Whether you're scaling ad campaigns or building a reliable account inventory, Facebook's ban waves can derail your efforts in hours. Quality accounts aren't just nice to have—they're the foundation of sustainable advertising. While buying pre-warmed accounts seems convenient, nothing beats the control and cost savings of farming your own. You'll know exactly what went into each account, avoid sketchy resellers, and build profiles that can withstand Facebook's increasingly aggressive bot detection.
The problem with buying accounts is simple: you never really know what you're getting. That sketchy shop selling "aged accounts" might be offloading burned profiles that'll get flagged within days. When you farm accounts yourself, you control the quality from registration to first campaign launch.
Let's be realistic about the setup. This isn't some massive operation requiring a server farm in your basement. Here's what you actually need:
The basics: A decent laptop or PC, an antidetect browser like AdsPower or Dolphin, and some starting capital for SIM cards and connectivity. That's it. No need to overthink this.
The smart move on proxies: Here's a trick that saves money and actually works better than cheap proxies. Instead of burning cash on residential proxies, grab a local unlimited mobile data plan. In most European countries, you're looking at $10-20 monthly for unlimited data. Your phone connects to a cell tower, gets an IP address, and boom—you've got a rotating mobile proxy. Toggle airplane mode for a few seconds, and you get a fresh IP. Facebook sees mobile traffic as more legitimate anyway since that's how real people actually use the platform.
Antidetect browser: Pick any reliable option. For 100 profiles, you're looking at $30-50 monthly. The more profiles you need, the better the per-unit pricing gets. Here's the thing though—Facebook is getting brutal about desktop registrations. Register on Android emulation whenever possible. Real people scroll Facebook on their phones, not their gaming PCs at 3 AM.
SIM cards: Match your SIM cards to your target geography and your mobile plan location. This consistency matters more than people realize. Activation codes run about $0.30 each, sometimes cheaper if you hunt around.
The actual math: A beginner can handle 50 accounts comfortably. After a month or two, bumping that to 100+ becomes manageable. Let's break down the cost per account: $0.30 for SIM verification, $15 for the mobile plan (split across all accounts), and $25 for antidetect profiles. That's roughly $1.30 per account if you're doing 50 at a time.
Want to go even cheaper? Create multiple accounts within your antidetect browser—something like 10 accounts with 5 profiles each gets you 50 free profiles. This works fine when you're starting out, but experienced farmers scale up and the per-account cost drops to basically nothing.
Compare that to buying "warmed" accounts at $10 each from shops where you have zero clue about their actual quality. The numbers speak for themselves.
Once your setup is ready, your job is surprisingly simple: act human. Sounds obvious, but you'd be amazed how many people rush this and wonder why their accounts get nuked.
Start with a tracking sheet. Seriously, make a spreadsheet right now. Track every login, password, registration date, and activity log. This isn't optional—it's how you stay organized and spot patterns when things go wrong.
Build cookies before registration. Before you even think about creating an account, warm up that browser profile. Visit websites with Meta's pixel installed. Click around. Browse some products. Let those cookies accumulate naturally. This makes registration smoother and raises fewer flags.
Register carefully. This is where impatience kills accounts. Take your time. Set your antidetect to Android device emulation. Use your SMS activation service for verification. Fill out the form like an actual person would—pausing, correcting typos, the works.
After registration, do some light activity: scroll through photos, drop a few likes, send friend requests to random users in your target region. Don't go crazy here. Unbind the phone number, add your email in settings, then let the account rest overnight.
The next day starts the real farm. Log back in. Set up two-factor authentication if you want extra security. Then start living in the account: browse photos, join groups, maybe play a game or two. Whatever normal people do on Facebook, you do too.
For a proper 21-day farm (21 separate sessions), mix up your activity each time. Join different groups. Comment on posts. Share something. Send messages. Make it look like someone actually lives behind that profile. The goal is authenticity, not hitting some arbitrary action quota.
Account farming is repetitive work, no question. But shops and teams would collapse without dedicated farmers grinding away day after day. Without people farming quality accounts, shops couldn't offer competitive prices, and affiliate teams would burn through their inventory in days.
The pay might not match what media buyers pull in, but here's the smart play: many teams use farming as a filter. Put someone on farming for a few months, see if they're detail-oriented and reliable, then promote them to buyer if they prove themselves. It's actually a decent entry point into the industry.
This is where it gets interesting. Even experienced affiliates debate whether to keep buying accounts or spin up their own farming operation.
And they should debate it, because here's the reality: most shops with actually good accounts are constantly sold out. When someone's offering you bulk accounts at scale, they're probably not premium quality—let's be honest here. Some smart affiliates already switched to hand-farming their own setups in their spare time. It's cheaper and higher quality.
Think about it: buying 50 accounts at $500 versus farming them yourself for $130. That's not a small difference. Does that mean every shop is garbage? No, some proven players exist, and if you know them, buying can be faster and simpler.
But we're here to save money and guarantee quality. Plus, shops don't always have bulk inventory when you need it.
When you want complete control over account quality and aren't afraid of putting in some upfront work, farming your own accounts makes more financial and operational sense than hoping random shops deliver what they promise.
If you can farm accounts yourself, it's not just about saving money—it's about avoiding those painful ban waves that wipe out purchased inventory. When you build an account by hand, you understand how trust gets established. Even when you do buy accounts later, you'll know to let them acclimate to your device instead of immediately throwing a card on them and launching campaigns.
Farm your accounts, test different approaches, experiment with warming strategies, and may Zuckerberg's all-seeing eye pass over your profiles. Good luck out there.