Facebook prohibits the buying and selling of accounts. Despite that, there are marketplaces where the same happens all the time without any issues.
Sellers sell Facebook accounts in bulk, and buyers buy and use them without inviting bans from Facebook.
What are those marketplaces? And how do these people run purchased Facebook accounts without letting Facebook know?
This article answers both in detail. You’ll learn about four big and credible marketplaces to buy Facebook accounts from. Then we’ll also demonstrate the steps for managing them using the Gologin anti-detect browser.
But first, let’s discuss some basics.
TL;DR
While Facebook officially prohibits buying accounts, marketers do so to bypass low daily spending limits and mitigate the risk of a “chain-reaction” ban where one flagged ad kills an entire business. To succeed, you must use aged or verified accounts and manage them through an antidetect browser like Gologin. This isolates each account’s digital fingerprint and IP, preventing Facebook’s AI from linking them to your real identity or previously banned profiles.
Why Marketers Need Multiple Facebook Accounts in 2026
Facebook is not what it was three or four years ago. Things have changed a lot, especially on the Meta ads side.
Meta has quietly built one of the most sophisticated advertiser-scoring systems in digital marketing.
It tracks things like the ad you run, every rejection you get, every time a user clicks “hide ad” on your creative, etc, all of which is used to calculate your trust score.
Meta calls this the HiVA Score (High Value Advertiser Score). Using this trust metric, the platform determines how much leniency and freedom a business manager account gets when it comes to bans and other restrictions.
The score isn’t made public. It’s for use by the platform’s algorithms. But its impact can be felt by the account owner.
But how does any of that imply the need for owning multiple Facebook accounts? Let me explain.
The Danger of Running Everything from One Account
If you own a single ad account and one of your ads gets banned for, let’s say, catching a wave of negative user feedback, your account’s HiVA score drops. The damage no longer stays limited to just one campaign. The entire account’s reputation takes a hit.
If this happens a couple more times, you build enough distrust with Meta’s algorithm that running future campaigns becomes difficult. Recovering your trust score from that point can take months of cautious activity.
What that means is that until you haven’t rebuilt the required trust score, you cannot run many of your tasks from that account.
And since you own a single account only, your only option is to halt your operations until Meta allows you to run them again.
Not to mention, you will be left with nothing if Meta just bans your account instead of placing restrictions only.
So there goes a big reason why you should buy additional Facebook ad accounts.
That’s not the only reason, though.
The Daily Spending Limit Issue
Each Meta Ads account can spend a limited amount of money on ads each day. Meta calls this the Daily Spending Limit and sets this amount based on factors like payment and advertising history.
You can check your current daily spending limit in the Current balance section in Payment settings.
The good thing is that Meta can decide to increase this limit. But making Meta take that decision is the hard part.
You will have to follow strict policies and consistently spend up to or near your current daily spend limit.
According to some accounts, it takes at least four to six weeks before Meta trusts you enough to increase your daily spending limit.
What this means is that if you want to test ten different offers this month, for example, you won’t be able to do that from a single new account with a low daily spending limit.
Instead of waiting for the daily spending limit to increase to a desired level, what you can do is buy Facebook ads accounts.
You can buy aged Facebook account with a clean advertising history to function as your primary ad account. From there, you can run serious and reliable campaigns.
Meanwhile, aggressive testing happens elsewhere, in accounts where a ban or a restriction doesn’t cost you much. That’s also where you won’t need to fear the consequences of running campaigns in niches that tend to attract more scrutiny from Meta.
Types of Facebook Accounts You Can Buy
Now, before you go and buy Facebook account, you need to know about the types of accounts being sold out there.
Aged Facebook Accounts (2–10+ Years)
These are accounts that were registered years ago, sometimes as far back as 2012 or 2015, and have a history of safe activity.
These accounts enjoy a high level of trust with Meta’s systems, so the actions you perform using them won’t get watched closely.
Logins, ad submissions, billing attempts, etc, everything passes through Meta’s review phases much more easily than if freshly registered accounts carried out the same actions.
So if your major goal is advertising, this is the category of accounts you should be browsing in the Facebook accounts marketplace, which we’ll cover later.
You could buy an old Facebook account and avoid the heavy scrutiny that new accounts face for the first few weeks.
Verified Business Manager (BM) Accounts
A Business Manager account sits above your personal account, and you handle pages, ad accounts, pixels, billing, and more from it.
Meta has lately been pushing higher levels of identity verification on advertisers.
If you make a business manager account from scratch, the verification is going to be a hassle.
But if you buy a Facebook ads account with an already verified BM attached, you’ll be skipping the legal and document verification steps.
These accounts often already have a payment history and advertising permissions in place, which allows you to bypass a lot of the initial setup friction that new accounts face.
Farmed Accounts (Soft-Registrations)
These accounts were created to be sold.
The seller deliberately puts them through a warm-up process so they appear to Meta’s algorithms as credible accounts made for legit purposes, not for selling.
The warm up process involves simple activities like:
- Logging in
- Scrolling
- Joining groups
- Adding profile details and more
This process goes on for two to four weeks before the account is put on sale.
This is what the term soft-registeration mean. It means the account didn’t go through a comprehensive usage history. It was put to use just enough to prepare it for selling.
You’ll see different names for them on marketplaces. Some platforms, like AccsMarket, call them soft-regs, while others categorize them as promoted/grown/farmed accounts.
So keep an eye out for all sorts of names.
Reinstated Accounts
Reinstated accounts are the ones that have faced bans in the past. But they were reinstated by Facebook after the owner appealed the bans.
But why would someone buy a Facebook account with a history like that? The reason is a bit counterintuitive.
An account that has been brought back from bans had to verify its identity to Meta through documents, and it’s possible that Meta’s team personally reviewed the case.
Meta knows a real person is running the account, so the account will have a low chance of facing identity-related issues.
What’s good is that these accounts come for a low price because their ban history drops their value.
Auto-Reg Accounts
Auto-reg accounts are accounts that are created by software. They have no human involvement in their creation at any stage of the registration. Be it filling out sign-up forms or passing captchas, the entire process is automated.
These types of accounts are typically the cheapest you can find at a marketplace. They do well for tasks where you don’t worry about getting banned, like:
- Mass following
- Parsing
- Inflating numbers, etc.
But one thing you should be wary of is that Facebook trusts these types of accounts the least. They do not last long and almost always require a warm-up period before you can put them to use.
Note: If you try to run Ads from a new, freshly created auto-reg account without a proper warm-up period, you can get banned by Facebook instantly. These are disposable accounts, so you should treat them that way.
Manual-Reg Accounts
Manual-reg accounts are accounts that are created by a real person. Their registration is carried out with the help of clear proxies and unique data. Also, their warm-up process usually begins right after you create an account.
These types of accounts have an edge over auto-reg accounts, and they sit in a sweet spot between price and quality. How? Well, Facebook is less likely to flag such accounts compared to auto-regs because their registration patterns look organic to Facebook’s algorithm.
They definitely cost a little more than auto-reg accounts, which is an obvious tradeoff. But if you are after accounts with less risk of getting banned and accounts that can handle more than just basic throwaway tasks, manual-reg accounts are a much better choice.
Where to Buy Facebook Accounts in 2026
Now the question is, where to buy the Facebook accounts we just read about?
There are dozens of marketplaces online that claim to sell them.
But in my personal experience, most of them are a total waste of time. When it comes to Facebook, I could find very few platforms that were selling Facebook accounts and weren’t shady.
Most platforms looked very suspicious to me, so I dropped them. While some others had only a few Facebook accounts in their inventory. It seemed like they weren’t being managed anymore.
The Facebook marketplaces I have added to the list are the best I could find. All of them have a vast inventory of Facebook accounts. They’re also very popular among buyers and have an active base of sellers.
Let’s learn more about them in detail.
| Aspect | AccsMarket | G2G | Z2U | SWAPD.co |
| Platform type | Direct vendor | P2P marketplace | P2P marketplace | Moderated community |
| Best for | Bulk orders | Comparison shopping | Variety. The platform has several search filters to help you find very niche accounts | Niche Facebook pages and groups with big and established audiences |
| Replacement warranty | 24–48 hours | Escrow-based dispute | Escrow-based dispute | Negotiated per deal |
| Buyer protection | Limited | Escrow | Escrow | Full moderation |
| Typical price range | Low–mid | Low–mid | Low–mid | Mid–high |
1. AccsMarket
AccsMarket has been here since 2017 and has built a good reputation. They sell social media accounts of all types, not just Facebook.
Their Facebook marketplace is quite big. You’ll find both personal and ad accounts on sale there.
The categories of Facebook accounts I found there include the following:
- Softregs
- Accounts with friends
- Aged Facebook accounts
- Aged accounts with friends
- Accounts for advertising (marketplace or Business Manager activated)
Each of these categories has loads of listings, and each listing has plenty of accounts in stock.
One thing you should note is that the platform operates as a direct vendor rather than a marketplace. In other words, the seller is AccsMarket itself. You won’t be buying Facebook accounts from individual sellers.
In addition, AccsMarket is the best place to buy accounts in bulk because the per-account price is very low on many listings.
The platform has its fair share of issues, though. Users complain that some accounts can be defective in a batch. They were either flagged on arrival or got banned after some time.
To tackle these issues, the platform entertains replacement of accounts and refunds, although under certain conditions.
Accounts that are eligible for replacement should be either:
- Blocked
- Deleted
- Or if incorrect login credentials are provided
Refunds are processed if replacement isn’t possible for some reason despite being eligible.
However, some users complain that when you request a replacement or refund, the support flees responsibility by attributing the issue to the buyer.
To ensure your experience is smooth, you should approach AccsMarket smartly. Buy a small test batch first and check it. AccsMarket itself recommends that you buy up to 10 accounts if you’re a first-time buyer.
AccsMarket has separate guidelines for buyers of Facebook accounts. You should give them a read before buying.
2. G2G
G2G used to be a marketplace of gaming accounts and in-game currency only. You could buy accounts for titles like World of Warcraft and FIFA.
But now you’ll also find Facebook accounts on sale there.
The platform operates like a free market. There are individual sellers with their own listings and their own quality standards, pricing, terms and conditions, ratings and reviews left by users, etc.
To ensure a smooth transfer of accounts and payments, the platform supports escrow transactions.
In an escrow transaction, the platform (G2G in this case) holds the buyer’s payment and transfers it to the seller only when the buyer confirms they’ve received all the deliverables.
For instance, you’ll see that a seller has processed 472 orders with a 98% successful delivery rate.
Information like this is going to make decision-making a lot easier.
The downside is that G2G’s Facebook inventory is small. You can see that in the pasted screenshot as well. At the time of writing, only 176 accounts were on sale.
At the same time, the good thing is that there are 16 categories of Facebook accounts.
The platform claims to offer 100% refunds on the basis that you haven’t received your order completely or the received order was different from the description.
3. Z2U
Z2U is also a consumer-to-consumer marketplace like G2G, but its inventory is much bigger.
At the time of writing, there were a total of 5952 listings of Facebook accounts. And each of those listings contains a bulk of accounts, so the actual number of accounts is in thousands.
Like G2G, Z2U also has an escrow-based payment system.
Their listings cover a wide range of Facebook account types, even beyond the types we covered. That’s typical of marketplaces like that because there are many buyers, and every individual buyer has something unique to offer.
You’ll also find a sheer variety of accounts origin-wise. For instance, if you are trying to buy USA Facebook accounts with a specific region IP, let’s say Connecticut, you can filter accounts by country and find all listings for the USA.
Speaking of filters, Z2U’s search filters deserve a separate mention. Z2U has a separate set of filters for different social media accounts and other products that it sells.
And those filters allow for a very granular search.
For instance, for the Facebook marketplace, its search filters are as follows:
- Tags
- Price range in USD
- Country of registration
- Friends count
- Followers count
- Marketplace activated or not
- Business Manager activated or not
- Two-factor authentication
- Full access (yes/no)
- Account age
- Can modify account age (yes/no)
- Ownership transfer or rental
As I said, there are a lot of filters.
Here’s a pro tip before you make a purchase on Z2U. Thoroughly assess buyers.
Each seller has a profile showing their order history, order completion rate, the products they are selling, overall ratings, ratings based on the last 90 days, and buyer reviews.
There’s a lot of data based on which you can evaluate the seller to have peace of mind.
4. SWAPD.co
SWAPD is very different from the three platforms you just read about.
It is a heavily moderated digital asset marketplace, and the products there are of premium quality.
You’ll find all sorts of products and services being sold there. There are social media accounts, emails, messenger assets (e.g, Discord servers), followers, shoutouts, likes, rare handles, websites, unban services, entire online businesses, and much more.
When it comes to Facebook, SWAPD’s marketplace offers well-established fanpages and groups.
The platform serves a different type of buyer altogether. You go there to buy niche Facebook pages with an established audience and continue running them.
So technically, it isn’t a marketplace of personal Facebook accounts or ad accounts. You are not going to find $2 farmed or soft-reg accounts here.
However, you can still post a request detailing the type of Facebook accounts you want in their Buyer Requests category and hope someone has what you need.
SWAPD deals in expensive assets, which is why it strictly moderates both buyers and sellers.
Every member who wants to transact on SWAPD goes through ID verification before being allowed to participate, and moderators actively remove listings that don’t meet the platform’s quality standards.
How to Safely Use Multiple Facebook Accounts with Gologin
After you buy Facebook accounts, you need to log in and use them a certain way so that Facebook can’t detect the change in ownership or the location of the account.
If Facebook detects that, it can disable your accounts outright. Why? Because buying and selling of Facebook accounts is a violation of the platform’s ToS.
Here’s what Facebook states in their ToS:
You must not share your password, give access to your Facebook account to others, or transfer your account to anyone else (without our permission).
That doesn’t stop people from buying and selling Facebook accounts. That happens all the time.
But how do those people manage to evade detection? They use special anti-detect browsers like Gologin.
Let’s show you how you can use Gologin to manage your Facebook accounts safely.
Note: Before purchasing a Facebook account, you may ask the seller if they manage their accounts through Gologin. If they do, then the browser profile (in which the account is operated) with session data can be transferred directly to you. Doing this will make the account handover much safer and will reduce the risk as well.
Step 1: Download Gologin and Create Your Account
Go to gologin.com and download the application for your operating system.
Gologin is available for Windows, macOS, Linux, and as a web app. You’ll find our Android app on Google Play too.
After installing Gologin, create a Gologin account using Google sign-in or email.
A free 7-day trial of all features will start immediately. That’ll give you more than enough time to log in your first batch of Facebook accounts and check them as well as the Gologin browser.
Step 2: Create a Browser Profile for Each Account
Next, open the Gologin browser.
You’ll be greeted by Gologin’s dashboard. You’ll see a few pre-created browser profiles.
Each of these profiles is a completely isolated browsing environment. If you launch any of them and log in to a Facebook account, then launch another and log in to a different Facebook account, it’ll appear to Facebook that both these accounts are being run from two separate devices.
You can also plug in a proxy in these profiles to mimic that the accounts are being run from different locations, too.
But don’t use the pre-created browser profiles.
I’ll show you how you can create them. Follow these steps:
- Click Add Profile in the top right corner
- In the profile creation screen, give the profile any name that relates to the account it will hold (i.e., Facebook_username)
- You’ll also see that Gologin has generated a fingerprint already. You can leave most of the fingerprint parameters as they are. But you’re also free to tweak them if a use case calls for it.
What’s remaining now is setting up a proxy.
Step 3: Assign the Right Proxy to Each Profile
In Gologin’s profile creation screen, paste the proxy details your proxy provider gave you into the different proxy fields.
Next, click Check Proxy to verify the IP and confirm the location.
Make sure the proxy country matches the country the Facebook account was registered in or was being used from.
If you log into a German account from a Moscow IP, Facebook’s systems interpret that as a compromised account and will likely trigger an immediate checkpoint.
Once you have verified the proxy, click Create Profile. The newly created browser profile will appear in the dashboard.
Step 4: Import Session Cookies Before Your First Login
When you buy a Facebook account from reputable sellers, you typically get a cookies file alongside the login credentials.
This file is usually in JSON format and represents an active session from the account’s last genuine login.
You can plug this file into a Gologin profile to mimic the continuation of its last active session.
Gologin has settings for that. Here’s how to access them and plug in the cookies file:
- Press the three-dot menu next to a browser profile’s Run button
- Select Cookies, then choose Cookie Import
- Import cookies either by copying the data from the cookie file or by uploading the file itself
- Press Import
Step 5: Run the Profile and Log In
Click the Run button next to the newly created browser profile.
A new browser window will open. It’ll feel as if you’re using Google Chrome.
Open the Facebook login page.
If you imported cookies, the Facebook account may already appear logged in when Facebook loads. If not, log in normally using the credentials the seller gave you.
Step 6: Scale to More Accounts
Create more Gologin browser profiles and log in to other Facebook accounts in them.
Depending on the Gologin plan you’re on, you can create anywhere from 100 to 100,000 browser profiles.
The free plan lets you create 3 browser profiles.
You can also share a profile with a team member, and they will find the Facebook account already logged in when they open it.
They don’t even need to install Gologin on their own machine to access it. They can simply open the shared profile through Gologin’s web app from any browser.
Download Gologin for free and manage multiple accounts without bans!
FAQs
How much does an aged Facebook account cost in 2026?
There’s no standard price for an aged Facebook account. The price varies based on factors like how old it is exactly, whether or not you’re getting the email account too, whether it is a farmed or real user account, whether it has faced bans before, seller discretion, the marketplace, and more.
Can I use one credit card for multiple accounts?
Yes, you can technically use one credit card for multiple Facebook accounts, but make sure your card has a decent enough limit to keep all the ad accounts running. Also, using a single card for multiple Facebook account comes with a risk. For example, if your one Facebook account gets banned, Facebook might ban your other accounts using the same card as part of the chain reaction.
Is it legal to buy Facebook accounts?
Buying Facebook accounts is generally not allowed under Facebook’s rules, because Meta’s terms prohibit selling, licensing, or purchasing accounts and account-related data. That means even if the transaction is not explicitly illegal in every country, it can still lead to account suspension, restriction, or permanent bans. There may also be added legal risks if the account was obtained through impersonation, fraud, stolen identity, or misleading commercial activity.
Why do people buy old Facebook accounts?
People usually buy old Facebook accounts because aged profiles often look more trustworthy than brand-new ones. In practice, they may be used to run ads, manage pages, join groups faster, or reduce the chance of immediate automated restrictions. Some buyers assume older accounts have a stronger history and therefore a lower risk of being flagged, although that does not make the practice safe or compliant with Meta’s policies. It also creates major risks around scams, fake identity, and sudden account loss













