Real public shares added to any public Facebook post, with a 30-day refill warranty. Each share creates a new post object on a supply timeline, so the share count rises and the original post gets attributed reach. 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.
Public Re-Shares
Each share creates a public post on a supply timeline, raising the visible share count.
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 share services, written without marketing fluff.
Public Re-Shares
Each share creates a new public post on a supply account's timeline that links back to your original. The share count under your post rises, and the original gets attributed reach when the supply account's friends see the shared version. Private DM shares are not delivered, only public ones, since those are the ones counted.
Real-Account Sharers
Premium-tier shares come from real Facebook profiles with photos, friends, and posting history. Lower tiers use mixed-quality accounts at lower prices. Real-account shares look more credible if anyone clicks through to see who reshared.
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 the share count drops within that window because Facebook prunes accounts or supply accounts delete the shared posts, the system replaces the lost shares. Shares lost because you delete the original post are not refilled, because the share targets are gone with it.
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 Service Tier
Standard, premium with refill, or drip-feed. Service names state the quality tier and warranty status explicitly.
4
Paste Post URL
Public Facebook post URL only, never your password. The post must be public during the delivery window. Posts set to friends-only or private will not accept external shares.
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.
Pair shares with post Likes, reactions, and comments on the same post so the engagement row reads as a real conversation, not just a single distribution metric.
When you buy Facebook shares, you are paying for other accounts to publicly reshare your post. 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). Each supply account opens your post and uses the Share action to publish a new post on its own timeline that links back to your original. The share count under your post rises, and a colored bubble showing shares appears in the engagement row alongside Likes and reactions.
This is mechanically different from every other Facebook engagement metric. A Like or a reaction attaches to your post and stays there. A share creates a new post object on someone else's timeline that references yours. That means buying shares actually generates new public content on Facebook (the shared posts on supply timelines), which is part of what makes shares both more valuable as a signal and slightly more expensive per unit than passive engagement.
One important note about counting. Facebook only publicly counts shares that go to a person's own timeline or to a public Group. Shares sent through Messenger to a DM, or shares to a closed Group, do not appear in the visible share number. This service delivers public re-shares specifically, since those are the ones that show in the count and that the engagement row reflects. Pair shares with post Likes, reactions, and comments on the same post so the full engagement row tells one coherent story.
In Meta's own publishing about News Feed ranking, shares are consistently named as one of the highest-weight engagement signals, alongside comments and replies. The reasoning is straightforward: sharing a post takes much more deliberate effort than tapping Like or even leaving a comment, and the act of resharing is a public endorsement that the content was worth pushing to the sharer's own network. Facebook reads that as a strong signal of meaningful interaction, and posts with a healthy share count tend to be surfaced more aggressively to the original poster's followers.
Shares also create attributed reach for the original post. When a supply account shares your post, the shared post (with a "shared a post from..." attribution and a link back to your original) appears in that account's friends' News Feeds. Some of those friends will engage with the shared version, and some will click through to your original. That is reach you did not have to pay Facebook ads for, generated as a byproduct of the share count itself.
Honest limit: the bought share count contributes to social proof and to the ranking signal, but the attributed reach varies a lot by supply account. Real-account shares from accounts with active friend networks deliver more attributed reach than thin recycled accounts whose friends rarely scroll. The premium tiers are where the attributed-reach part of the value actually shows up.
Quality Tiers Explained
The Facebook share services on NLO SMM fall into a few brackets, each priced and named explicitly so you know what you are ordering before you pay.
Standard Shares
The lowest price point. These come from a mix of older recycled accounts with thinner profiles and smaller friend networks. The share count rises and the share bubble appears in the engagement row, but the attributed reach the shared posts generate is limited because the supply accounts do not have large active audiences. Useful when the goal is the visible share count for social proof and the basic ranking signal, and the cost matters more than the spread.
Premium Real-Account Shares with Refill
Real Facebook profiles with photos, friends, and posting history. Shares from these accounts generate measurable attributed reach because the shared posts actually appear in friends' News Feeds and get some looks. They look credible if anyone clicks through the share list, they hold better against Facebook's periodic pruning, and the 30-day refill replaces drops. The right choice when you want shares to do more than just lift the number.
Drip-Feed
A delivery mode rather than a quality bracket. Drip-feed spreads the shares across hours or days instead of dropping them at once. For shares this matters more than for any other metric, because each share is a public post on a supply account's timeline, and a single account resharing dozens of unrelated posts in the same minute looks more obviously bot-driven than a single account leaving Likes. Drip-feed lets each supply account share at a more natural cadence. More on the timing in when to use drip-feed below.
The 30-day refill warranty covers attrition on premium-tier share services. The system records the share 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.
Shares have a slightly more complex attrition profile than other metrics. The drop can come from supply accounts deleting the shared post off their own timeline (which removes it from the count), from Facebook pruning supply accounts entirely (which takes any shared posts with them), or from the supply account being deleted by its owner. The warranty exists to absorb all three.
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 the most common own-goal here, which is deleting the original post. When the original is gone, the shared posts on supply timelines become broken stubs that show "This content isn't available right now," and the share count zeroes out. No refill can restore that, because the share targets are gone with the original. 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 shares. 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 has other accounts share your public post without ever touching 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 share 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), since shared content that violates policy can be removed from supply timelines and reduce the visible share 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 the share count plausible relative to the post's reach, pair shares with other engagement so the row looks balanced, and drip-feed so each supply account shares at a natural cadence. Done that way the risk is low. Never mathematically zero, so size your spend accordingly.
When to Use Drip-Feed Delivery
Drip-feed matters more for shares than for any other Facebook metric because each share is a public post that lands on a supply account's timeline. The cadence of those public posts is something Facebook and human viewers can both check. Three situations decide the call.
Almost every share order on a small Page
On a fresh post from a small or mid-sized Page, a sudden jump from 3 shares to 8,000 shares in ten minutes is the kind of spike that stands out both to scrolling viewers and to Facebook's anomaly detection on the post. Drip the order across the first day or two so the share curve mirrors how a post that catches on actually spreads.
Keeping supply accounts from looking bot-driven
If 50 supply accounts each share dozens of unrelated client posts in the same minute, those accounts look obviously automated, which lowers their quality over time. Drip-feed spreads the shares per supply account, so each one shares at a cadence closer to how a normal Facebook user reshares content (one or two posts a day, not 60 in a minute).
Backing paid promotion with a credible share curve
If you are also boosting the post with Facebook ads or paid promotion, a steady share curve during the campaign lifts ad-funnel metrics naturally and lifts the social proof seen by ad viewers. A flat zero-shares post that suddenly shows 6,000 shares overnight, mid-campaign, draws more scrutiny than one that climbed during the campaign window.
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 share orders against new posts as they publish.
Two groups rely on it. Marketing agencies fire shares 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 shares alongside post Likes, reactions, and comments on the same post through one balance is simpler than juggling several providers, and it keeps the engagement row balanced rather than buying shares in isolation. Fund the account once on the add funds page and the API draws from that balance.
Who Uses This Service
Buying Facebook shares is mostly about lifting a post's distribution signal and attributed reach. The realistic range of buyers includes:
Page admins boosting a key post, lifting the share count on launches, announcements, and important updates so Facebook reads the post as worth distributing more widely.
News and commentary pages, where shares are the metric that drives off-page reach as stories spread through friend networks.
Brand managers running campaigns, lifting share counts on campaign posts to support paid promotion and social proof for ad viewers.
Creators and content producers, lifting shares on video and photo posts to push them further in News Feed distribution and into friend-of-fan networks.
Marketing agencies, posting share orders across many client posts through the API with drip-feed cadences matched per campaign.
Reseller panels, child-panel operators sourcing Facebook shares from NLO SMM and reselling to their own customers.
What unites them is a distribution-and-credibility goal: lift the strongest visible engagement signal Facebook tracks, and earn the attributed reach that real shares generate.
Mistakes That Hurt Results
Buying shares can give a post real distribution lift or expose it as bot-driven, depending on execution. These are the avoidable errors.
Spiking shares with no other engagement
A post with 6,000 shares, 80 Likes, and 0 comments is a structurally impossible profile, since shares are the rarest engagement metric and real posts that get heavily shared also accumulate Likes and reactions. Pair shares with post Likes, reactions, and comments so the engagement row stays believable.
Dropping all shares at once on a small Page
A fresh post that goes from 3 shares to 8,000 shares in ten minutes is the spike pattern Facebook's anomaly detection picks up. Drip the order across hours or days so the curve mirrors how a post catching on actually spreads. Drip-feed matters more for shares than for any other Facebook metric.
Buying shares for posts you plan to edit or delete
Shares attach to the original post. If you delete the post, the shared versions on supply timelines become broken stubs, and the share count zeroes. Heavy edits can also flag the post for Page-quality review. Buy shares for posts you intend to leave live as posted.
Sharing for friends-only or private posts
The post needs to be public for external accounts to share it. Posts set to friends-only, custom audiences, or private will not accept shares from supply accounts, since those accounts cannot see the post in the first place. Check the post's audience setting before ordering.
Using any service that asks for your password or admin access
No share 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 quality tier and order size. Standard shares from mixed-quality accounts are the cheapest; premium real-account shares with refill cost more because they generate measurable attributed reach in addition to lifting the count. Shares are generally priced higher per unit than Likes because each share creates a new public post on a supply account's timeline. Exact rates show live in the order panel above. The full catalog is on the services page.
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 get shared by 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 share service needs either.
Yes. Each share creates a public post on a supply account's timeline that references your original (the standard "shared a post from..." attribution). That shared post is what counts toward the public share number and what generates attributed reach when the supply account's friends see it. Shares sent only through Messenger to a DM, or to a closed Group, do not appear in the public share count.
Yes, more than buying Likes or reactions does. Shares are one of the strongest News Feed ranking signals Facebook tracks, and the shared posts themselves appear in supply accounts' friends' feeds, generating attributed reach back to your original. Premium tiers from real accounts with active friend networks generate more attributed reach than standard tiers from thin recycled accounts.
Yes, as long as the post is publicly accessible and shareable. Page posts, public Profile posts, public Group posts, photos, videos, and Reels all work. Posts set to friends-only or to a custom restricted audience are not supported, because external supply accounts cannot see them to share them.
Standard orders typically start within 60 seconds and complete over hours for smaller volumes. Larger orders complete over hours to a day. We recommend drip-feed for almost every share order, since the cadence of public re-shares is more visible than Likes, and a steady curve looks more credible than an instant spike.
Some can. Facebook periodically prunes accounts it flags as inactive or in violation (which takes their shares with them), and supply accounts can delete shared posts off their own timelines. Premium-tier services include a 30-day refill that replaces eligible drops within that window. Shares lost because you deleted the original post are not refilled, because the share targets are gone with it. Standard tiers without refill in the name are not covered.
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 Shares
Real public re-shares on any public Facebook post on a Page, Profile, or public Group, 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.