Reddit threads with zero comments die fast. The algorithm buries them, users scroll past them, and whatever you posted – product launch, brand mention, discussion starter – disappears into the void within hours.
That is why buying Reddit comments has become a standard play for marketers, founders, and agencies in 2026. But the market is flooded with services that deliver robotic, one-line replies that get flagged and removed before they generate any traction.
I spent three weeks testing six comment services across multiple subreddits and niches. I ordered custom comments, tracked delivery times, monitored account quality, and watched whether the comments actually stuck or got nuked by moderators.
Here is what I found.
What Makes a Reddit Comment Service Worth Using
Before diving into the reviews, let me explain the criteria I used to evaluate each provider.
Comment authenticity. Does the comment read like something a real Redditor would write? Or does it sound like it was generated by a template engine from 2019?
Account quality. Are comments posted from aged accounts with karma history? Or are they coming from day-old throwaways that scream “fake engagement”?
Customization options. Can you provide context, tone direction, or talking points? Or do you get generic praise regardless of the thread topic?
Delivery speed and reliability. Did they deliver on time? Did the comments actually appear and stay visible?
Pricing transparency. No bait-and-switch. The price you see should be the price you pay.
With those five pillars in mind, here are the six services ranked from best to worst.
1. REDAccs – Best Overall Comment Service

REDAccs stood out immediately because they approach Reddit comments differently than everyone else I tested. Instead of treating comments as a commodity – pump out volume, hope some stick – they treat each comment as a micro-content piece that needs to fit the thread’s context, tone, and subreddit culture.
I ordered 15 comments across three different subreddits: a tech subreddit, a marketing community, and a niche hobby forum. Every comment arrived within 24 hours. More importantly, every comment was clearly written by someone who understood the thread. They referenced other replies, used subreddit-appropriate language, and varied in length from two sentences to full paragraphs with supporting arguments.
The accounts posting the comments were all aged – the youngest was over a year old with 2,000+ karma. Several had posting histories that looked completely organic. Two weeks after delivery, all 15 comments were still live and had received upvotes from genuine users.
REDAccs also offers bundled packages that combine comments with upvotes, which is useful when you need a comment to gain visibility within a thread. Their dashboard is clean, the ordering process takes about two minutes, and their support team responded to a question I had within three hours.
Pricing: Custom comments start at $3.50 per comment for orders of 10+. Premium packages with targeted subreddit matching run $5-8 per comment. Bundles with upvotes start at $45 for 10 comments + 50 upvotes.
Verdict: The clear winner for anyone who needs comments that actually look and feel real.
2. Upvote.Shop – Best for Speed and Bulk Orders
Upvote.Shop has carved out a solid reputation in the Reddit engagement space, and their comment service lives up to it. They are especially strong for bulk orders where you need 20+ comments deployed across multiple threads quickly.
I ordered 10 comments and had all of them posted within 12 hours. The quality was good – not quite as contextually nuanced as REDAccs, but clearly written by humans who read the thread first. Account ages were solid, mostly 6-18 months old, with decent karma scores.
Where Upvote.Shop really shines is their speed. If you are running a time-sensitive campaign – product launch, PR push, damage control – they can mobilize fast without sacrificing too much quality.
Pricing: Comments start at $2.75 each for standard quality. Custom-written comments run $4.50-6.00 each. Bulk pricing available for 25+ orders.
Verdict: Strong second choice, especially when turnaround time matters.
3. BuyVotes – Reliable Mid-Range Option
BuyVotes offers Reddit comments alongside their broader social media engagement menu. The comments I received were decent – they addressed the thread topic and used natural language – but lacked the depth and nuance of the top two providers.
Out of 8 comments ordered, 7 stayed live after one week. One was removed by a subreddit moderator, likely because the account had a limited history in that specific community. Delivery took about 36 hours.
Pricing: Starting at $3.00 per comment. Custom options available at $5.00 per comment.
Verdict: A safe choice if REDAccs and Upvote.Shop are unavailable, but not top-tier.
4. MediaMaster – Established but Showing Age
MediaMaster has been around for years, which is both their strength and their weakness. They have infrastructure and reliability, but their Reddit comment quality feels like it has not evolved with the platform’s increasingly sophisticated spam detection.
I ordered 8 comments. Five were acceptable. Three felt templated – generic praise that could apply to any thread. Account quality was mixed. Delivery was slow at roughly 48 hours.
Pricing: Comments from $2.50 each. Limited customization options.
Verdict: Established brand, but the comment quality is inconsistent.
5. SiderMed – Decent Quality, Limited Customization
SiderMed delivered comments that were grammatically correct and topically relevant, but they did not offer much control over tone or approach. You submit the thread URL, and they handle the rest – which works fine for generic engagement but falls short for targeted marketing campaigns.
Six of my 7 ordered comments survived moderation. Delivery took about 30 hours.
Pricing: From $3.25 per comment. No custom writing tier available.
Verdict: Adequate for basic engagement needs, but limited flexibility.
6. BuyVotes – Budget Option with Caveats
Website: BuyVotes
BuyVotes is primarily an upvote service that adds comments as an extension. The price is attractive, but the quality reflects the lower investment. Comments were short, somewhat generic, and posted from accounts with thinner histories.
Three of my 8 comments were removed within 72 hours. That is a 37.5% failure rate, which significantly impacts the value proposition even at lower prices.
Pricing: Starting at $1.75 per comment. Bulk discounts for 50+ orders.
Verdict: You get what you pay for. Only consider for low-stakes engagement.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Service | Custom Writing | Account Quality | Delivery Speed | Survival Rate | Price/Comment |
| REDAccs | Yes – fully custom | Aged, high karma | ~24 hrs | 100% | $3.50-8.00 |
| Upvote.Shop | Yes – human-written | Aged, decent karma | ~12 hrs | 90% | $2.75-6.00 |
| BuyVotes | Semi-custom | Mixed quality | ~36 hrs | 87% | $3.00-5.00 |
| MediaMaster | Limited | Mixed quality | ~48 hrs | 62% | $2.50+ |
| SiderMed | No | Decent | ~30 hrs | 86% | $3.25+ |
| BuyVotes | No | Thin histories | ~24 hrs | 62% | $1.75+ |
The Bottom Line
The Reddit comment market in 2026 has a clear quality divide. Services like REDAccs and Upvote.Shop invest in human writers who understand Reddit culture. The rest rely on volume-based approaches that produce inconsistent results.
If your comments need to drive real engagement – spark replies, earn upvotes, influence thread direction – pay for quality. If you just need surface-level social proof and do not care about longevity, the budget options exist.
But in my testing, the cheapest options ended up being the most expensive when you factor in the removal rate. A $1.75 comment that gets deleted in 48 hours costs infinitely more than a $5.00 comment that stays live and generates organic engagement for months.
Invest in comments that survive. That is the entire point.

