Which quality option should you pick for an order?
A lot of PrimeLikes services aren’t one product but a short menu: the same followers or likes offered in a few quality grades at different prices. Paying more buys more believable accounts, and often a refill. The skill is picking the cheapest option that still does the job.
Open most services and you’ll see the same engagement listed several times with different labels and prices. People assume it’s clutter. It isn’t. Each line is a quality option, and the label tells you exactly what you’re buying.
Read the label, not a tier number
PrimeLikes puts the quality right in the service name instead of hiding it behind a “tier 1 / tier 2.” You’ll see grades like:
- Mixed Quality: the cheapest supply, a grab-bag of accounts from wherever’s available. Fine when authenticity doesn’t matter.
- High Quality: more believable, more active accounts. A sensible everyday choice.
- 100% Real / Verified Real: accounts that read as genuinely real, sometimes verified or with their own posts. For content that gets scrutinized.
On top of the grade, you’ll see add-ons that stack:
- + Refill: backed by a refill warranty (more on that below).
- Non-Drop / Low-Drop: built to hold rather than fade.
- + Posts: accounts that have their own content, so they look like real profiles.
Price rises as you move from Mixed toward Real, and again as you add Refill or Non-Drop. That’s the whole trade: you’re paying for engagement that looks more legitimate and sticks around longer.
What a refill option adds
Some options come with a refill warranty: if your delivered count slips within the window, it’s topped back up at no charge, automatically. The window is shown on the service, usually around 30 days, with a few options going much longer. Cheaper grades often ship without a refill, which is part of why they cost less.
So if you want a safety net, choose an option whose name includes Refill or Non-Drop, and check the window before ordering. We go deeper on why drop happens, and what the warranty does and doesn’t cover, in the guide on drop and refills.
Match the option to the stakes
One question settles most decisions: who’s going to look at this, and how hard?
- Nobody, or a number you’re just testing → cheapest Mixed Quality, no refill needed.
- Normal followers and casual viewers → High Quality.
- A brand, a client, or a launch moment → 100% Real or Verified, with a refill.
Spending up on a post nobody scrutinizes is wasted money. Spending down on a post that matters is a false economy, because cheap supply on a high-visibility post is exactly where the seams show.
Whichever option you pick
The order should still look proportional to the account. A huge number from a great option still looks odd sitting next to no other engagement. So choose the grade that matches the stakes, choose the refill window that matches how long the content needs to hold, and keep the amount believable for your account.
Ready to grow your engagement?
Compare options in the catalog →Frequently asked questions
Why is the same service listed several times?
Those aren't duplicates, they're quality options. The same followers or likes are offered at a few different quality grades and prices, and the grade is written into the service name (Mixed Quality, High Quality, 100% Real, and so on). You pick the one that fits.
What does a higher-quality option actually get me?
More believable accounts, and on many options, a refill. Cheaper grades use mixed, low-activity accounts; pricier ones use accounts that look genuinely real, sometimes verified or with their own posts. The price climbs with quality because the engagement looks more legitimate and tends to hold better.
Is the most expensive option always best?
No. The best option is the cheapest one that meets your goal. Top-grade accounts are overkill for a quick view-count test, and cheap supply is the wrong call for a post a brand will inspect. Match the spend to how closely it'll be looked at.