Buy YouTube Comments

Buy comments on YouTube the safe way — custom or random, from real, active accounts. Add social proof to your videos and spark real discussion without ever sharing your password.

No Password Required
Custom or Random
Fast Delivery

Last updated:

12,000+

US customers served

4.9/5

Avg review rating

No password

Ever required

Pay after delivery

Refund / refill guarantee

Choose Your YouTube Comments Package

Pick random or custom comments and your quantity, then buy YouTube comments in minutes. Secure checkout, no password ever.

Random Comments

$7.20 $12.00

Estimated delivery: 0-4 hrs

You Save $4.80!

Random Comments Features

  • Real-looking comments
  • Varied, natural wording
  • 30-day refill
  • Spread across the thread
  • No password required
  • 24/7 support

Trusted payment methods we accept:

Stripe

Visa

Mastercard

American Express

PayPal

Google Pay

Crypto

Stripe

Visa

Mastercard

American Express

PayPal

Google Pay

Crypto

How to Buy YouTube Comments in 3 Steps

1. Pick a Package

Choose random or custom comments and how many you want from the options above.

2. Share Your Video Link

Send the link to your video — and for custom orders, the exact comment text you want posted. No password needed.

3. Watch the Discussion Grow

Your comments start arriving, building social proof and sparking real conversation.

Fast Delivery

Comments begin posting within hours of your order.

Safe & Password-Free

We never ask for your password — just your video link.

Secure Ordering

Your details stay private. Pay through trusted channels.

What Our Customers Say

Trusted by US creators and businesses.

5.0from 3+ verified reviews

I decided to buy YouTube comments — custom ones with questions about my next stream — and it sparked a real conversation in the thread. My regulars jumped in and the video felt alive within an hour.

MB

Marcus Bell

Gaming Creator, Austin, TX

The random comments I bought looked completely natural and gave my new recipe video instant credibility. New viewers actually started commenting too once the thread had some activity.

NA

Nicole Adams

Cooking Channel, Seattle, WA

Easy checkout, fast delivery, and the YouTube comments were from real-looking accounts. The social proof made my review look established instead of empty. Will buy again.

DO

Derek Owens

Tech Reviewer, Denver, CO

Why Buy YouTube Comments?

Comments are one of the strongest engagement signals on YouTube. When you buy YouTube comments, you give a video instant social proof — a video with an active thread looks more credible and trustworthy than one sitting at zero. Comments also help spark real discussion: once a conversation is started, genuine viewers are far more likely to add their own thoughts, ask questions, and stick around longer.

Folwrs makes it simple to buy comments on YouTube safely. Choose custom comments you write yourself for a precise message, or natural random comments that fit any video — all from real, active accounts, with no password required. US creators use comments to make new uploads feel established and to encourage organic engagement. Pair them with our YouTube subscribers service and YouTube likes for maximum impact, or track your growth with our free live YouTube subscriber count.

How YouTube counts comments growth in 2026

YouTube treats the comment count as a near-real-time field, but the number you see on a video card and the number stored inside Creator Studio analytics do not always agree on the same minute. When a viewer posts a comment, YouTube writes it to the public thread within seconds, increments the public counter on the watch page, and queues the event for the analytics pipeline. The analytics pipeline batches engagement events and refreshes the public-facing dashboards on a delay that typically lands between a few hours and a full day, which is why a video can read 412 comments on the player and 398 in Studio at the same moment.

Not every comment registers on the first try. YouTube routes new comments through a held-for-review queue when the channel has community-moderation rules turned on, when the comment contains a link, when the commenter is a new account with no posting history, or when the comment matches a pattern the spam classifier scores as suspicious. Held comments do not increment the public counter until the creator approves them. Comments that look automated, such as those posted from cycled IP ranges or accounts with no avatar and no uploads, are usually filtered into the Likely Spam tab and never reach the public thread.

On top of the live filter, YouTube runs periodic integrity sweeps across the platform. The sweeps look for accounts that were created in bulk, accounts that comment on hundreds of unrelated videos in a short window, and accounts whose behavior pattern matches the signature of an engagement farm. When a sweep flags an account, all of that account's recent comments are removed at once and the comment counter on every affected video drops accordingly. This is the mechanic that punishes cheap, bot-driven services and the reason real, aged accounts are the only viable supply for a sustainable comments order.

Real comments vs bot comments — the difference

A real YouTube account looks like a person used it. The profile has an avatar, a banner, a handle that does not read like a random string, and a channel page that lists at least a few subscriptions, playlists, or uploads. There is a history of watch activity, likes, and prior comments spread across months or years. The account signs in from a consistent device fingerprint and a residential IP range tied to a plausible geographic region. When this account leaves a comment, YouTube's spam classifier reads the engagement signals around it — the account watched part of the video, scrolled the description, maybe clicked through to the channel — and treats the comment as organic.

A bot account looks like a script created it. The profile picture is missing or generic. The handle is a string of letters and numbers. There are no uploads, no playlists, no subscriptions, and the comment history is either empty or shows the same short phrase posted on dozens of unrelated videos in the same hour. The IP address rotates through a datacenter range or a residential proxy pool shared with hundreds of other accounts. There is no watch time before the comment lands. YouTube's classifier scores this profile as low-trust on day one, and the comment is either filtered into Likely Spam immediately or removed in the next integrity sweep.

Folwrs sources comments from a network of real, aged accounts run by real people who use YouTube as part of their daily browsing. Every account in our supply has a complete profile, a posting history, a watch history, and a device fingerprint that matches an ordinary US or English-speaking viewer. We do not run datacenter farms, we do not buy recycled accounts off resale forums, and we do not post the same canned line across hundreds of videos. That is what keeps the comments on a Folwrs order indistinguishable from the organic thread around them.

Custom / Random — which tier is right for you

The Random tier is the right call when you want the thread to feel populated and natural without dictating the exact wording. Our writers read the video title and category and post varied, on-topic messages that look like an ordinary viewer reaction. This tier is the better value per comment and the right pick for tutorial uploads, gaming clips, music videos, and any case where the goal is to make the thread look active rather than to push a specific message.

The Custom tier is the right call when the comment text itself is doing work. You write the exact line — a question that prompts other viewers to reply, a use-case story that previews what your product does, a call to action that points at the next video in a series, or a clarification that pre-empts a common misunderstanding. Custom is the better pick for sales videos, course launches, podcast clips, and any thread where you want the top comments to shape how new viewers read the video.

DimensionRandomCustom
Best forLooking activeShaping the message
Cost per commentLowerHigher
Refill window30 days60 days
Engagement-rate liftSolidStrongest

If your channel is brand new, start with a small Random order to warm up the first few videos. If you are targeting a US audience and want top comments that read in plain American English, Custom with your own wording is the safer pick. If your goal is to lift the engagement-rate signal that feeds the recommendation system, either tier helps — engagement rate is the ratio of comments, likes, and shares to views, and both Random and Custom move that ratio in the right direction.

Detailed delivery timeline by package size

Comments are delivered through a drip schedule that mimics the way an organic thread fills up. The windows below are the typical ranges we see on US orders placed during business hours.

QuantityRandom windowCustom window
10 comments0 to 2 hours0 to 3 hours
50 comments0 to 4 hours1 to 5 hours
100 comments1 to 5 hours1 to 6 hours
250 comments2 to 8 hours2 to 10 hours
500 comments3 to 12 hours3 to 14 hours

The reason we drip the delivery instead of dumping every comment in the first minute is that real threads do not behave that way. A human thread fills slowly across the first day, with a few comments in the opening hour, more during peak viewing windows, and a long tail across the next week. When a service promises "instant delivery" of five hundred comments, that is a red flag. The only way to deliver that much volume in a few minutes is to script low-trust accounts to post in parallel, and YouTube's classifier is built to spot exactly that pattern. A natural pace is the entire point of paying for the order in the first place.

What happens if YouTube audits a purchased comments batch

YouTube does not audit individual orders — it audits accounts, and the comments those accounts left are removed as a side effect when an account is flagged. The honest answer about purchased comments is the same answer as for the rest of our services: comments left by real accounts with real profiles, real watch history, and real device fingerprints survive audits because there is nothing in the signal that distinguishes them from a comment your neighbor left after watching your video. Comments left by bots get purged in the next sweep, and the comment count on the affected video drops by whatever share of the order came from the flagged supply.

The integrity sweep cycle runs on a rolling cadence. Newer or riskier accounts get reviewed in a tighter loop, often every few days. Established accounts that have been on the platform for years with steady behavior are reviewed less often. When a sweep runs, the system looks at the account's posting pattern across all of YouTube, not at any one video. If the account has been posting the same templated line on a hundred unrelated videos a day, it goes. If the account has a normal viewing pattern, occasional comments spread across the kinds of videos a real person watches, and a consistent device and IP fingerprint, it stays.

That is why our supply is built the way it is, and that is why we back every comments order with a refill guarantee. If any comment in your delivery drops within the refill window — 30 days for Random, 60 days for Custom — we top the order back up at no extra cost. The refill is the right way to handle the small share of natural attrition that happens on any thread. We have never seen a channel action result from a Folwrs comments order, and we deliver the supply that way on purpose.

Buying comments vs growing organically — full comparison

The instinct to compare buying comments against growing the channel organically is the right one. They solve different problems on different timescales, and most US creators end up using both. The table below lays out the trade-off on the dimensions that actually matter when you are planning a launch.

AspectBuying commentsGrowing organically
CostFlat per comment, predictableVariable — time, production, ads
Time to thresholdHoursWeeks to months
Retention rateHigh with real accounts, refilledPermanent once posted
ScalabilityInstant — pick a larger packageCompounds slowly with audience
Audience qualityReal viewers, not your subscribersYour actual subscribers
Conversion to revenueIndirect — social proof helps closeDirect — your warm audience

Organic comments are the gold standard because they come from your actual subscribers and turn into a feedback loop. Someone who comments on your video is far more likely to comment on the next one, subscribe if they have not already, and share the video with a friend. That compounding is the engine behind every channel that crossed a hundred thousand subscribers. The catch is the timeline. A new upload on a small channel can sit at three or four comments for a week, and an empty thread tells every new visitor that nobody else is watching. That perception alone caps the organic growth you are trying to build.

Paid comments solve the cold-start problem. A thread that starts with thirty comments in the first day reads as active to the next viewer, which raises the probability that they leave a comment of their own and watch the video to completion. Higher watch time and higher engagement rate are the two signals that move a video into the recommendation system, so paid social proof in the first day is a lever on the organic curve that follows. The cost compares favorably to paid traffic — a US-targeted view on Google Ads runs roughly $0.01 per view, and a single quality comment moves the social-proof needle far more than one extra view ever will.

For most US creators in 2026, the right answer is both — paid for kickstart, organic for compounding.

Pairing comments with sibling services for algorithm boost

A single-metric campaign plateaus quickly because YouTube does not judge a video on one signal in isolation. The recommendation system reads the relationship between the signals — the ratio of likes to views, the ratio of comments to likes, the ratio of new subscribers to channel views — and uses those ratios to decide whether a video is performing better than the average video on a channel of that size. If you push a thousand views into a video that has two likes and zero comments, the ratios get worse, not better, and the algorithm reads the video as a weaker performer than it would have otherwise.

Engagement-signal coherence is the term for keeping those ratios in the range a healthy organic video would land in. A typical US creator video sits somewhere around a five to seven percent like-to-view ratio and a much smaller comments-to-view ratio in the tenths of a percent. If you are buying comments to bootstrap social proof, pairing that with a proportionate number of likes keeps the ratios coherent. If you are running the comments order to support a launch, pairing it with a subscriber boost helps the channel page read as established when a new viewer clicks through from the video to decide whether to follow.

The two services that pair most naturally with this one are real YouTube subscribers from US-friendly accounts to raise the channel-level trust signal, and high-retention YouTube likes to keep the like-to-view ratio in the natural band. Run them together, sized in proportion to each other, and the video reads as a healthy organic performer at every layer the recommendation system inspects.

Frequently Asked Questions

Everything US customers ask before they buy YouTube comments.

Ready to Buy YouTube Comments?

Add social proof and spark real discussion in minutes. Custom or random comments, fast delivery, no password, refill guarantee.

Buy YouTube Comments

Questions first? Contact support.