Real Kick subscriptions delivered through Kick's own gifted-sub system, billed through the platform and posted to your channel as legitimate Tier 1 (and where supported Tier 2) subs with real sub badges in chat. Your channel must be sub-eligible on Kick (subscriptions enabled). No password ever required, only your public Kick channel URL. Used by streamers chasing sub milestones, agencies, and reseller panels through our dashboard and REST API.
We never ask for your password. Zero risk of channel suspensions.
Real Gifted-Sub System
Delivery uses Kick's own gifted-sub flow. Subs are billed through the platform, post to your sub count, and show real sub badges in chat.
1-Month Duration
Each gifted sub is one month by default, the same as any Kick gifted sub. Multi-month variants exist on some services.
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 Kick subscriber services, written without marketing fluff.
Real Gifted Subs
The supply uses Kick's own gifted-sub flow. Each sub is paid through Kick's billing on the supply side, lands on your sub count, and shows up in your dashboard alongside organic subs. The recipient gets a real sub badge in chat and ad-free viewing for the duration.
1-Month Duration by Default
Each gifted sub on Kick is a one-month subscription, the same as any human-gifted sub. When the month ends the sub expires unless renewed. Multi-month gifted-sub variants exist on some services for longer credibility windows.
Eligibility Required
Your channel must have subscriptions enabled on Kick before the order can land. Without eligibility the Kick platform itself rejects the gifted-sub call. The first FAQ below covers what enables it.
Fast Start
Once eligibility is confirmed, standard-tier orders typically begin within the first few minutes after payment clears. Delivery is paced so the sub-count rise looks like a believable sub-bomb rather than a sudden vertical line.
No Credentials Required
Orders use your public Kick channel URL only. There is no OAuth flow, no password field, no access to your dashboard. The supply pays for subs from its own end through Kick's normal sub flow.
Public REST API
The full REST API at /api covers sub order placement, status, balance, and bulk operations. Agencies push sub orders against many client channels from one balance. Standard rate limits apply.
Process
How Ordering Works
The full flow from account creation to delivery. Five steps, with the eligibility check up front.
1
Create an Account
Free signup, email and password only. No card details required at signup.
2
Confirm Sub Eligibility
Check that subscriptions are enabled on your Kick channel. If the Subscribe button is visible to viewers on your channel page, you are eligible.
3
Add Funds & Pick Service
Top up the balance. Choose Tier 1, Tier 2 (where supported), or a multi-month variant. The service name states the tier and duration.
4
Paste Channel URL
Public Kick channel URL only, never your password. Set the sub quantity, place the order.
5
Track in Dashboard
Order status updates in real time. Each sub lands in your Kick sub dashboard as a normal gifted sub, with the supply username and tier visible.
Customer Feedback
Verified Reviews on Trustpilot
Our reviews live on Trustpilot, so they are independently verifiable, not testimonials we wrote ourselves.
When you buy Kick subscribers, you are paying for other Kick accounts to send your channel real gifted subscriptions through Kick's own gifted-sub system. The supply accounts use Kick's normal sub flow to gift the sub: payment clears through the platform on the supply side, the sub posts to your channel just like any human-gifted sub, the recipient gets a real sub badge in chat, the sub shows in your dashboard's sub list with the gifter's username, and you receive the streamer share through Kick's monetization split.
This is structurally different from followers, which are free clicks on the Follow button, and from chatters or viewers, which are live-session metrics that disappear when the broadcast ends. Subs are paid, persistent for the month, and processed by Kick's actual billing pipeline. That is why per-sub pricing is higher than per-follower or per-viewer pricing: the cost of the sub itself flows through Kick's system before anything reaches the supply pool's margin.
The eligibility constraint matters before anything else. The Kick gifted-sub call only works on channels that have subscriptions enabled, which on Kick typically requires the channel to be at the affiliate or partner tier of the creator program with subscriptions activated in the dashboard. If your channel does not yet have the Subscribe button visible on the public channel page, the platform rejects the gifted sub before our supply can deliver it. The FAQ below covers how to confirm eligibility.
Kick built its reputation partly on the 95/5 revenue split, where the streamer keeps 95 percent of subscription revenue and Kick keeps 5 percent. The headline subscription price is the standard tier (Tier 1) that the platform sets, with higher tiers (Tier 2 and where rolled out Tier 3) priced as multiples. Each gifted sub is billed at the tier price on the supply side, the platform takes its share, and the streamer receives the rest into the channel balance through the normal Kick payout cycle.
The eligibility path looks like this in practice. New channels do not have subscriptions enabled by default; the Subscribe button does not appear, and gifted subs cannot be received. After the channel meets Kick's creator-program criteria (a moving target as Kick adjusts thresholds, but historically tied to follower count, broadcast hours, average concurrent viewers, and standing on the platform), subscriptions activate. The Subscribe button appears on the channel page, viewers can subscribe, and gifted-sub flows accept your channel as a valid recipient. From that point on, our service can deliver.
Two practical notes. First, do not buy subs as part of a strategy to reach affiliate or partner eligibility. The eligibility check is the gate, not the result of bought subs, so you have to be enabled before the order can land. Second, the sub badges that appear in chat for the gifted recipients are real platform badges with the standard Kick sub flair and the tier color. Anyone hovering over a username in chat sees the sub status, which is what makes the sub count actually function as social proof rather than just a number on the channel page.
Sub Tiers and Multi-Month Variants
The Kick subscriber services on NLO SMM split along three axes: the sub tier delivered, the duration per sub (single-month vs multi-month), and the pacing of delivery. All three are stated in the service name.
Tier 1 Gifted Subs
The base tier, priced at the Kick standard sub price. This is the volume choice for sub-count lifts and sub-goal pushes. The vast majority of organic gifted subs on Kick are Tier 1, so a delivery of Tier 1 subs blends naturally with the existing sub mix on any channel.
Tier 2 Gifted Subs (where supported)
Higher-priced tier subs that show with a distinct sub badge color in chat and provide a larger revenue share to the streamer per sub. Useful when a brand-deal context calls for premium sub deliveries (some sponsorships call for visible higher-tier subs in chat as part of the campaign optics) or when the goal is more revenue per delivered sub rather than more sub-count units. Costs proportionally more per sub because the underlying Kick billing is higher.
Multi-Month Gifted Subs
Some services deliver gifted subs with multi-month durations (3-month, 6-month, 12-month variants) instead of the default single month. The sub still posts as one sub to your sub count, but the sub badge in chat and the recipient's subscriber status stay valid for the full multi-month window. Useful when the goal is sustained sub-count credibility across a longer marketing window rather than churn at the one-month mark.
Sub-Bomb Pacing Options
Sub orders can land all at once (a real sub bomb that hits during your live stream and triggers the on-screen sub notifications, alerts, and the celebration overlays your stream is set up to play) or be paced across hours or days. The right choice depends on whether you want the chat reaction in the moment or a steadier sub-count climb visible on your channel page for visitors who land later.
Unlike follower services, sub services do not carry a 30-day refill warranty. The reason is structural: each gifted sub is a one-month subscription by definition (multi-month variants are still finite). When the month ends the sub expires unless renewed, and the expiration is part of how the gifted-sub system is designed to work, not a churn problem to refill.
During the month the sub is valid, it counts toward your sub-count display, the recipient holds the sub badge in chat, and you receive the streamer share through Kick's payout. After the month expires, the sub badge disappears from chat for that user and your sub count drops by one unless they (or another gifter) resubscribe. A refill would have to either pay for another month, which is just placing another order, or roll back time, which is not a service anyone can provide.
The right framing for sub orders is project-based, not lifetime-based. Order subs to cover a window where the sub-count credibility matters: a partnership renewal review, a brand-deal contract period, a sub-goal push during a specific stream, or a launch month around new content. When the window passes, decide whether the next month needs another order based on what is happening on the channel then. For sustained sub counts, the multi-month variants stretch the credibility window per delivered sub at lower per-month cost than re-ordering single-month subs three times.
If something goes wrong during delivery (a sub fails to post due to Kick rate-limit response or a supply-side error), support resolves it through the dashboard or the REST API. That is not a refill of an expired sub; it is making sure the order delivers the units you paid for. The dashboard shows live status on every sub in the order.
Safety, Bans, and What Kick Actually Detects
Kick's terms of service prohibit fraudulent activity around its monetization system, but enforcement targets specific behavior, not the fact that a channel received gifted subs. The patterns Kick acts on are credential stuffing, payment fraud (chargebacks, stolen-card sub purchases), repeated platform abuse, and content policy violations in the broadcast itself. Subs gifted from supply accounts that pay through legitimate payment paths do not match those patterns, because the billing is real and the gifted-sub call is the same call any human gifter uses.
This is why NLO SMM only needs your public channel URL. There is no login, no OAuth, no password, no access to your dashboard or your payout account. The supply pays for the gifted sub from its own side. Because no software touches your account, a sub order cannot trigger the account-side enforcement that gets channels banned. The relevant safety surface is what your channel itself does: do not run third-party automation on your streaming machine, do not abuse Kick's APIs from your own account, and keep the broadcast within Kick's content standards.
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 sub orders sized so the sub-count rise looks like a real sub bomb or sub-goal push rather than a number that nothing else on the channel can justify. A channel with 6 average viewers receiving 500 simultaneous subs reads as off to anyone reviewing the channel, regardless of how legitimately each sub was billed.
Sub-Bomb Pacing and the Believable Curve
How the subs land matters as much as how many. There are two main delivery shapes, and the right one depends on what you are using the sub count for.
Live sub-bomb during a stream
Order subs to land in a tight burst while you are streaming. The Kick sub notification fires for each sub, your on-screen alert plays, the chat reacts, and the moment becomes content that clips well and reads as a community event. This is the right configuration for sub-goal streams, milestone celebrations, brand-deal optics where the sponsor wants visible community support during the live window, and anytime the in-the-moment energy matters more than the sustained count.
Paced delivery for sustained sub count
Spread the subs across hours, a day, or several days so the sub-count rise looks like steady community growth rather than a one-time burst. Better for visitors who land on the channel page between streams and read the sub count as a passive signal, and for partnership-review windows where the reviewer is looking at the sub-count trend over weeks.
Match the burst size to the channel
The same rule that applies to followers applies harder to subs because each sub is more visible per unit. A channel with 4 average viewers receiving 200 simultaneous subs in a 30-second window does not look like a sub bomb; it looks like an obvious order. Stay within the multiplier of what your channel could plausibly produce on a great day: a 4x to 10x of your channel's typical organic sub burst is the upper end of believable for a single event.
NLO SMM exposes a public REST API at /api covering sub order placement, status checks, balance queries, and bulk operations. For sub services specifically, the API is useful for two patterns: scheduling sub-bomb timing precisely against a stream-start webhook so the burst lands when your overlays and alerts are ready, and pacing multi-day sub deliveries against a calendar your marketing schedule defines.
Two groups rely on it. Marketing agencies and talent management firms push subs to many client channels from a single balance, often timed to partnership review windows, sponsorship contract periods, or coordinated content launches. Reseller panels connect their own storefront to NLO SMM as an upstream provider and forward sub orders through the API; if you run one, the child panel option is built for exactly this. Standard rate limits apply, higher limits are available on request through the dashboard.
For streamers running a full Kick strategy, ordering subs alongside followers, viewers, and chatters through one balance is simpler than juggling several providers. Fund the account once on the add funds page and the API draws from that balance.
Who Uses This Service
Buying Kick subs is mostly about sub-count credibility for partnership and brand-deal contexts, and about lifting the moment of a sub-goal stream where the on-screen alerts and chat reaction matter. The realistic buyer pool includes:
Streamers running sub-goal streams, layering bought sub bombs on top of the organic sub flow so the goal hits during the stream and the celebration content plays as planned.
Streamers approaching partnership renewal or tier upgrades, lifting the sub-count trend so the review sees a steady monetized community rather than a quiet one.
Streamers running sponsored streams, ensuring the sub count visible to the sponsor during the campaign window matches the audience-engagement promise.
Established creators with churn windows, covering the month or two where the regular subscriber base typically dips so the public sub count stays steady.
Talent management firms, coordinating sub orders across rostered streamers through the API on the schedule the partnership-review calendar requires.
Reseller panels, child-panel operators sourcing Kick sub services from NLO SMM and reselling to their own customers.
What unites them is a paid-credibility goal: keep the sub count and the monetary commitment from the audience high enough that visitors, partners, brand coordinators, and the platform itself read the channel as a real working creator business.
Mistakes That Hurt Results
Buying Kick subs can compound real partnership momentum or read as a transparent inflation block, depending on execution. These are the avoidable errors.
Ordering before sub eligibility is enabled
If the Subscribe button is not visible on your public channel page, the platform rejects the gifted-sub call before our supply can deliver. Confirm eligibility first. Reach affiliate or partner status, activate subscriptions in the dashboard, verify the Subscribe button appears, and only then place the order.
Treating subs as a forever metric
Each gifted sub is one month by default. Ordering subs in January and expecting the sub-count credibility to hold in May without further action is the wrong mental model. Plan sub orders around windows (partnership reviews, sponsorship contracts, sub-goal streams) and re-order or use multi-month variants for sustained windows.
Sub bombs that do not match channel size
A 200-sub bomb on a channel that averages 8 viewers looks artificial in the moment and reads as off afterward when visitors load the channel and see a sub count that nothing about the audience can justify. Size sub bombs to the channel's plausible best day, not the channel's wishful thinking.
Pacing live sub bombs incorrectly
Subs delivered in a 5-second burst feel unnatural even on big channels. A real sub bomb from a generous viewer arrives over 30 to 90 seconds because Kick paces the platform notifications. Pick a delivery pacing that matches what a real human gifter would produce, not the fastest setting available.
Using any service that asks for your password
No Kick sub service needs your password. Your public channel URL is the only input required. Treat a password request as a reason to leave, since password-based services are exactly what triggers the account-side enforcement Kick takes seriously.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. Subscriptions have to be enabled on your Kick channel before our supply can deliver gifted subs through Kick's own sub system. The simplest check: open your channel page in an incognito window. If a Subscribe button appears next to the Follow button, you are eligible. If only the Follow button shows, you are not yet, and gifted subs cannot land. Subscription eligibility on Kick typically activates after the channel reaches affiliate or partner status on Kick's creator program and you activate subs in the dashboard.
Per-sub pricing is higher than per-follower pricing because the cost of the sub itself is billed through Kick's billing pipeline before reaching the supply pool's margin. Tier 1 subs are the lowest price point; Tier 2 and multi-month variants cost proportionally more. Exact rates show live in the order panel above. The full catalog is on the services page.
Yes. The supply uses Kick's own gifted-sub flow, the same call any human gifter makes. The sub is billed through Kick's billing pipeline on the supply side, the platform takes its 5 percent, the streamer share goes to your channel balance, and the sub appears in your sub dashboard as a normal gifted sub with the gifter's username and tier. The recipient receives a real sub badge in chat and the standard sub perks for the duration. This is not a fake count appended to your channel; it is real sub flow through the platform.
By default, one month, the same as any Kick gifted sub. Multi-month variants on some services deliver subs valid for three, six, or twelve months. When the duration ends the sub expires unless someone renews or gifts again. There is no refill warranty because the expiration is part of how gifted subs work by design, not a churn problem.
Yes, when delivered as a live sub bomb during your stream. Each gifted sub fires Kick's sub-event notification, which triggers your overlay, alert sounds, and any chat-bot reactions you have tied to the sub event. Picking the live-sub-bomb pacing setting on the order lines the bombs up with your broadcast. Paced delivery across hours or days lands the subs more quietly with notifications spread out.
Kick subscriptions follow a tier structure with Tier 1 as the base price and higher tiers (Tier 2, and where rolled out Tier 3) as multiples. Higher tiers cost proportionally more, return more streamer revenue per sub through the 95/5 split, and display a distinct sub badge color in chat. The vast majority of organic gifted subs on Kick are Tier 1, so Tier 1 deliveries blend naturally with the existing sub mix. Tier 2 is useful when premium sub visibility matters for a brand-deal context or when you want more revenue per delivered sub.
It is safe when the provider never requests your password and the subs are gifted through Kick's normal billing flow with legitimate payment paths on the supply side. NLO SMM only needs your public channel URL. There is no access to your dashboard, payout account, or login. Kick's enforcement targets payment fraud and credential abuse, not real gifted subs from external accounts. Do not run third-party automation on your account. No provider can guarantee against future policy changes.
Yes. The 95/5 split applies the same way it does for any Kick sub. The supply pays the sub price through Kick, the platform takes its 5 percent, and the streamer share posts to your channel balance through the normal payout cycle. From your accounting side, the subs look indistinguishable from any other gifted sub revenue.
Standard-tier orders typically begin within the first few minutes after payment clears, assuming sub eligibility is confirmed and the channel is reachable. Sub-bomb pacing lands the delivery in a tight burst during your stream; paced delivery spreads across hours or days. The dashboard shows live status on every sub in the order, including each delivered sub's gifter username and tier.
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 Kick Subscribers
Real gifted subs through Kick's own gifted-sub system, billed through the platform, posted to your sub count with real sub badges in chat. Tier 1 (and where supported Tier 2) plus multi-month variants. Sub-bomb pacing for live moments, paced delivery for sustained credibility. Channel must have subscriptions enabled.