Real Facebook comments on any public Page, Profile, Group, photo, video, or Reels post — write your own custom text or pick random/emoji comments — with a 30-day refill warranty. Orders typically start in under 60 seconds. No password ever required, only the post URL. Used by Page admins, agencies, and reseller panels through our dashboard and REST API.
We never ask for your password. Zero risk of account bans.
Instant Start
Most orders begin within 1-2 minutes of placement.
Refill Guarantee
Drops? We replace them free during the warranty period.
24/7 Support
Real humans ready to help you anytime, day or night.
Service Details
What You Actually Get
The concrete characteristics of NLO SMM's Facebook comment services, written without marketing fluff.
Real-Account Comments
Premium-tier comments come from real Facebook profiles with photos, friends, and posting history, so the name and avatar next to each comment look genuine. Lower tiers use mixed-quality accounts at lower prices — the service name in the catalog tells you which is which.
Sub-60-Second Start
Standard-tier orders typically begin processing within the first minute after payment clears. Larger orders complete over hours; very large orders (50K+) over 24 to 72 hours. Each service description states its expected speed.
30-Day Refill Warranty
Services with refill in their name include a 30-day warranty: if comments on your post drop within that window, typically because Facebook removes some or supply accounts go inactive, the system replaces the lost comments. Standard services without refill in the name are not covered.
Custom or Random Comments
Supply your own lines and the comments say exactly what you write, or pick a random/emoji package for generic positive comments. Custom comments let you stay on-topic — which matters because every comment is visible text that real viewers read in the comment section.
No Credentials Required
Orders are placed using the public Facebook post URL only. There is no OAuth flow, no password field, no third-party app authorization. If the post is public during the delivery window, that is the only access required.
Public REST API
The full REST API at /api covers order placement, status, balance, refill triggers, and bulk operations. It is used by marketing agencies and reseller child panels. Standard rate limits apply; higher limits available on request.
Process
How Ordering Works
The full flow from account creation to delivery — five steps, typically completed in under two minutes.
1
Create an Account
Free signup — email and password only. No card details required at signup.
2
Add Funds
Card, crypto (BTC, ETH, USDT), or regional processors. Minimum top-up applies; check the funding page for current options.
3
Pick a Comment Type
Custom comments (you write the lines), random comments, or emoji comments — plus standard or premium account quality. The service name states the type and tier.
4
Paste Post URL & Comments
Public Facebook post URL only — never your password. For custom comments, paste your lines, one per line. The post must be public during the delivery window.
5
Track in Dashboard
Order status updates in real time. Standard tiers typically show "in progress" within a minute of placement.
Customer Feedback
Verified Reviews on Trustpilot
Our reviews live on Trustpilot, so they're independently verifiable — not testimonials we wrote ourselves.
When you buy Facebook comments, you are paying for other accounts to post text comments on a specific Facebook post — a Page status, a Profile post, a public Group post, a photo, a video, or a Reel. You hand over the post URL — and, for custom comments, the exact lines you want posted — not your login. Each comment is added under the post and raises its comment count, and the panel routes your order to a network of real accounts (premium tiers) or older recycled profiles (standard tiers).
Comments are different from every other metric on this panel in one important way: they are visible, human-readable text. A reaction, page like, or view is just a number, but a comment shows a name, an avatar, and words that every future viewer can read. That is why what the comments say matters as much as how many there are. You can supply your own lines (custom comments) to keep them on-topic and on-brand, or choose a random/emoji package for generic positive comments.
Buying comments does not run the Page for you. A post no one wants to read will not be rescued by a comment count. What comments change is the engagement signal Facebook reads, the social proof of an active discussion under the post, and the time real viewers spend reading the section. Pair comments with Facebook post likes and reactions so the engagement profile stays proportional and believable.
Comments are one of the strongest News Feed signals on Facebook. In its own explanations of feed ranking, Meta has consistently said the feed prioritises "meaningful social interactions" — back-and-forth between people — over passive consumption, and that comments and replies weigh significantly more than a like or a quick reaction. A post that generates conversation tends to be shown to more friends, followers, and Group members; a post that only gets passive views fades faster.
There is a catch specific to comments, and it cuts both ways. Because comments are public text, a relevant, on-topic comment adds real social proof and can start the back-and-forth Facebook is looking for — but a generic "Great post!" repeated fifty times, or remarks that have nothing to do with the post, are obvious to any human scrolling the section and can make a Page look bot-boosted. This is why custom comments that fit the content usually outperform cheap random ones, even when the raw count is the same.
As with every metric, the underlying post still has to be good. Comments strengthen the engagement profile and can spark real conversation under a post that already has something to say, but no comment count overrides a post that no one finishes reading. Use comments to make a working post look alive, not to rescue one that is not landing.
Quality Tiers Explained
The Facebook comment services on NLO SMM are defined by two things: the type of comment and the quality of the accounts posting it. Both are stated in the service name.
Custom Comments
You supply the exact text, one comment per line, and those are what get posted. This is the option to use when the comments matter — on-topic lines that fit the post look genuine and can steer the conversation. It is the best choice for brand Pages and business posts where customers actually read the section before deciding to engage or message.
Random & Emoji Comments
Generic positive comments or emoji reactions from the service's own pool. Cheaper and faster, useful when you mainly want to lift the comment count and warm up the section, but they read as generic, so keep volumes modest and use them where the section is not the main read.
Standard vs Premium Accounts
Independently of type, the commenting accounts can be standard (mixed quality, sometimes thinner profiles) or premium (real accounts with photos, friends, and posting history). Premium tiers include the 30-day refill and look more credible next to each comment. There is more on timing in when to use drip-feed below.
The 30-day refill warranty covers attrition on premium-tier comment services. The system records the comment count on your post at the moment delivery completes; if it drops within the 30-day window, the difference is replenished when you trigger the refill button in the dashboard or through an API call.
Some attrition is normal and has nothing to do with provider quality. Facebook periodically removes comments or purges accounts flagged as inactive or in violation of policy, which takes their comments with them, and supply accounts may be deleted by their owners. The warranty exists to absorb both. Note that a comment you delete, hide, or report yourself — or one removed by a Page moderator or Group admin — is not refilled, because that was a moderation action and not a drop.
What the warranty does not cover: drops outside the 30-day window, drops on standard-tier services that do not include refill in the service name, and changes you cause yourself — removing the post, changing the post's audience to private, or moderating the comments. When a drop is eligible, refill turnaround is typically fast; submit the order ID through the dashboard or the REST API.
Safety, Bans, and What Facebook Actually Detects
Facebook's community standards discourage artificial inflation of metrics, but enforcement targets specific behavior, not the fact that a post gained comments. The patterns Facebook acts on are automation tools that log into your account, scripted activity performed by your account, mass-messaging spam, and policy violations in the content itself. An external service that posts comments from other accounts without ever touching your account does not match those patterns.
Comments do carry one extra consideration the number-only metrics do not: the text itself must stay within Facebook's rules. Spammy, repetitive, link-stuffed, or policy-violating comment text can be filtered or removed by Facebook regardless of who posted it, and Page admins or Group admins can moderate comments at will, so custom comments should read like real remarks. NLO SMM only ever needs the public post URL and your comment lines — no login, no OAuth, no password, nothing installed.
An honest caveat belongs here: no provider can guarantee against future platform policy changes, and anyone promising a permanent guarantee is overstating it. Keep the comment count plausible relative to the post's reactions and reach, keep custom text on-topic, treat purchased comments as one input alongside genuine content, and use drip-feed when an instant spike would stand out. Done that way the risk is low, but never mathematically zero.
When to Use Drip-Feed Delivery
Drip-feed spreads a comment order across a delivery window instead of dropping it all at once. It usually costs the same per comment; you are choosing a delivery shape. Comments make a spike especially obvious on Facebook — a hundred comments appearing in the same minute, all with timestamps clustered together, is easy to spot in a feed that orders by recency — so pacing matters more here than for silent metrics. Three situations decide the call.
When reactions and reach are still low
A post with 80 reactions and 500 comments is an impossible profile on Facebook. Keep comments behind your reactions and roughly aligned with the post's reach; if you are boosting a fresh post, drip the comments so the section fills in gradually. Pair the order with Facebook reactions and post likes to keep the ratio believable.
When you want a natural-looking conversation
Real comment sections on Facebook build over hours and days, not in one burst — Page posts in particular often pick up comments over the first day or two as the feed surfaces them to different audiences. Spreading custom comments over the first 24 to 48 hours after posting makes the section read like genuine readers arriving.
When you are boosting several posts
Spreading comments across a posting schedule, rather than dumping a large order on one upload, keeps each post's engagement within a natural band and avoids a single post that looks out of line with the rest of the Page or Profile. This matches the way Facebook's feed already paces real engagement over time.
NLO SMM exposes a public REST API at /api covering order placement, status checks, balance queries, refill triggers, and bulk operations — including passing custom comment lines with the order. It is the same backend the dashboard uses, so anything you can do by hand you can automate.
Two groups rely on it. Marketing agencies post comments to many client Pages from a single balance and pull status programmatically instead of watching a dashboard. Reseller panels connect their own storefront to NLO SMM as an upstream provider and forward orders through the API; if you run one, the child panel option is built for exactly this. Standard rate limits apply, and higher limits are available on request through the dashboard.
For bulk buyers, ordering comments, post likes, reactions, and views in coordinated quantities through one account is simpler than juggling several providers, and it keeps the comment-to-engagement ratio in your control rather than buying comments in isolation. Fund the account once on the add funds page and the API draws from that balance.
Who Uses This Service
Buying Facebook comments is about making a post's comment section look active and on-topic for the audience that will read it. The realistic range of buyers includes:
Page admins warming up a key post — seeding the first on-topic comments so real fans feel comfortable joining the discussion instead of landing on an empty thread.
Small businesses and local shops — adding questions and positive remarks under a product, offer, or event post so it reads as discussed, not ignored.
Marketers steering the narrative — using custom comments to surface a key point, an FAQ answer, or a call to action near the top of the section.
Group admins — kickstarting discussion under a Group post when membership is large but daily active commenting is still thin.
Marketing agencies — posting tailored comment sets per client Page through the API.
Reseller panels — child-panel operators sourcing Facebook comments from NLO SMM and reselling to their own customers.
What unites them is a per-post goal: make the comment section look like a real, on-topic conversation, then let genuine readers add to it.
Mistakes That Hurt Results
Buying Facebook comments can make a post look alive or expose it as bot-boosted, depending on execution. These are the avoidable errors.
Using generic comments where people will read them
This is the biggest one and it is unique to comments. Fifty identical "Great post!" lines, or remarks that have nothing to do with the post, are obvious to any human scrolling the section and do more harm than a low comment count. Use custom, on-topic comments when the section is visible to a real audience — especially on a brand Page where customers read before they buy.
Letting the ratio go lopsided
Comments are rarer than reactions, which are rarer than reach. A post with more comments than reactions, or a comment count near its view count, looks bought at a glance. Keep comments behind reactions and roughly aligned with the post's views.
Dumping them all in one burst
A wall of comments with near-identical timestamps reads as automated, particularly in Facebook's feed view that surfaces recency. Drip the order so the section fills in the way a real conversation would, across hours or days.
Comment text that breaks the rules
Spammy, offensive, link-stuffed, or policy-violating comment text can be filtered or removed by Facebook no matter who posted it, and Page or Group admins can moderate it on top of that. Keep custom lines clean, natural, and link-free.
Using any service that asks for your password
No comment service needs your password — only the public post URL and your comment lines. Treat a password request as a reason to leave. The same applies if you also buy Facebook followers or Page likes.
Frequently Asked Questions
Pricing depends on the comment type and account quality. Random or emoji comments are the cheapest; custom comments and premium real-account comments cost more. Exact rates show live in the order panel above, and larger orders get better per-1,000 pricing. The full catalog is on the services page.
It is safe when the provider never requests your password and never logs into your account. NLO SMM only needs the public post URL and, for custom comments, your text — no credentials, no app authorization, no automation on your account. Facebook's enforcement targets accounts that run automation on themselves, not posts that receive comments from external accounts. Keep comment text clean and on-topic, since Facebook can filter or remove text that breaks its rules.
No. The only inputs required are the public URL of the post and, for custom comments, the lines you want posted. Any service that asks for your password should be avoided — there is no legitimate reason a comment service needs account credentials.
Standard comment orders typically start within 60 seconds; larger or custom orders complete over hours. Drip-feed is recommended for comments so the section fills in like a real conversation rather than a single burst. Because Facebook surfaces engagement most while a post is fresh, ordering soon after you publish gets the most value.
Some can. Facebook occasionally filters comments or purges inactive accounts, and supply accounts may be deleted. Premium-tier services include a 30-day refill that replaces eligible drops. Comments you delete or hide yourself, or that Page or Group admins moderate out, are not refilled. Standard tiers without refill in the name are not covered.
Yes — that is the custom comments option. You provide the exact lines, one per line, and those get posted. It is the better choice when the section is visible to a real audience, because on-topic comments look genuine while generic ones stand out. Random and emoji packages are available when you just want to lift the count.
Comments are among Facebook's strongest News Feed signals — Meta has consistently said the feed prioritises meaningful social interactions over passive views, and comments and replies weigh more than reactions. An active comment section can lift distribution to friends, followers, and Group members. But a comment count does not override weak content, and generic or off-topic comments can hurt credibility more than help. On-topic comments on a post that already says something are where they work.
Yes. Comments can be ordered for any public Facebook post — Page status updates, Profile posts, public Group posts, photos, videos, and Reels. The only requirement is that the post is publicly accessible and not restricted to a private audience or a closed Group during delivery.
Yes. The REST API at /api covers order placement, status checks, balance, refill triggers, and bulk operations, and is used by agencies and reseller child panels. Standard rate limits apply; higher limits are available on request.
Credit and debit cards, cryptocurrency including Bitcoin, Ethereum, and USDT, and several regional processors. Available methods are listed on the Add Funds page after you create an account.
Order Facebook Comments
Real comments on any public Facebook post — Page, Profile, Group, photo, video, or Reel — custom text or random/emoji, with a 30-day refill warranty, a sub-60-second start, and the post URL as the only required input. Order from the dashboard or automate through the REST API.