“Which account to buy” is not about “the most expensive” but about fit. Overpaying for age where it's not needed burns budget; saving on type where resilience matters burns the account. Let's break down the types and scenarios.
Fresh and autoreg
Fresh accounts are just-registered, hand-made accounts for quick tasks. Autoreg accounts are bulk-registered by software — the cheapest consumable for automation. Both need careful warm-up; autoreg is riskier at the start because the digital footprint is thinner.
Aged by year (2011-2024)
The signup year is one of the main trust signals. A 2011-2016 account has lived through more platform update cycles and reads as a long-standing profile: a lower suspicion threshold on login and actions. Newer years (2020-2024) are cheaper and fit where age isn't critical.
- 2011-2016 — maximum trust, higher price, for long projects.
- 2017-2019 — a balance of age and cost.
- 2020-2024 — a budget option for quick tasks.
Why a bundled email matters
An account with access to its linked email is easier to recover and secure — without it you rely on the password alone. This is a key safety factor: right after purchase, change the credentials and save everything in a password manager.
Frequently asked questions
- Is an aged account safer than a fresh one?
- All else equal — yes, age raises platform trust. But even an aged account is easy to burn with an abrupt start without warm-up and a proxy. The type is a base, not a guarantee.
- What should a beginner buy?
- Start with one aged account with email and one clean proxy, practice warm-up hands-on, and only then scale with packs. It's cheaper to learn without burning expensive consumables.