Real reactions on your Telegram channel posts using the 16 standard free emoji that Telegram supports natively (👍 ❤️ 🔥 🥰 👏 😁 🤔 🤯 😱 🤬 😢 🎉 🤩 🤮 💩 👎) plus Premium custom emoji from accounts with Telegram Premium subscription. Pick the specific emoji you want the supply to react with or distribute the reaction quantity across multiple emoji so the per-emoji counts below the post look like authentic audience response. Orders typically start in under 60 seconds. No password ever required, only the public post URL. Used by crypto signal channels, news and editorial channels, brand campaigns, and reseller panels through our dashboard and REST API.
We never ask for your password. The public post URL is the only input.
Pick the Emoji
Service names state which emoji the supply reacts with. Standard 16 free emoji and Premium custom emoji supported.
Multi-Emoji Mixes
Mixed reaction services distribute the quantity across several emoji so the per-emoji counts look like authentic audience response.
24/7 Support
Real humans, every day of the week.
Service Details
What You Actually Get
The concrete characteristics of NLO SMM's Telegram reaction services, written without marketing fluff.
Real Reaction Taps
Real Telegram accounts tap the emoji you specify on the post you provide. The reaction count next to that emoji rises by one per account, the emoji appears in the reaction row below the post if it was not already there, and reaction-tracking analytics on TG Stat pick up the engagement.
All 16 Standard Free Emoji
Coverage of every emoji Telegram added to the standard reaction set (👍 👎 ❤️ 🔥 🥰 👏 😁 🤔 🤯 😱 🤬 😢 🎉 🤩 🤮 💩). Service names state which emoji each option targets so you can pick the one that fits the post tone.
Premium Custom Emoji
Premium reaction services use accounts with active Telegram Premium subscriptions, which unlocks custom emoji from emoji packs as reaction options (the floating animated reactions that only Premium users can leave). Right for channels with Premium-enabled reaction sets configured by the admin.
Fast Paced Delivery
Standard orders begin within 60 seconds. Reactions land paced across minutes rather than all at once, so the per-emoji count climb matches how real subscribers react after the publish notification fires, front-loaded in the first hour and tapering across the next day.
No Credentials Required
Orders use the public post URL only. No OAuth, no password, no admin access to the channel. The channel must be public (with a public @username) and reactions must be enabled on the channel for the supply to react successfully.
Public REST API
The full REST API at /api covers reaction orders, useful for editorial-publishing automation where each new post triggers per-emoji reaction top-ups through webhook integration with your publishing tool.
Process
How Ordering Works
From signup to reactions landing on the post, in five steps.
1
Create an Account
Free signup, email and password only. No card details required at signup.
2
Enable Reactions
Channel settings, Reactions, enable the emoji set you want. If you want a specific emoji boosted, make sure it is in the allowed reaction list.
3
Pick the Service
Single-emoji services target one specific emoji. Mixed reaction services distribute across multiple emoji. Premium services use Telegram Premium accounts for custom emoji reactions.
4
Paste Post URL
Format: t.me/yourchannel/123. Set the quantity, place the order. The service name confirms which emoji the supply will react with.
5
Track in Dashboard
Order status updates in real time. Reaction counts below the post rise within the first minute and continue over the next 1 to 2 hours.
Customer Feedback
Verified Reviews on Trustpilot
Our reviews live on Trustpilot, so they are independently verifiable, not testimonials we wrote ourselves.
Pair reactions with post views, comments, and channel subscribers so the engagement profile (views, reactions, comments) stays proportional and reads as authentic audience response.
When you buy Telegram reactions, you are paying for real Telegram accounts to tap a specific emoji on your channel post. You provide the public post URL (t.me/yourchannel/123) and the service name states which emoji the supply will react with. The reaction count next to that emoji rises by one per account, the emoji appears in the visible reaction row below the post if it was not already there, and TG Stat picks up the engagement signal when it next refreshes the channel analytics.
Telegram added emoji reactions to channels in December 2021, and the feature now sits below every channel post next to the view counter and forward count. Reactions are the primary fast-engagement signal on Telegram, the equivalent of likes on Instagram or upvotes on Reddit. A post with 30,000 views and 12 total reactions reads as content that subscribers scrolled past without engaging; a post with 30,000 views and 800 reactions spread across 5 to 7 different emoji reads as content that generated active audience response.
For this service to land, three conditions must be true. The channel must be public (have a public @username) so the supply can reach the post through the standard t.me link. Reactions must be enabled on the channel (channel settings, Reactions, enable). And the specific emoji you want boosted must be in the channel's allowed reaction list, since Telegram lets channel admins restrict which reactions are available; ordering a 🤬 reaction on a channel where the admin has restricted reactions to 👍 ❤️ 🔥 will fail because that emoji is not available for tapping. For the broader engagement profile, see post views and comments which pair naturally with reactions.
The Telegram Reaction System: Free, Premium, Admin-Restricted
The Telegram reaction system is more layered than the like-button systems on most other platforms. Three structural facts shape how reaction orders work.
The 16 standard free emoji
Every Telegram account, whether on the free plan or the Premium plan, can leave reactions using the 16 standard free emoji that Telegram designated for the reaction system: 👍 👎 ❤️ 🔥 🥰 👏 😁 🤔 🤯 😱 🤬 😢 🎉 🤩 🤮 💩. These are the default options that appear in the reaction picker on any post where reactions are enabled. The bulk of reaction orders target these 16 because the supply pool is broad and the cost per thousand is low. The most commonly ordered ones are 👍 ❤️ 🔥 (positive sentiment), 🤔 (curious), and 🎉 (celebration) because they fit the broadest range of post content tone.
Premium custom emoji
Accounts with an active Telegram Premium subscription can leave reactions using custom emoji from emoji packs (the animated emoji that Premium users see in their picker). When a Premium user reacts with a custom emoji, the reaction shows the custom emoji in the reaction row instead of a standard emoji. Premium reaction services in the NLO SMM catalog use accounts with active Premium subscriptions, which costs more per thousand because maintaining a pool of Premium-active accounts requires recurring Premium subscription costs on the supply side. Use Premium reactions on channels with Premium-enabled reaction sets (the admin must have allowed custom emoji reactions in the channel settings).
Admin-restricted reaction lists
Channel admins can restrict the reaction list on their channel down to a custom subset, anywhere from one emoji to the full 16-plus-Premium list. Many crypto signal channels restrict to 👍 ❤️ 🔥 🎉 to keep the reaction row positive; many news channels include 😱 🤬 😢 to allow critical reactions; brand channels often restrict to brand-color-matching emoji. Before placing an order, check the channel's allowed reaction list (tap the reaction picker on any post to see). Ordering an emoji that is not in the allowed list will fail because the supply network cannot tap an emoji that is not available.
Service Types: Single-Emoji, Mixed, Premium
The Telegram reaction services on NLO SMM split into three categories by what the supply reacts with. Pick the category that fits the post and the channel's reaction configuration.
Single-Emoji Reactions
The service targets one specific emoji from the 16 standard free options. The order delivers the full quantity to that one emoji, so the count next to it rises by the ordered amount. Right when you want one specific reaction (positive sentiment 👍 on an announcement post, fire 🔥 on a hot-take news post, celebration 🎉 on a milestone post). Single-emoji orders complete in 1 to 2 hours typically.
Mixed Reactions (Positive Mix)
The service distributes the quantity across multiple positive-sentiment emoji (typically 👍 ❤️ 🔥 🥰 👏 🎉 🤩 in varying proportions). The result shows reaction counts spread across 5 to 7 emoji rather than concentrated on one, which reads as authentic audience response where different subscribers preferred different emoji. Right when the post is high-stakes (partnership announcement, launch post, major editorial) and you want the reaction row to look like a genuine engagement distribution.
Mixed Reactions (Negative Mix)
Less common but available. The service distributes across negative-sentiment emoji (👎 🤔 😱 🤬 🤮 💩) on the assumption that the channel admin wants reactions to look like an authentic audience pushback (some news channels, controversial editorial channels, sentiment polls embedded as posts). Use with judgement because most channels suppress negative reactions through admin-restricted reaction lists; verify the channel allows these emoji before ordering.
Premium Reactions
The supply uses accounts with active Telegram Premium subscriptions, which lets them react with custom emoji from emoji packs. The reaction row shows the custom emoji instead of standard emoji. Useful on channels that have specifically configured Premium custom emoji as part of their reaction set (brand channels with branded emoji packs, specialized communities with niche emoji preferences). Costs more per thousand than standard tiers because of the Premium subscription cost on the supply side.
Quality and Geographic Targeting
Within each service type, standard tiers use older recycled accounts; premium real-account tiers use accounts with profile pictures and recent activity (the reaction itself shows the same emoji regardless of supply quality, but on group reactions where individual reactors are visible, the supply quality matters). Country-targeted reactions from specific geos cost more per thousand because the matching supply pool is smaller; relevant for region-specific channels where the audience-geography distribution on TG Stat would otherwise show a mismatch.
Telegram reactions, like post views, are a stable metric. Once a reaction is registered through the standard reaction-tap mechanism, the reaction stays on the post permanently. Unlike subscribers, members, or vote counts where Telegram's periodic anti-spam sweeps remove accounts and reduce the associated metric, reaction counts are not retroactively decreased when supply accounts are later banned. The reaction was registered at the moment the account tapped the emoji, and Telegram does not roll back the counter.
This stability means refill warranty is not a relevant mechanic for reactions the way it is for subscribers or members. The dashboard support resolves three other situations instead. If the original order fails to deliver the full quantity due to a supply-side error during placement, support tops up the order to the intended count from the original delivery window. If the post is deleted before the order completes, the remaining undelivered quantity is refunded to your balance, since reactions cannot land on a deleted post. If you discover after delivery that you submitted the wrong post URL (typo in the post number, the wrong channel), support cannot move reactions between posts (Telegram does not expose a reaction-transfer endpoint to external accounts), but can offer partial credit toward a corrective order on the right post, evaluated case by case.
One reaction-specific exception: if the channel admin removes a previously-allowed emoji from the channel's reaction list after delivery, the reactions on that emoji become hidden from public view (still counted in Telegram's backend, but not displayed in the reaction row). Restoring the emoji to the allowed list makes the reaction count visible again. The reaction count itself was not removed; only the display was.
Safety, Bans, and What Telegram Actually Detects
Telegram's enforcement targets specific patterns: bot rings using coordinated account-creation signatures, scam content broadcast through channels (impersonation, fake giveaways, phishing schemes), and cross-channel manipulation rings where the same supply accounts farm engagement across many client channels in coordinated bursts. Telegram does not single out individual channel posts for receiving reactions through external accounts using the standard reaction-tap mechanism.
An external service that has unrelated Telegram accounts tap reactions on a public channel post through the standard mechanism does not match the enforcement patterns. The supply diversity, the natural reaction-arrival curve produced by paced delivery, the multi-emoji distribution across orders, and the per-channel customization avoid the coordinated-burst signature platform enforcement targets. NLO SMM only needs the public post URL; we never request a login, OAuth, or admin access to the channel.
The safety surface on your end is what the channel publishes. Do not run scam patterns (impersonation of established projects, fake giveaway schemes, phishing-link campaigns), do not publish content that triggers mass user reports, and stay within Telegram's content policy. If the content is clean and the reaction counts stay proportional to the channel's view counts and subscriber base, the engagement profile reads as ordinary audience response.
An honest caveat: no provider can guarantee against future Telegram policy changes. Telegram has tightened its detection of coordinated engagement patterns over the years, generally toward better identification of cross-channel manipulation rings. Keep per-post reaction counts proportional to post view counts (typically 2 to 8 percent of views as reactions reads as healthy engagement), and the order looks like ordinary audience response from the channel's existing subscriber base.
Single-Emoji vs Mixed Distribution Strategy
The choice between concentrating all reactions on one emoji or distributing across multiple emoji shapes how the reaction row reads to anyone viewing the post. Both strategies have legitimate uses.
Single-emoji concentration
Concentrating 5,000 reactions on 🔥 produces a reaction row that shows one dominant emoji with a high count and other emoji with low or zero counts. This reads as a post that triggered one strong reaction from the audience (a launch post that everyone found exciting, a milestone post that everyone celebrated). Single-emoji concentration works on posts with a clear emotional tone where one emoji obviously fits the content. Right for hype announcements, hot-take news, and milestone celebrations.
Mixed distribution for nuanced posts
Distributing 5,000 reactions across 7 emoji (say 1,500 on ❤️, 1,200 on 🔥, 900 on 👍, 600 on 🎉, 400 on 🤩, 200 on 🥰, 200 on 👏) produces a reaction row that reads as authentic audience response where different subscribers preferred different emoji based on their personal expression style. This works better on substantive editorial content, partnership announcements, and longer-form posts where a uniform single-emoji response would feel coordinated. Right for partnership announcements, major editorial pieces, and brand campaigns where the reaction distribution itself is part of the credibility signal.
Calibrating to post view count
Reaction counts on Telegram typically run 2 to 8 percent of post view count for healthy organic engagement. A post with 20,000 views and 800 total reactions distributed across multiple emoji reads as healthy 4 percent engagement; a post with 20,000 views and 18,000 reactions on one emoji reads as obviously inflated. Cross-check the order quantity against the post's expected view count; if you are also ordering views separately, use the target view count as the upper bound for what reactions can plausibly carry.
Tone-matching the emoji choice
The emoji should fit the post content. Ordering 🎉 reactions on a sober editorial post about market crashes reads as off-tone and undermines credibility. Ordering 🤬 reactions on a positive product launch reads as off-tone in the other direction. Read the post and pick the emoji (or mix) that an actual subscriber would reasonably tap based on the content.
NLO SMM exposes a public REST API at /api covering order placement, status checks, balance queries, and bulk operations. For Telegram reactions specifically, the API is most useful for editorial-publishing automation where each new post fired by your publishing tool triggers reaction orders within seconds, so the per-emoji reaction counts start climbing before the first organic readers see the post. The configuration lets you set different reaction profiles for different post types (mixed positive distribution on editorial, single-emoji 🔥 on news, single-emoji 🎉 on milestones).
Four buyer categories rely on the reaction API. Crypto signal channels publishing daily signals where each post needs consistent reaction counts to maintain the channel's apparent engagement profile across the editorial calendar. News and editorial channels where the reaction distribution itself signals the channel's editorial stance to readers (more 🤬 on news the channel disapproves, more 🎉 on positive coverage). Marketing and PR agencies managing reaction campaigns across many client channels with per-channel emoji preferences stored as configuration. Reseller panels connecting their own storefront to NLO SMM as an upstream provider; if you run a reseller storefront, the child panel option is built for this.
Standard rate limits apply, and higher limits are available on request. For channels running a full Telegram growth strategy, ordering reactions alongside channel subscribers, post views, comments, and poll votes through one balance keeps the engagement metrics proportional. Fund the account once on the add funds page and the API draws from that balance.
Who Uses This Service
Buying Telegram reactions is mostly about giving the reaction row below each post the appearance of active audience response that matches the channel's view counts and subscriber base. The realistic buyer pool includes:
Crypto signal and trading channels, where the reaction row below each daily signal post is the fastest visible engagement signal subscribers see; a flat reaction row reads as a channel nobody is paying attention to.
News and editorial channels, where reactions serve as a fast audience-sentiment indicator that complements the longer comment threads in linked discussion groups.
Cryptocurrency project channels, where reactions on announcement posts (token launches, partnership reveals, exchange listing news) are part of the community-traction signal that exchanges and partnership counterparties check.
Brand-managed content channels, where consistent reaction patterns across the editorial calendar demonstrate audience engagement to internal stakeholders.
Influencer and creator channels on Telegram, particularly in regions where Telegram is the primary content platform (Russia, MENA region, parts of Latin America and Southeast Asia), where reactions per post directly drive collaboration offers.
News reaction campaigns, where the reaction distribution itself is editorial (channels deliberately driving 🤬 reactions on opposition coverage and 🎉 reactions on aligned coverage to signal stance to readers).
Marketing and PR agencies, automating reaction campaigns across many client channels through the API.
Reseller panels, child-panel operators sourcing reaction services from NLO SMM and reselling.
What unites them is the engagement-row goal: make the per-emoji counts below each post look like an active audience reacting to the content, with reaction proportions that match the post tone and total counts that match the channel's view and subscriber baseline.
Mistakes That Hurt Results
Buying reactions can compound into a credibly engaged channel or read as obvious inflation, depending on execution. These are the avoidable errors specific to Telegram reaction mechanics.
Ordering an emoji not in the channel's allowed reaction list
If the channel admin has restricted reactions to a custom subset (say 👍 ❤️ 🔥 🎉 only) and you order 🤬 reactions, the supply cannot tap the emoji because it is not available in the reaction picker. The order fails and the undelivered quantity refunds to your balance. Before ordering, tap the reaction picker on any post in the channel to confirm which emoji are allowed.
Reactions count out of proportion to view count
A post with 1,000 views and 5,000 reactions implies that every viewer reacted multiple times, which is impossible since Telegram limits reactions to one emoji per account per post on standard reaction-enabled channels. The reaction count should stay well below the view count. The healthy band is roughly 2 to 8 percent of views as reactions; pushing above 20 percent starts looking artificial.
Single-emoji concentration on substantive posts
5,000 reactions all on 🎉 on a substantive editorial post about complex market dynamics reads as coordinated. Use mixed reaction services to distribute the count across multiple emoji on posts where the content is nuanced enough that a uniform single-emoji response would feel engineered.
Tone-mismatched emoji on the post
Ordering 🎉 reactions on a post about a market crash, or 🤬 reactions on a positive partnership announcement, makes the reaction row visibly inconsistent with the post content. Read the post and pick the emoji that fits the tone before ordering.
Ordering on a post with reactions disabled
If reactions are disabled on the channel (Channel settings, Reactions, Off) the reaction picker does not appear and no supply can tap anything. The order fails and refunds. Enable reactions on the channel before ordering.
Ignoring the views-and-comments side of the engagement profile
Reactions without matching view counts and at least some comments look isolated. The combined engagement profile (views, reactions, comments) should move together. Use post views and comments alongside reactions to keep the profile proportional.
Using any service that asks for your password or admin access
No Telegram reaction service needs your password, 2FA code, or admin access to the channel. The public post URL is the only input required. Treat a request for any login material as a reason to leave the service immediately.
Frequently Asked Questions
Pricing depends on the service type (single-emoji, mixed, Premium custom emoji), the quality tier (standard recycled accounts vs premium real-account vs Premium-subscription accounts), the pacing speed, and whether country targeting is included. Standard single-emoji reactions are the cheapest; Premium custom-emoji reactions cost more because the supply requires active Telegram Premium subscriptions. Exact rates show live in the order panel above. The full catalog is on the services page.
The 16 standard free emoji that Telegram supports natively in the reaction system (👍 👎 ❤️ 🔥 🥰 👏 😁 🤔 🤯 😱 🤬 😢 🎉 🤩 🤮 💩) are all available as single-emoji services. Mixed reaction services distribute across positive or negative subsets. Premium custom emoji from emoji packs are available through Premium reaction services. Each service name states which emoji or mix it targets.
Standard reactions use the 16 free emoji available to every Telegram account. Premium reactions use accounts with active Telegram Premium subscriptions, which lets them react with custom emoji from emoji packs (the animated emoji that only Premium users can leave). Premium reactions cost more per thousand because maintaining a pool of Premium-active supply accounts requires recurring Premium subscription costs. Use Premium reactions on channels that have Premium custom emoji enabled in their reaction settings.
Three common failure modes. First, reactions are disabled on the channel (Channel settings, Reactions, Off), in which case the reaction picker does not appear and no supply can tap. Second, the channel admin has restricted reactions to a custom list that does not include the emoji you ordered. Third, the post was deleted before delivery completed. In all three cases, the undelivered quantity refunds to your balance.
No. Telegram reactions are stable once tapped. Unlike subscribers or members, the platform does not retroactively reduce reaction counts when supply accounts are later banned. The reaction was registered at the moment the account tapped the emoji, and Telegram does not roll back the counter. One exception: if the channel admin later removes a previously-allowed emoji from the channel's reaction list, the reactions on that emoji become hidden from public display (still counted in the backend) until the emoji is restored to the allowed list.
Standard orders begin within 60 seconds and complete inside 1 to 2 hours for normal quantities. Reactions are paced across the delivery window rather than landing in one instant batch, so the per-emoji count climb matches how real subscribers react after the publish notification fires.
Yes. The channel must have a public @username so the post URL resolves through the standard t.me link. Private channels with invite-link-only access cannot receive reaction orders. The post must also still exist and the channel's reaction settings must allow the specific emoji you are ordering.
Yes. The catalog includes geo-targeted reaction services for major regions including USA, UK, EU, Brazil, India, Russia, MENA, Iran, and Vietnam. Geo-targeted reactions cost more per thousand because the matching supply pool is smaller. Relevant for region-specific channels where the audience-geography distribution on TG Stat would otherwise show a mismatch with the channel's content language.
It is safe when the provider never requests your password, 2FA code, or admin access to the channel. NLO SMM only needs the public post URL. Telegram's enforcement targets coordinated cross-channel manipulation rings and bot rings with identifiable signatures, not individual posts receiving reactions from real accounts through the standard reaction-tap mechanism. Keep reaction counts proportional to view counts (2 to 8 percent of views is healthy). No provider can guarantee against future platform policy changes.
Yes. The REST API at /api covers reaction orders, useful for editorial-publishing automation where each new post triggers per-emoji reaction top-ups through webhook integration. Used by crypto signal channels, news and editorial channels, marketing agencies managing many client channels, and reseller child panels forwarding orders. Standard rate limits apply; higher limits 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 Telegram Reactions
Real reactions on the posts you specify, across all 16 standard free emoji plus Premium custom emoji. Single-emoji concentration for clear-tone posts or mixed distribution across multiple emoji for substantive posts where the reaction row needs to read as authentic audience response. Public REST API for editorial-publishing automation, public post URL as the only required input.