Operating since 2020, 500,000+ orders processed

Buy Facebook Group Members

Real Facebook accounts that join your Group, with a 30-day refill warranty. Orders typically start in under 60 seconds. No password ever required, only the Group URL. Used by community managers, agencies, and reseller panels through our dashboard and REST API.

No password required
Under 60s start time
30-day refill warranty
Public REST API
500K+ Orders Processed
2,000+ Active Services
30+ Platforms Supported
2020 Operating Since
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Preview our ordering experience. Select a service, enter your details, and get started in seconds.

Facebook Services

Choose a category & service below
Min: 100, Max: 500,000
Price per 1,000 $0.90
Total $0.90
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100% Safe

We never ask for your password. Zero risk of account bans.

Instant Start

Most orders begin within 1-2 minutes of placement.

Auto-Approve First

Turn off member approval before ordering so requests are not held in a queue.

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 Group member services, written without marketing fluff.

Real-Account Members

Premium-tier members come from real Facebook profiles with photos, friends, and posting history. Lower tiers use mixed-quality accounts at lower prices. The service name in the catalog states which tier you are buying, so there are no surprises after delivery.

Works With Auto-Approve

If your Group has member approval turned on, requests sit in a queue until you accept them. Turn admin approval off for the delivery window (or be ready to approve in bulk) so the supply accounts can actually join.

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 your member count drops within that window because Facebook prunes inactive accounts or supply accounts go offline, the system replaces the lost members. Members removed by you or your admin team are not refilled.

No Credentials Required

Orders use the Group URL only. There is no OAuth flow, no password field, no third-party app authorization. The Group must be public, or set so it is discoverable and accepting join requests, during the delivery window.

Public REST API

The full REST API at /api covers order placement, status, balance, refill triggers, and bulk operations. It is used by community managers 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

Turn Off Admin Approval

In Group settings, switch member approval to "Anyone can join" for the delivery window. Or leave approval on and plan to accept the queue in bulk.

4

Paste Group URL

Public Facebook Group URL only, never your password. The Group must be discoverable and accepting join requests 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

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Complete Growth

Related Facebook & Social Media Services

Combine Group members with reactions, comments, and shares on Group posts so a busy member count is backed by visible activity.

What "Buying Facebook Group Members" Actually Means

When you buy Facebook Group members, you are paying for other accounts to join your Group. You hand over the Group URL, not your login, and the panel routes the order to a network of real accounts (premium tiers) or older recycled profiles (standard tiers) that request to join. The member count Facebook displays in the Group header rises the same way it would from organic joins.

Facebook Groups are a different surface from Pages and Profiles, and the count works differently as a result. A Group has members, not followers. Members can see the Group's posts in their News Feed if they are engaged, and the Group itself shows up in member discovery surfaces (Suggested Groups, Groups for You, the Discover tab) based on member count, activity, and category. NLO SMM Group services add to the Members count specifically, on either a public Group or a discoverable private Group that accepts join requests.

Buying members does not run the community for you. A Group with 50,000 members and no daily posts looks like a dead community to anyone who lands in it, and Facebook reads the low engagement as a signal not to suggest the Group further. What members change is the size of the audience eligible to see your Group posts, the social proof a new visitor sees on the Group page, and the perception of an active community. Pair the member count with post likes, comments, and reactions on actual Group posts so the inside of the Group reads as alive, not just the headline number.

Want to get started? Buy Facebook Group Members Now

How Facebook Surfaces and Ranks Groups

Facebook has its own ranking system for Groups, separate from Page ranking. The Groups tab, Suggested Groups, and "Discover" recommendations all weigh signals Meta has named in its own Group publishing: member count, recency of posts and comments, the rate at which members engage with Group content, and the Group's category match against the viewer's interests. A higher member count is one of the most visible inputs, especially for new viewers who scan the headline number before deciding to join.

What the member count alone does not do is push your Group posts into more News Feeds. Facebook ranks each Group post individually using "meaningful social interactions" (comments and replies above passive views) before deciding how many of your members to surface it to. A Group with 30,000 members and active commenters reaches more of those members than a Group with 200,000 members where nobody talks. The member count sets the ceiling; the per-post engagement decides how close you get to it.

Honest limit: members are the most visible Group number, so they do most of the heavy lifting for first-impression credibility and for Group discovery rankings. They are not the lever that puts your posts in member feeds. Use members to lift the count above the empty-shell baseline, and run a real posting schedule with engagement to make the Group genuinely worth being in.

Quality Tiers and Privacy Considerations

The Facebook Group member services on NLO SMM are defined by two things: the quality of the accounts joining and the privacy/approval settings of your Group. Both shape what you should order.

Standard Members

The lowest price point. These come from a mix of older recycled accounts with thinner profiles. The member count rises and the Group looks larger at a glance, but if a visitor clicks through the members list they will see fewer photos and less activity. Useful when the headline number is the goal and the cost matters more than how the members look on close inspection.

Premium Real-Account Members with Refill

Real Facebook profiles with photos, friends, and posting history. They look credible in the members list, they hold better against Facebook's periodic pruning, and the 30-day refill replaces any drops in that window. The right choice for brand and creator communities where members are visible and where a serious-looking community matters more than a cheap headline number.

Public vs Private Groups

Facebook now offers two privacy settings: Public (anyone can see posts and join) and Private (members can see posts; non-members may or may not be able to find the Group depending on the visibility setting). Members can be delivered to a Group regardless of privacy, but Private Groups that require admin approval will queue every join request until you accept it. If you keep approval on, plan to bulk-approve when the order delivers; if you turn approval off for the delivery window, the supply joins automatically.

Explore all Facebook Group services View Services

How the Refill Warranty Works for Groups

The 30-day refill warranty covers attrition on premium-tier Group member services. The system records the member count 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. Refills are typically processed quickly once the request is submitted.

Some attrition is normal. Facebook periodically prunes accounts it flags as inactive or in violation of policy, which removes any group memberships those accounts had. Supply accounts can also be deleted by their owners or by Facebook between order and refill. The warranty exists to absorb both. Note that a member you yourself or another admin removes, ban, or block is not refilled, because that was a moderation action and not a drop.

What the refill 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 such as turning off membership, deleting the Group, restricting discoverability, or running large-scale member purges in the admin tool. 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 Group gained members. 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 Group itself (prohibited content, misleading group name, organized abuse). An external service that has other accounts join your Group without ever touching your account does not match those patterns.

This is why NLO SMM only needs the Group URL. There is no login, no OAuth, no password, and nothing installed. Because no software touches your account or your admin team's accounts, a member order cannot trigger the automation-based enforcement that actually gets accounts and Groups restricted. The relevant safety surface is the Group content itself: keep the Group name, description, cover photo, and posts within Facebook's community standards, since content violations are the most common reason a Group gets archived or removed regardless of member count.

An honest caveat belongs here: no provider can guarantee against future platform policy changes, and anyone promising a permanent guarantee is overstating it. Keep growth plausible for the Group age and niche, drip-feed when an instant jump would stand out, and run real posts with real engagement so the Group reads as a community rather than a member-count dumping ground. Done that way the risk is low. Never mathematically zero, so size your spend accordingly.

When to Use Drip-Feed Delivery

Drip-feed spreads a member order across a delivery window instead of dropping it all at once. It usually costs the same per member; you are choosing a delivery shape. For Groups specifically, drip-feed has extra value because it lines up with how real communities grow and because it prevents flooding the admin approval queue if you keep approval on. Three situations decide the call.

New or small Groups

A Group with 80 members that jumps to 50,000 overnight reads as bought to anyone visiting, and Facebook's Group anomaly detection picks up large discontinuous joins. Drip the order over the first few weeks so the curve mirrors how a real community fills up, and run real posts during the ramp so the inside of the Group reads as active.

Groups with admin approval kept on

If you leave admin approval on for safety reasons (a niche community where you want to vet members), a single burst of 10,000 join requests will overwhelm the admin queue and look obviously synthetic. Drip the order over days or weeks so the requests trickle in at a rate you can realistically review, and the approval pattern mirrors normal Group growth.

Communities running paid promotion or recruiting around an event

If you are advertising the Group, hosting a launch, or recruiting around a specific date, a steady ramp during the campaign reads better than a sudden spike on the day. Order earlier and spread the delivery across the campaign window so the member curve looks consistent with the rest of the Group's growth pattern.

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API and Bulk Orders for Community Managers

NLO SMM exposes a public REST API at /api covering order placement, status checks, balance queries, refill triggers, and bulk operations. It is the same backend the dashboard uses, so anything you can do by hand you can automate, including running member orders against a portfolio of client Groups.

Two groups rely on it. Community managers and agencies that run multiple Groups (one per niche, per client, per region) push member growth to all of them 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 accounts running a full Group strategy, ordering members alongside post likes, comments, and reactions on actual Group posts through one balance is simpler than juggling several providers, and it keeps the member-to-engagement ratio in your control rather than buying members in isolation. Fund the account once on the add funds page and the API draws from that balance.

Who Uses This Service

Buying Facebook Group members is mostly about how a community reads to people who land in it for the first time. The realistic range of buyers includes:

  • Community managers building niche groups, lifting member counts above the empty baseline so first joiners see a real-looking community.
  • Small businesses running customer groups, where a busier member count lends credibility to support, deals, or product discussion communities.
  • Online courses and creators, building free-to-join Groups around content (cohort communities, paid-program alumni groups, free lead-magnet communities) where the member count signals value before someone joins.
  • Local groups, neighborhood, regional, or city groups where a larger member base implies the community is the real one for that area.
  • Marketing agencies, managing many client Groups and topping up members through the API.
  • Reseller panels, child-panel operators sourcing Facebook Group members from NLO SMM and reselling to their own customers.

What unites them is a community-level goal: make the member count match the ambition of the Group, then run real activity inside so the community is worth being in once joined.

Mistakes That Hurt Results

Buying members can lift a Group or expose it as inflated, depending on execution. These are the avoidable errors.

Buying for a Group with admin approval on, then not approving

This is the single most common mistake on Group orders. Most niche Groups require admin approval for new members. If you order without preparing the queue, the supply requests sit unapproved, the member count does not rise, and the order looks like it failed. Either turn admin approval off for the delivery window, or be ready to bulk-approve as the requests arrive.

Spiking a small or new Group

A Group with 100 members that jumps to 50,000 in a day is the classic giveaway. Drip the order so the curve mirrors how real Groups grow, and run real posts during the ramp so the numbers have a story behind them.

Letting the engagement ratio go lopsided

A Group with 100,000 members and 4 reactions on its latest post reads as bought to anyone who actually opens it. Buy post likes, reactions, and comments on your real Group posts so the engagement keeps pace with the member count.

Treating members as a substitute for moderation

A Group with thousands of bought members and no posting rules, no spam filters, and no admin team becomes a spam target. Set up posting rules and approval filters on Group posts so the higher visibility from a larger member count does not draw spam that drives real members away.

Using any service that asks for your password

No Group member service needs your password, and no service needs admin access to your Group. The public Group URL is the only input required. Treat a password request or an admin-permissions request as a reason to leave.

Frequently Asked Questions

Pricing depends on the quality tier and order size. Standard members from mixed-quality accounts are the cheapest; premium real-account members with refill 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 asks for admin permissions on your Group. NLO SMM only needs the public Group URL. No credentials, no app authorization, no automation on your account. Facebook's enforcement targets accounts that run automation on themselves, not Groups that gain members from external accounts. Keep the Group content within Facebook's community standards, since that is what enforcement actually looks at.

No to both. The only input required is the public Group URL. Any service that asks for your password or for admin permissions on your Group should be avoided. There is no legitimate reason a member service needs either.

You have two options. Turn admin approval off for the delivery window (Group settings, "Who can join", set to "Anyone can join") so the supply accounts join automatically. Or leave approval on and plan to bulk-approve the queue as the requests arrive. If you keep approval on, drip-feed the order so the queue trickles in at a rate you can actually review instead of arriving in one burst.

Yes, as long as the Group is discoverable (so the URL can be reached) and is accepting join requests during the delivery window. Hidden Groups that cannot be found in search will need admin approval and a join link plan if you want to deliver to them; in most cases switching to Private visible during the order window is the simplest route.

Standard orders typically start within 60 seconds and complete over hours for smaller volumes. Larger orders (50K+) complete over 24 to 72 hours. Drip-feed services spread delivery over days or weeks, which we recommend for Groups since it matches how real communities grow and prevents flooding the admin approval queue if you keep approval on.

Some can. Facebook periodically prunes accounts it flags as inactive or in violation, and supply accounts can be deleted between order and refill. Premium-tier services include a 30-day refill that replaces eligible drops within that window. Members you or other admins remove, ban, or block are not refilled. Standard tiers without refill in the name are not covered.

It can help. Facebook's Group recommendations weigh member count, post activity, category match, and engagement rates when deciding which Groups to surface in Suggested Groups and the Discover tab. A higher member count is one of the most visible signals. But it does not guarantee distribution, and a large Group with no post activity tends to fall back in those rankings.

Yes. The REST API at /api covers order placement, status checks, balance, refill triggers, and bulk operations, and is used by community managers, 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 Group Members

Real members joining any public or discoverable Facebook Group, with a 30-day refill warranty on premium tiers, a sub-60-second start, and the Group URL as the only required input. Order from the dashboard or automate through the REST API.