Let’s break down everything you need to know about warming up a Facebook account. We’ll go over how it works, why it matters for marketers and automation users, and how Multilogin can keep your profiles safe, realistic, and undetectable.
If you’re managing ads, running e-commerce stores, or creating social media campaigns, you’ve probably noticed Facebook doesn’t like new accounts acting too perfect too soon. That’s why “warming up” your accounts before going full-scale is essential.
What does warming up a Facebook account mean?
Warming up means gradually building trust with Facebook’s algorithm. Instead of instantly creating an account and running ads or sending hundreds of friend requests, you slowly act like a genuine user.
In short — you’re teaching Facebook your account is real, not a bot.
During the warm-up phase, you should:
- Use the account daily from a consistent device and IP.
- Scroll, react, and engage naturally.
- Avoid connecting too many accounts from the same environment.
Why warming up matters more than ever
Facebook’s detection system doesn’t just look at what you do — it looks at how and where you do it.
If multiple new accounts share the same browser fingerprint, IP, or device, they’ll likely get flagged or banned. That’s where Multilogin’s antidetect technology comes in.
With 25+ fingerprinting parameters, it creates unique, human-like browser profiles that make each account look like it’s coming from a completely different user.
So instead of Facebook seeing “one person running ten accounts,” it sees “ten unique users” — each with their own cookies, device, and history.
What is Facebook Warmup?
Facebook warmup is the strategic process of gradually building an account’s trust and reputation with Facebook’s algorithm. Instead of immediately using a new account for business activities, you simulate natural user behavior over days or weeks to establish credibility.
Think of it like breaking in new shoes. You wouldn’t run a marathon in brand-new sneakers—you’d wear them around the house first, then for short walks, gradually increasing activity. Facebook accounts work the same way. The platform’s bot detection systems monitor everything from login patterns to interaction speeds, looking for signs of automation or suspicious activity.
During warmup, you’re essentially teaching Facebook’s algorithm that your account belongs to a real person with genuine interests. This involves logging in at realistic times, browsing content naturally, engaging with posts gradually, and building connections slowly. The goal is reaching a trust threshold where Facebook stops scrutinizing your every move.
What warming up a Facebook account actually means: You’re gradually building trust with Facebook’s algorithm instead of instantly creating an account and running ads or sending hundreds of friend requests. You slowly act like a genuine user—teaching Facebook your account is real, not a bot.
During the warm-up phase, you should use the account daily from a consistent device and IP, scroll and react naturally, engage authentically with content, and crucially, avoid connecting too many accounts from the same environment. This last point is where many marketers fail—managing multiple accounts without proper browser fingerprinting protection inevitably leads to linked account detection.
Why warmup has become non-negotiable: Facebook processes over 4 billion interactions daily, and its detection systems improve constantly. Facebook’s detection system doesn’t just look at what you do—it looks at how and where you do it. If multiple new accounts share the same browser fingerprint, IP, or device fingerprint, they’ll likely get flagged or banned immediately.
Accounts that skip warmup face immediate scrutiny—delayed post visibility, restricted features, or outright bans. Meanwhile, properly warmed accounts enjoy smoother operations, better reach, and significantly lower ban rates. The platform’s advanced tracking technology can connect accounts across devices and sessions, making technical protection essential.
The warmup period typically ranges from 7-30 days, depending on your account’s purpose. Personal profiles need less intensive warmup than business accounts planning to run ads or manage pages.
However, the investment always pays off through longer account lifespans and fewer headaches down the road. This is especially critical for those engaged in multi-account management across social media platforms.
How Do I Warm Up a New Facebook Account?
Warming up a new Facebook account requires patience and strategic planning. Rush the process, and you’ll trigger Facebook’s detection systems. Follow these steps methodically, and you’ll build accounts that withstand scrutiny.
Week 1: Foundation Building
Start by completing your profile naturally. Add a profile picture and cover photo, but don’t upload them simultaneously—space them out by a few hours. Fill in basic information like your city, education, and work, but leave some fields empty. Perfect profiles scream “fake account.”
On day one, log in and just scroll the feed for 5–10 minutes. Don’t rush into any interactions. Log in 2-3 times daily at varied hours afterward. Spend 10-15 minutes scrolling through your feed, watching a video or two, and clicking on suggested content. Don’t interact with anything yet—just browse. This passive activity tells Facebook’s algorithm you’re a real person exploring the platform.
Over the next few days, gradually add more profile elements. Add a profile photo and bio, but do so incrementally. Like a few posts—starting with just 2-3 per day. Join a couple of groups related to your interests, but don’t post anything yet. Comment casually on posts you genuinely find interesting, avoiding spammy language at all costs.
Avoid friend requests entirely during week one. Instead, let Facebook suggest people you might know and occasionally click through their profiles without sending requests. This mimics how genuine users explore the platform before connecting with others. Each action trains Facebook’s algorithm to see your account as human rather than automated.
Pro tip: Never use the same device or browser for multiple new accounts during warmup. Facebook tracks device fingerprints, and logging in from identical digital environments raises immediate red flags. This is where antidetect browsers become essential for anyone managing multiple accounts. These specialized tools create unique browser profiles with distinct fingerprints, preventing Facebook from linking your accounts together.
Week 2: Gradual Engagement
Start liking posts—but sparingly. Aim for 3-5 likes per session initially, focusing on content in your feed rather than seeking out specific pages. Vary what you like: mix posts from friends, pages, and groups naturally. This varied engagement pattern signals authentic user behavior rather than bot traffic.
Begin sending friend requests, but keep it conservative. Send 2-3 requests daily to people with mutual friends or logical connections based on your profile details. Accept incoming requests slowly as well. Genuine users don’t collect hundreds of friends overnight—rapid friend accumulation is a major shadow ban trigger.
Leave your first comments during week two, but make them substantial. Single emoji responses or generic “nice!” comments look automated and can trigger bot detection tests. Write 1-2 thoughtful comments daily that contribute to conversations naturally. This demonstrates genuine engagement rather than scripted responses.
Join 1-2 groups related to your profile’s interests. Don’t post immediately—just request membership and browse content when approved. Active participation comes later in the warmup process. For those managing multiple accounts, using session management tools ensures each account maintains its own isolated activity history.
During this phase, commenting and joining groups should take 15-20 minutes per day. This gradual increase in engagement duration helps establish natural usage patterns that Facebook’s behavioral analytics systems recognize as authentic.
Week 3: Increasing Activity
Ramp up engagement gradually. Increase daily likes to 8-10, comments to 3-4, and friend requests to 5-6. Start sharing content occasionally—but only posts from your feed, not external links yet. Sharing posts and messaging friends should now consume 20-30 minutes of daily activity.
Post your first original content: a simple status update or photo. Keep it personal and authentic. Avoid any business-related content during warmup. Facebook needs to see genuine personal use before trusting accounts with commercial activity. This is especially important for those planning to use accounts for social media marketing purposes.
Engage more actively in groups by leaving thoughtful comments on existing posts. Don’t create new posts yet—contributing to conversations builds credibility without drawing excessive attention. This measured approach prevents triggering Facebook’s anti-bot detection systems.
Start using Facebook features naturally: react to stories, send a few messages to new connections, and explore different sections like Marketplace or Events (without posting anything yourself). This diversified platform usage demonstrates you’re a real person exploring Facebook’s full ecosystem rather than a bot focused on single-purpose activity.
Important: Never copy-paste the same message to multiple people. Facebook’s behavioral analytics easily detect repetitive actions. Each interaction should feel unique and intentional. Using tools that enable human typing simulation can help maintain authentic interaction patterns across multiple accounts.
Week 4: Full Activity Mode
By week four, your account should feel established. Increase friend requests to 8-10 daily, maintain consistent engagement with likes and comments, and start posting more regularly—2-3 times per week. After two weeks minimum, if your account will eventually run ads, you can consider connecting to Ad Manager.
If your account will eventually run ads, now’s the time to like business pages and join industry-related groups. However, don’t immediately launch campaigns. Spend another week demonstrating interest in business topics before transitioning to commercial activity. Rushing into ads is a common mistake that leads to Facebook ad account bans.
Create your first post in a group—something valuable and non-promotional. Ask a question, share an insight, or contribute to an ongoing discussion. This positions you as a community member rather than a marketer waiting to pounce. For those managing accounts for affiliate marketing, this organic positioning is crucial for long-term account health.
Throughout this process, remember that consistency matters more than volume. Facebook tracks consistency, not just raw action counts. With proper antidetect browser technology, you can open multiple profiles and manage warm-up schedules simultaneously, without overlapping cookies or shared data—scaling your warmup operations without increasing ban risk.
How to Warm Up a Facebook Profile?
Warming up an existing Facebook profile requires a different approach than new accounts. Maybe you’ve purchased an aged account, recovered from a Facebook ban, or inherited a dormant profile. Whatever the situation, these accounts need careful reactivation.
Assessing Your Starting Point
First, evaluate the account’s current state. Check when it last saw activity, review past posts for concerning content, and examine the friend list quality. Accounts dormant for months need gentler warmup than those inactive for weeks.
If you’re working with aged Facebook accounts bought from providers, warm them up too—don’t assume they’re safe just because they’re old. Import the account into a new Multilogin profile, assign a clean residential proxy, and log in normally. Crucially, avoid changing passwords immediately, as this can trigger security alerts.
Log in and spend your first session just browsing. Don’t change anything or interact with content. Simply scroll through your feed for 15-20 minutes. This reintroduces the account to Facebook’s systems without triggering alerts about sudden behavioral changes. Facebook’s session replay technology monitors these initial interactions carefully.
Gradual Reactivation Strategy
Update your profile picture and cover photo if they’re outdated, but do so separately over several days. Change other profile information gradually—never update multiple fields in one session. This prevents triggering Facebook’s account verification bypass alerts.
Start with minimal engagement: 2-3 likes daily for the first week, focusing on content from existing friends. This signals renewed interest without appearing aggressive. Engage naturally for 3–5 days before connecting to Ads Manager if that’s your eventual goal.
Avoid these common mistakes:
- Immediately messaging all your friends after months of silence
- Posting promotional content before rebuilding personal activity
- Joining multiple new groups simultaneously
- Sending friend requests to strangers right away
- Logging in from drastically different locations without explanation
Instead, reconnect naturally. Comment on posts from close connections, react to their stories, and gradually expand your activity circle. Think of it as rekindling friendships rather than launching a marketing campaign.
For those managing multiple reactivated accounts, proper proxy management ensures each account appears to log in from consistent, believable locations.
For purchased aged accounts, pay special attention to the account’s historical activity patterns. Suddenly changing the type of content you post or groups you engage with raises suspicions.
Blend your new activity with the account’s established personality for the smoothest transition. This ensures the account’s new environment doesn’t trigger Facebook’s “unusual login location” alerts that often lead to IP bans.
Advanced consideration: If the profile will manage business assets or run ads, take extra time warming up. Facebook scrutinizes commercial accounts more heavily. Spend 3-4 weeks demonstrating genuine personal use before transitioning to business activities. Learn more about avoiding Facebook Marketplace bans by maintaining account health throughout the transition period.
Can a Fake FB Account Be Traced?
Yes, absolutely. Facebook’s detection capabilities extend far beyond checking if your profile information matches government records. The platform employs sophisticated browser fingerprinting technology that creates unique digital signatures for every device and connection accessing its network.
How Facebook Traces Accounts
Device fingerprinting captures dozens of technical parameters: your screen resolution, installed fonts, browser version, operating system, canvas fingerprinting data, WebGL renderer information, audio fingerprinting characteristics, and hundreds of other data points. These elements combine to create a virtually unique identifier for your device.
That’s where Multilogin’s antidetect technology becomes essential. With 25+ fingerprinting parameters, it creates unique, human-like browser profiles that make each account look like it’s coming from a completely different user.
Multilogin automatically randomizes canvas fingerprints, audio fingerprints, WebGL & GPU data, fonts, screen size, and timezone—ensuring every session remains consistent yet unique.
When you create multiple accounts from the same device without protection, Facebook instantly connects them through matching fingerprints. This is why basic solutions like incognito mode or clearing cookies don’t work—these actions don’t change your underlying device signature. Even WebRTC leaks can expose your real IP address despite other precautions.
IP address tracking provides another layer of detection. Facebook monitors when multiple accounts consistently log in from identical IP addresses, especially if those accounts exhibit other suspicious similarities.
While residential IPs offer more cover than datacenter addresses, IP tracking alone can still expose related accounts. This is why using residential proxies specifically designed for social media is crucial.
Behavioral analysis rounds out Facebook’s detection arsenal. The platform’s AI examines how you type, mouse movement patterns, scrolling speeds, and interaction timing. Accounts controlled by the same person develop recognizable behavioral signatures, even when using different devices or locations. Facebook’s keystroke dynamics tracking can identify users across sessions.
The Reality of “Fake” Accounts
Facebook doesn’t necessarily care if your name is fake or your profile picture shows someone else. What triggers bans is suspicious technical patterns and behavior that suggests automation, coordination, or violation of community standards.
So instead of Facebook seeing “one person running ten accounts,” properly protected setups show “ten unique users”—each with their own cookies, device signature, and browsing history. Each Multilogin profile has its own browser fingerprint, cookies, and proxy, which means every Facebook account you create looks like it’s coming from a real, distinct device.
Properly managed accounts with fictional identities but genuine-seeming activity often survive indefinitely. Meanwhile, accounts with completely accurate information get banned regularly if their technical signatures or behavior patterns raise red flags. Understanding how Facebook bans accounts helps you avoid common detection triggers.
Protection strategies that actually work:
- Antidetect browsers modify your device fingerprint comprehensively. Tools like Multilogin generate unique browser profiles with different canvas fingerprints, WebGL parameters, fonts, and dozens of other technical details. This allows managing multiple accounts without creating identical fingerprint signatures. The technology prevents cross-browser fingerprinting that would otherwise link your accounts.
- Residential proxies mask your real IP address with IPs from actual internet service providers. Unlike datacenter proxies, residential IPs appear as regular home or mobile connections, making your accounts look geographically diverse and authentic. Multilogin’s built-in residential proxies are included in all plans, simplifying this process significantly. Use Multilogin’s built-in residential proxies for real-world IP addresses that Facebook trusts.
- Behavioral variation requires conscious effort. Don’t interact with accounts in identical patterns—vary your typing speed, scrolling behavior, and engagement timing. Use different content interests for each account rather than joining the same groups or liking identical pages. Tools with human typing simulation capabilities help maintain these natural variations.
The bottom line: Facebook can trace any account if you’re not using proper protection. However, with the right combination of fingerprint masking, residential proxies, and behavioral awareness, you can manage multiple accounts safely for years. Thousands of social media managers, marketers, and agencies do exactly this every day using professional antidetect browser solutions.
Is It Possible to Wipe Your Facebook Account and Start Over?
Short answer: not really. Facebook’s systems are far more sophisticated than most people realize. While you can technically delete an account and create a new one, Facebook maintains extensive backend records that can link your new account to the deleted one through reverse fingerprinting techniques.
What Facebook Remembers
When you delete a Facebook account, the platform doesn’t immediately purge all associated data. Facebook’s device fingerprinting technology has already cataloged your device signature, IP addresses you’ve used, behavioral patterns, and connections to other accounts.
Creating a new account from the same device or IP address immediately raises flags. Facebook’s algorithm recognizes the technical signature and applies scrutiny based on the deleted account’s history. If the previous account was banned for violations, the new one starts under a cloud of suspicion—a phenomenon related to IP blacklisting.
Even more concerning: Facebook tracks relationships between accounts through social graph analysis. If your deleted account interacted regularly with certain profiles, and your new account immediately reconnects with those same people, the pattern becomes obvious. The platform’s behavioral analytics can identify these relationships even when you’re trying to stay under the radar.
The Only Real Fresh Start
True account independence requires eliminating all connecting factors between old and new profiles:
Device separation means using completely different browser fingerprints. This isn’t achievable by simply buying a new computer—you need software that modifies all the dozens of fingerprinting parameters Facebook monitors. Antidetect browser technology specifically addresses this challenge by creating isolated browser environments with unique digital identities.
IP isolation requires using different residential proxies for each account. Your new account needs to appear from a completely different geographic location and ISP than your old one. Facebook’s systems are particularly sensitive to IP reuse patterns, which is why geolocation spoofing combined with authentic residential IPs is essential.
Behavioral differentiation means developing distinct usage patterns. Don’t join the same groups, like identical pages, or reconnect with the same friend circle immediately. Build an entirely different online persona with unique interests and engagement patterns. Understanding how to avoid Facebook bans helps you develop these distinct behavioral profiles.
Alternative approach: Instead of deleting and recreating, consider purchasing aged Facebook accounts with clean histories. These accounts come with established trust scores and activity patterns. However, they still require proper warmup when you take control, and you must use antidetect browser profiles to prevent linking them to your existing accounts.
Reality check: If you’re considering wiping and starting over because of past violations, understand that Facebook’s memory is long. The platform’s AI systems get better at pattern recognition every day through machine learning-based tracking. Your best strategy is starting fresh with proper protection from day one rather than hoping Facebook forgets your past activity.
The investment in proper tools like Multilogin pays for itself quickly by preventing the endless cycle of creating new accounts only to have them banned within days. Start with a protected setup at €5.85/month rather than losing time and money to repeated bans. Unlike standalone antidetect browsers, Multilogin includes proxies in every plan, saving you both time and setup hassle.
Step-by-step: How to warm up a Facebook account
Let’s go through a safe warm-up schedule you can follow using Multilogin.
Step 1: Create your profile in Multilogin
- Open Multilogin X and click Create new profile.
- Choose Mimic (Chrome-based) or Stealthfox (Firefox-based).
- Assign a residential proxy (included in all plans).
- Save your profile locally or in the cloud.
Each Multilogin profile has its own browser fingerprint, cookies, and proxy, which means every Facebook account you create looks like it’s coming from a real device.
👉 Tip: Use Multilogin’s built-in residential proxies for real-world IP addresses. Learn more on our pricing page.
Step 2: Log in and stay active
On day one, log in and just scroll the feed for 5–10 minutes. Don’t rush.
Over the next few days:
- Add a profile photo and bio.
- Like a few posts.
- Join a couple of groups.
- Comment casually (avoid spammy language).
Each action trains Facebook’s algorithm to see your account as human.
With Multilogin, all of this activity is saved within your profile’s isolated environment — cookies, cache, and login sessions remain separate, even across hundreds of accounts.
Step 3: Use pre-farmed cookies
New accounts with zero cookies scream suspicious.
Multilogin solves this with pre-farmed cookies — aged browsing data that makes your Facebook accounts look older and more trusted from day one.
These cookies simulate real browsing behavior, so Facebook sees an account with an active history instead of a brand-new blank slate.
For example, instead of showing “Account created today, no browsing history,” Facebook sees “User has already browsed multiple sites.”
That difference alone can reduce bans dramatically.
Step 4: Gradually increase engagement
Once your account feels “alive,” start building interaction:
Day | Activity | Recommended Duration |
1–3 | Browsing, likes, follows | 10–15 min/day |
4–7 | Commenting, joining groups | 15–20 min/day |
8–14 | Sharing posts, messaging friends | 20–30 min/day |
15+ | Ad account connection (if needed) | After 2 weeks minimum |
Don’t skip ahead — Facebook tracks consistency, not just actions.
With Multilogin, you can open multiple profiles and manage warm-up schedules simultaneously, without overlapping cookies or shared data.
Step 5: Maintain healthy browser fingerprints
Even after warming up, keep your profiles clean.
Multilogin automatically randomizes:
- Canvas fingerprint
- Audio fingerprint
- WebGL & GPU data
- Fonts, screen size, and timezone
That way, every session remains consistent yet unique.
👉 Learn how antidetect browsers protect your accounts from browser fingerprinting.
Step 6: Automate safely
Once accounts are stable, you can start light automation — but smartly.
Use Multilogin’s API or integrate with Selenium, Playwright, or Puppeteer to automate routine actions like browsing or liking posts.
Always mimic real behavior:
- Add random delays.
- Change interaction patterns.
- Use varied session lengths.
That’s how professional teams scale dozens or even hundreds of Facebook accounts safely.
What not to do when warming up
Even experienced marketers make mistakes that get accounts banned. Avoid these:
❌ Logging in multiple new accounts from the same IP.
❌ Sending mass friend requests or DMs too early.
❌ Using free or datacenter proxies (Facebook detects them easily).
❌ Deleting cookies too often — it resets trust signals.
❌ Running automation 24/7 without human-like pauses.
Multilogin’s proxy hub and fingerprint engine prevent most of these mistakes automatically.
For example, if you assign a different residential proxy per profile, you’ll never mix IPs or leak data between accounts.
How Multilogin simplifies the warm-up process
Here’s what makes Multilogin the ultimate tool for Facebook account warm-up:
Feature | Benefit |
Pre-farmed cookies | Simulate aged browsing to gain instant trust |
Residential proxies | Appear as real home users instead of datacenter IPs |
Unique browser fingerprints | Every account looks like a separate person |
Cloud profile storage | Access your warmed-up accounts anywhere |
AI Quick Actions | Automate repetitive warm-up tasks with a single command |
24/7 support | Get help anytime in five languages |
Unlike standalone antidetect browsers, Multilogin includes proxies in every plan, saving you both time and setup hassle.
How many Facebook accounts can you warm up at once?
That depends on your plan.
- Pro 10 (€5.85/month annually) – Manage and warm up to 10 Facebook profiles.
- Pro 50 / 100 – For small agencies or affiliate marketers scaling campaigns.
- Business plans (300+) – Perfect for teams managing thousands of profiles with unlimited team seats and API automation.
👉 See all options on the Multilogin pricing page.
Every plan includes free residential proxy traffic and fingerprint protection tested daily on over 50 sites — so you’re always one step ahead of detection systems.
Warming up aged or purchased Facebook accounts
If you’re working with aged Facebook accounts bought from providers, warm them up too — don’t assume they’re safe.
Here’s how to do it right:
- Import the account into a new Multilogin profile.
- Assign a clean residential proxy.
- Log in normally, avoid changing passwords immediately.
- Engage naturally for 3–5 days before connecting to Ads Manager.
This ensures the account’s new environment doesn’t trigger Facebook’s “unusual login location” alerts.
Why Multilogin is your safest choice
Multilogin isn’t just another antidetect browser — it’s an all-in-one ecosystem designed for long-term stability.
You get:
- Proven fingerprinting technology tested daily.
- Built-in proxies (no extra provider needed).
- Pre-farmed cookies for faster warm-ups.
- AI Quick Actions to save time.
- Cloud storage for teams.
It’s the same technology trusted by marketers, dropshippers, and affiliate experts worldwide to scale Facebook operations without bans.
👉 Don’t risk bans: Try Multilogin and keep your accounts undetected.
Frequently Asked Questions About How to Warm Up a Facebook Account
It’s best to warm up a new Facebook account for 10–14 days before running ads, posting frequently, or automating actions.
Start with light engagement — browsing, liking, and joining groups — and increase activity gradually. Using Multilogin’s pre-farmed cookies can shorten this period, since the account already appears older and more trusted.
Yes, but not from the same device or IP. If you log into multiple new accounts from one browser, Facebook will likely detect it.
With Multilogin, each account runs in its own isolated browser environment with a unique fingerprint and proxy, so you can warm up dozens of accounts simultaneously without cross-contamination.
Absolutely. Proxies are essential to prevent IP-based bans. Multilogin includes built-in residential proxies in all plans — meaning every profile connects through a clean, real-world IP.
You can also manage or top up proxy traffic directly inside the app without using external tools.
If you start posting, messaging, or running ads too aggressively, Facebook’s system might flag your account as spam or automation-driven.
When this happens, you’ll see warnings, temporary restrictions, or even permanent bans.
To stay safe, always:
- Keep session durations realistic.
- Spread actions over multiple days.
Use Multilogin’s cookie and fingerprint protection to keep activity natural.
Even aged or bought accounts need warming up in their new environment.
Here’s a safe method:
- Import the account into a fresh Multilogin profile.
- Assign a clean residential proxy.
- Browse normally for a few days before making changes.
- Gradually increase interactions.
Avoid logging in from your personal IP or deleting cookies — it resets Facebook’s trust signals.
Cookies store your browsing history, logins, and trust data. New accounts with zero cookies look suspicious, while pre-farmed cookies (like those in Multilogin) make your accounts appear established from the start.
This helps you avoid reCAPTCHAs and “suspicious login” warnings during the warm-up phase.
Conclusion
Warming up a Facebook account isn’t about tricks — it’s about building digital trust. When you act like a genuine user, Facebook rewards you with stability, reach, and long-term account health.
But doing that at scale — across multiple accounts — requires more than patience. It requires the right setup.
That’s where Multilogin steps in.
With unique browser fingerprints, built-in residential proxies, and pre-farmed cookies, you can simulate real human behavior safely and efficiently. Whether you’re managing ads, automating engagement, or testing new strategies, every action looks authentic.
If you’re serious about protecting your accounts and growing faster:
👉 Start your 3-day trial for just €1.99
👉 Or upgrade to Pro 10 (€5.85/month) to warm up and manage multiple Facebook profiles with full control.
Stay consistent. Stay invisible. Stay ahead — with Multilogin.