YouTube comments occupy a small but disproportionate slice of the engagement signal a video sends to the recommendation system. They cost more time per viewer than a like or a watch-second, so when comment volume is non-trivial the platform reads the section as evidence that the video is worth surfacing in the Up Next rail and on the homepage feed for similar viewer profiles. That signal compounds with the dominant ranking factors — average view duration and click-through-rate on the thumbnail — rather than replacing them.
What an order from us actually looks like: 10 to 500 positive comments per package, drip-fed over hours rather than dumped in a single window. Comments are written in English, length-varied (short reactions plus a few longer two-to-three-sentence replies), and authored by accounts with realistic upload history and subscription footprints. We never post anything that looks like keyword stuffing, link drops, or promotion of an unrelated channel — those patterns are the ones YouTube's spam filter strips automatically and they leave a flag on the video.
We need only the public watch URL or the channel handle. No password, no two-factor code, no Google account access of any kind. The Buy Now button on each package card uses TRY-locked pricing for Türkiye buyers and locks the FX rate at checkout for everyone else, so the amount you pay does not move while the comments are still being delivered.
Refill window is 30 days. If a chunk of the delivered comments gets removed by YouTube during that window — which can happen on videos that are themselves under review for a separate reason — we re-deliver the missing volume free of charge, automatically, no support ticket required. The refill policy is the same on every quantity tier.
A few constraints worth knowing before you order: YouTube auto-hides comments containing more than two URLs or words from its safety classifier (we do not include any URLs in delivered comments for that reason); videos under 30 seconds receive comments but the surfacing benefit is muted because Shorts uses a separate ranking pipeline; brand-new channels under 100 subscribers will see the comment activity but should expect the recommendation lift to compound only after the channel crosses the homepage-eligibility threshold.
For a deeper look at how the engagement signal interacts with watch-time on the same video, see our guide on YouTube CPM and revenue benchmarks.

![How to Get More Views on YouTube Shorts: 7 Tips [2026 Update] — illustration](/blog-covers/en/how-to-get-more-views-on-youtube-shorts.webp)
