profile quality
The profiles were decent overall. They had English names and realistic photos, so they did not look obviously fake at first glance.
Still, compared with the stronger providers, the sample felt a bit less polished. The profiles looked usable for basic post likes, but not quite as convincing as the higher-ranked results.
Value for money
At $1.10 for 100 likes, Famety was clearly strong on price. With 91 likes still visible after 14 days, the cost per retained like came out to about $0.012.
That makes it good value, but mainly if price is the biggest priority. The lower cost came with slower delivery and more drops than the better-performing providers.
Verdict
Famety made the top five because it offered a very low price with acceptable retention.
I would not put it in the same tier as the strongest results, but it still made sense as a budget option. It worked, just with more compromise than the providers that scored higher.
5. Poprey
Test Snapshot
- Order: 100 Facebook post likes for $0.90
- Starting point: The post had 27 likes before ordering
- Delivery: Full order delivered in 4 hours and 30 minutes
- Final count after delivery: 127 total likes
- 14-day result: 116 total likes remained
- Retention: 89 out of 100 purchased likes stayed
- Cost per retained like: $0.010
- Profile quality: Mixed. Profiles had a mix of English and foreign names, but no profile pictures
- Final score: 7.9/10
What happened during the test
Poprey delivered the full order in around 4 hours and 30 minutes. The post started with 27 likes and reached 127 total likes after delivery.
After 14 days, the post had 116 likes left, meaning 11 purchased likes dropped. That gave Poprey an 89% retention rate.
Profile quality
The profile quality was mixed. The names were a mix of English and foreign names, but the profiles did not have profile pictures.
That made the likes feel less natural than the stronger providers, even though the order itself was delivered.
Value for money
Poprey was the cheapest provider in the top five at $0.90 for 100 likes.
With 89 likes still visible after 14 days, the cost per retained like came out to about $0.010, which was very low. The tradeoff was weaker profile quality and slightly lower retention.
Verdict
Poprey made the top five because it was extremely cheap and still kept most of the likes after 14 days.
It had the weakest profile quality in the top five, but the retention and price were still strong enough to include it as a budget option.
What I Learned From Testing 20 Facebook Likes Sites
After testing all 20 sites, the biggest thing I noticed is that buying Facebook post likes is not as simple as “good” or “bad.” Some orders were delivered properly and stayed almost fully intact, while others made it clear why people are skeptical of these services in the first place.
For me, the useful part was seeing the difference between a cheap number and a result that actually holds. A low price looks good at checkout, but it matters less if the likes drop quickly or come from profiles that make the post look strange.
The better providers were not perfect, but they gave the post a visible boost without making it look obviously off. That is really the main line for me. If bought likes support the post without drawing the wrong kind of attention, they can have a place in a wider growth strategy.
































































































































