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How Much Is a Facebook Account: What Drives the Price

Seeing Facebook account prices that differ by tens of times and not sure what you're paying extra for? Without understanding the factors it's easy to buy the wrong thing for your task. Let's break down how much a Facebook account costs and what drives the price: type, geo, trust, and format. We won't give exact numbers — the market and exchange rate shift.

What drives a Facebook account's price

Price isn't a random figure but a sum of factors. The more "history" and trust a profile has, the more expensive it is. Let's go in order.

  • Account type — autoreg, aged, farmed, real device, with Business Manager.
  • Geo — tier 1 costs several times more than tier 3.
  • Trust and age — an old warmed profile is worth more than a fresh one.
  • Format and contents — email, 2FA, attached card/billing, limits.

Type and trust

The cheapest segment is fresh autoregs, especially web registration. Then, in ascending order, come aged, farmed accounts, and real device. Each step up means more trust from Facebook and a lower ban risk.

Frozen accounts stand apart — they're cheap but require unfreezing. It's an "at your own risk" format for volume.

Geo and tier

Geography is one of the main price multipliers. Tier 1 accounts (US, Europe) cost more because of a solvent audience and expensive traffic. Tier 3 (Asia, part of LATAM) is cheaper and comes in large batches.

Format and add-ons

FactorEffect on price
Age / agingRaises strongly
Tier 1 geoRaises
Business Manager / limitsRaises
Attached card, 2FA, emailRaises
Fresh web autoregMinimal price
Bulk / batch purchaseLowers per-unit price

How not to overpay

The main rule is not to pay for what your task doesn't need. Cheap autoregs are enough for offer tests; for stable spend take trust. Bulk almost always lowers the per-unit price.

  1. Define the task: testing, volume, or stability.
  2. Match it with the minimally sufficient type and geo.
  3. Count batch economics, not the price of one account.

Bulk vs single purchase

The per-unit price depends heavily on volume. For arbitrage, accounts are a consumable, so a batch is almost always more cost-effective than buying one by one, especially in cheap segments.

  • Single. Handy for testing quality and one-off tasks, but pricier per unit.
  • Batch. Lower per-unit price, but you must spin up and warm the volume at once.
  • Bulk 1000+. Minimal per-unit price for mass spend, with part of the batch knowingly dropping off.

Count not "how much one account costs" but "how much a working account costs after culling" — that's the honest consumable price.

Frequently asked questions about account price

Why do similar-looking accounts cost differently?

Differences in geo, age, email/2FA, billing, and warm-up. Outwardly a "facebook account," but essentially different trust.

Is a cheap account always bad?

No. For tests and mass volume, cheap autoregs are a working tool. What's bad is buying cheap where trust is needed.

Does the payment method affect price?

The payment method (USDT, CryptoBot, SBP) doesn't affect the account cost — it's about settlement convenience, not the product price.

Can the exact price be predicted?

Exact figures shift with the market and exchange rate, so rely on the current catalog listing for the type and geo you need.

Conclusion

How much a Facebook account costs depends on type, geo, trust, and delivery format. Fresh autoregs are cheap, aged and real device cost more, tier 1 multiplies the price. Don't overpay: take exactly the trust and geo your offer needs, and count the batch cost.

Compare segments: cheap FB accounts in bulk and trusted aged accounts. Next, read how to choose an account for arbitrage and Facebook arbitrage profitability. Pay with USDT (TRC20/BEP20), CryptoBot, SBP, instant 24/7 delivery, 24-hour warranty.