Operating since 2020, 500,000+ orders processed

Buy Facebook Reactions

Real Love, Haha, Wow, Sad, Care, and Angry reactions added to any public Facebook post, with a 30-day refill warranty. Mixed or single-type packages. 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.

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
Try It Now

See How Easy It Is to Order

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
Sign Up & Order Now

100% Safe

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

Match the Mood

Pick reactions that fit your post. Love for happy, Sad for somber, Haha for funny.

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 reaction services, written without marketing fluff.

Real-Account Reactions

Premium-tier reactions 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.

All Six Reaction Types

Love, Haha, Wow, Sad, Care, and Angry are all available as single-type packages. Pick the one (or the mix) that fits the post's sentiment so the reactions read as a real audience response, not a random pile of emoji.

Mixed Reaction Packages

Mixed packages distribute the reactions across the positive set (Love, Haha, Wow) so the engagement bar shows several colored bubbles rather than a single one. That looks closer to organic engagement on a good post than 5,000 identical Loves.

30-Day Refill Warranty

Services with refill in their name include a 30-day warranty. If the reaction count drops within that window because Facebook prunes inactive accounts or supply accounts go offline, the system replaces the lost reactions. Standard services without refill in the name are not covered.

No Credentials Required

Orders use the public post URL only. There is no OAuth flow, no password field, no third-party app authorization, no admin access on your Page. 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 Reaction Type

Love, Haha, Wow, Sad, Care, Angry, or a mixed positive package. The service name states the reaction type clearly.

4

Paste Post URL

Public Facebook post URL only, never your password. 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 are independently verifiable, not testimonials we wrote ourselves.

★★★★

Rated by real customers across 30+ platforms. Read verified reviews or leave your own. Every review is hosted and checked by Trustpilot.

See Reviews on Trustpilot
Complete Growth

Related Facebook & Social Media Services

Pair reactions with Likes, comments, and shares on the same post so the engagement row reads as a real conversation.

What "Buying Facebook Reactions" Actually Means

When you buy Facebook reactions, you are paying for other accounts to leave a specific reaction on a post: Love, Haha, Wow, Sad, Care, or Angry. You hand over the post 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 tap the chosen reaction. The reaction count under the post rises, and the engagement bar shows the corresponding colored bubble next to the total.

Reactions are different from the basic Like in one visible way. The Like is the default thumbs-up; Love, Haha, Wow, Sad, Care, and Angry are separate, named reactions that appear as their own emoji in the engagement row. A post that has 4,000 reactions distributed across Like, Love, and Haha looks more like a real audience response than 4,000 identical Likes. This service delivers the non-default reactions specifically; for the basic thumbs-up alone, see Buy Facebook Post Likes.

Buying reactions does not run the post for you. A weak post does not become a strong one because the engagement row has colored bubbles; what reactions change is the visual quality of the engagement and the social proof that the post got a real response. Pair reactions with post Likes and comments on the same post so the whole engagement row tells a coherent story instead of leaning entirely on one metric.

Want to get started? Buy Facebook Reactions Now

How Reactions Work in News Feed Ranking

Facebook introduced reactions in 2016 specifically because the Like was too coarse a signal. Meta has confirmed publicly that reactions feed the News Feed ranking system, and that the non-default reactions (Love, Haha, Wow, Sad, Angry, and later Care) are read as stronger signals than a quick Like because tapping a specific reaction takes more deliberate effort than a default tap. In practice that means a post with mostly Loves and Hahas can outperform a post with the same number of basic Likes when Facebook decides how widely to distribute it.

The other thing reactions change is the visual social proof at first glance. The engagement row at the bottom of a Facebook post shows the three most-used reactions as colored bubbles next to the total count. A post that shows the Love, Haha, and Wow bubbles signals an emotional, lively response; a post that shows only the thumbs-up signals neutral, passive acknowledgment. Buying mixed positive reactions specifically targets that visual: the engagement row that says "this post made people feel something" rather than "people scrolled past and tapped Like."

Sentiment match is the part that traps unprepared buyers. The reactions you pick need to fit the post. A funeral announcement with 5,000 Hahas reads as bot-driven or actively hostile, regardless of provider quality; the same announcement with Sad and Care reactions reads as a real community response. Pick reactions that match what the post is actually about, not whichever is cheapest in the catalog.

Reaction Types and Quality Tiers

The Facebook reaction services on NLO SMM are defined by two things: which reaction is delivered and the account quality behind it. Both are stated in the service name.

Single-Type Reactions

Single-type services deliver one specific reaction (Love only, Haha only, Wow only, and so on). Use them when the post calls for one clear emotional response: Love for celebrations, weddings, and milestones; Haha for jokes, memes, and humor posts; Wow for surprising news or impressive content; Sad for losses and somber news; Care for support posts; Angry for posts that legitimately invite outrage (a campaign call-out, for example).

Mixed Positive Packages

Mixed positive packages distribute the reactions across Love, Haha, and Wow according to a natural-looking ratio (typically Love-heavy, Haha second, Wow as the smallest share). The engagement row ends up showing three colored bubbles, which looks closer to how a real audience reacts to a good post than 5,000 identical Loves stacked on a single reaction.

Standard vs Premium Accounts

Independently of reaction type, the 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 credible if a visitor expands the reactions list to see who reacted. There is more on matching reactions to content in matching reactions to post sentiment below.

Explore all Facebook reaction services View Services

How the Refill Warranty Works

The 30-day refill warranty covers attrition on premium-tier reaction services. The system records the reaction 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. 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 reactions those accounts had given. Supply accounts can also be deleted by their owners or by Facebook between order and refill. The warranty exists to absorb both.

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. The most common own-goal here is deleting the post or changing its audience to private, which removes every reaction on it; no refill brings those back because the post object is gone. 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 reactions. 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 post itself. An external service that adds reactions to a public post without ever accessing your account does not match those patterns.

This is why NLO SMM only needs the public post URL. There is no login, no OAuth, no password, no admin access, and nothing installed. Because no software touches your account, a reaction order cannot trigger the automation-based enforcement that actually gets accounts restricted. The relevant safety surface is the post content itself: keep the post within Facebook's community standards (no prohibited content, no spam links, no policy violations), and a healthy reaction count alone will not invite enforcement scrutiny.

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 reaction count plausible relative to the post's reach, match the reaction type to the post's sentiment, and pair reactions with other engagement so the row looks balanced. Done that way the risk is low. Never mathematically zero, so size your spend accordingly.

Matching Reactions to Post Sentiment

Unlike most engagement metrics, reactions carry meaning. Picking the wrong reaction type for the post is the single fastest way to make bought engagement look obvious. Three guidelines decide the call.

Match positive reactions to positive posts

Celebrations, product launches, wins, milestones, photo posts, and humor content are all positive. Love works on celebrations and warm content; Haha works on humor, memes, and self-deprecating posts; Wow works on impressive results, surprising news, and visually striking content. Mixed positive packages let you cover all three at once without picking which is dominant.

Match somber reactions to somber posts

Loss announcements, condolences, illness updates, and serious news call for Sad and Care, not Love or Haha. The Care reaction was added specifically for this kind of content and reads as supportive. A somber post with 4,000 Loves looks tone-deaf at best and bot-driven at worst; the same post with Sad and Care reactions reads as a real community response.

Use Angry deliberately or not at all

Angry is the highest-risk reaction to buy. It only makes sense on posts that legitimately invite outrage (a campaign exposing a wrong, an opinion piece designed to provoke, a critique of a target the audience already opposes). On a neutral product post, Angry reactions look like a coordinated attack, which is the opposite of helpful. If the post does not specifically invite anger, skip this reaction entirely.

Ready to place an order? Create Free Account

API and Bulk Orders for Agencies

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 firing reaction orders against new posts as they publish.

Two groups rely on it. Marketing agencies fire reactions at many client posts 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 Facebook strategy, ordering reactions alongside post Likes, comments, and shares on the same post through one balance is simpler than juggling several providers, and it keeps the engagement row balanced rather than buying reactions in isolation. Fund the account once on the add funds page and the API draws from that balance.

Who Uses This Service

Buying Facebook reactions is mostly about how individual posts look at first glance. The realistic range of buyers includes:

  • Page admins boosting a key post, replacing a row of bare thumbs-ups with a Love/Haha/Wow mix that signals an emotional, lively response.
  • Brand managers running launches, ensuring launch posts and product announcements show Love reactions matching the celebratory tone.
  • Comedians, meme pages, and humor creators, where Haha reactions on jokes and memes are the engagement signal that matches the content.
  • News and commentary pages, picking Wow for surprising stories and Sad or Care for losses, matching reactions to article tone.
  • Marketing agencies, posting reaction orders across many client posts through the API with sentiment matched per post.
  • Reseller panels, child-panel operators sourcing Facebook reactions from NLO SMM and reselling to their own customers.

What unites them is a per-post visual goal: make the engagement row tell the story of how the audience felt about the post, not just that they tapped.

Mistakes That Hurt Results

Buying reactions can give a post real visual lift or expose it as bot-driven, depending on execution. These are the avoidable errors.

Wrong reaction for the post's sentiment

This is the single biggest one. A loss announcement with 5,000 Hahas, a wedding photo with 4,000 Angrys, or a serious news post with 6,000 Loves all read as obviously bought. Pick the reaction (or mixed package) that fits what the post is actually about.

Only one reaction type at very high volume

An engagement bar showing 8,000 reactions that are all Love and zero of anything else is a pattern real audiences almost never produce. Mix in some basic Likes, and consider a mixed positive package instead of single-type, so the engagement row shows multiple bubble colors.

Buying Angry reactions on posts that do not invite outrage

Angry is read as hostile attention. On a neutral product post or a personal announcement, Angry reactions look like a coordinated attack rather than support. Skip Angry unless the post is specifically designed to provoke that response.

Ignoring the Like count alongside reactions

Real posts gather basic Likes alongside reactions; a post with 6,000 reactions and only 80 Likes is structurally implausible. Order Likes and reactions together so the breakdown looks like a real audience response.

Using any service that asks for your password or admin access

No reaction service needs your password, and no service needs admin access to your Page. The public post 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 reaction type and account quality. Standard mixed-account reactions are the cheapest; premium real-account reactions with refill cost more; mixed positive packages cost slightly more than single-type because they distribute across Love, Haha, and Wow. Exact rates show live in the order panel above. The full catalog is on the services page.

All six non-default reactions Facebook offers: Love, Haha, Wow, Sad, Care, and Angry. Each is available as a single-type package, and Love/Haha/Wow are also available as a mixed positive package that distributes across all three. For the basic thumbs-up Like, see Buy Facebook Post Likes.

The Like is the default thumbs-up tap. Reactions (Love, Haha, Wow, Sad, Care, Angry) are separate, named responses that show as their own colored bubbles in the engagement row. Reactions take more deliberate effort to tap than Like, and Meta has confirmed they feed News Feed ranking as a stronger signal than a basic Like. The two metrics complement each other; most real posts have both.

It is safe when the provider never requests your password and never asks for admin access on your Page. NLO SMM only needs the public post URL. No credentials, no app authorization, no automation on your account. Facebook's enforcement targets accounts that run automation on themselves, not posts that gain reactions from external accounts. Keep the post content within Facebook's standards. No provider can guarantee against future policy changes.

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

Mixed positive packages (Love, Haha, Wow distributed) usually look more natural than a single reaction at high volume, because the engagement row shows multiple colored bubbles the way real audiences produce. Single-type makes sense when the post specifically calls for one reaction (a sad announcement needs Sad and Care, a wedding photo needs Love, a meme needs Haha) or when you want to drive that one bubble to the top of the engagement row.

Yes, as long as the post is publicly accessible. Page posts, public Profile posts, public Group posts, photos, videos, and Reels all work. Private posts and posts inside closed Groups are not supported because the supply accounts cannot see them.

Standard orders typically start within 60 seconds and complete over hours for smaller volumes. Larger orders complete over hours to a day. Drip-feed spreads delivery across hours or days for fresh posts on smaller Pages where an instant spike would look out of line with the Page's normal engagement.

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. Reactions lost because the post was deleted or set to private are not refilled, because the post itself is gone. Standard tiers without refill in the name are not covered.

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 Reactions

Real Love, Haha, Wow, Sad, Care, and Angry reactions on any public Facebook post, single-type or mixed positive packages, with a 30-day refill warranty on premium tiers, a sub-60-second start, and the public post URL as the only required input. Order from the dashboard or automate through the REST API.