Drops happen. We top them back up.
Choose a refill-eligible service and we restore any drop within the guarantee window — just keep your profile public so it can run.
Give a new upload the social proof that makes the next viewer click play. A higher view count signals a video worth watching — and views feed the session signals YouTube uses to decide what to recommend. Multiple quality tiers, refill on eligible services, order in seconds.
A view count is the fastest read on whether a video is worth a stranger's time. Numbers on the counter lower the risk of clicking — and a click that turns into watch-time is the signal that actually matters.
The view counter is the most public number a video has, and it is doing quiet work every time a stranger lands on your upload. Faced with two videos on the same topic, most people open the one that already has an audience — a high count reads as a quiet endorsement from everyone who watched before them. Buying YouTube views is really about clearing that first hurdle: getting a new upload past the "zero views, why bother" reflex so it can earn attention on its content.
Be clear about what a view does and does not do, though. Views are a foot in the door, not a guarantee of reach. YouTube cares less about the raw count than about what happens after the click — how long people stay, whether the session continues. A padded counter on a video nobody finishes will not fool the algorithm into recommending it. Use views to make a genuinely good upload look as alive as it deserves, then let retention carry it. Each service lists its start time, speed and source on the order page.
There isn't only the cheapest. Match the source to the job — live rates and min / max appear on the order page when you choose a service.
Choose a refill-eligible service and we restore any drop within the guarantee window — just keep your profile public so it can run.
We never ask for a password or login — only your public link. Nothing to revoke, nothing at risk.
It is worth being precise about what a view buys you. The number on the counter influences a human decision — whether a new visitor risks a click — far more than it influences the algorithm directly. That human nudge is real and useful, especially in the fragile first hours of an upload when a video has no audience to vouch for it.
What views cannot do is manufacture watch-time. YouTube weighs how long people actually stay, and a high count on a video with a poor retention curve sends a contradictory signal rather than a flattering one. If your goal is the watch-time that feeds recommendations and monetization, pair views with content people finish — and see the dedicated watch hours service, which targets duration rather than the click count.
A video with thousands of views and not a single like or comment looks off to viewers and to the platform. A small amount of balanced engagement reads far more naturally. Read each service description for start time, speed, source and drop / refill on eligible services before you order, and scale up gradually rather than dropping a huge batch on one fresh link.
Add funds with cards, crypto, PromptPay or TrueMoney — whatever suits you.
Read the description — start time, speed and quality differ between services.
Set the quantity and order. Delivery starts automatically — no waiting on an admin.