Where to Buy Aged Facebook Accounts in 2026 (All Types, Clear Pricing)
By Ernest Boudreaux, Digital Account Specialist at AccsZone. Ernest has worked in digital account management and multi-account Facebook advertising operations since 2021, and oversees product quality across AccsZone's Facebook, LinkedIn, and Gmail account categories. · Published June 2026 · Last updated June 11, 2026
If you search "buy aged Facebook accounts" right now, the first few results will point you toward marketplaces like FameSwap, SocialTradia, or Flippa. You'll create an account, browse listings, find something promising — then realize the seller set the price themselves, you don't know if it's fair, the seller might not even be online, and if something goes wrong you're waiting up to 72 hours for a support ticket reply.
That's the reality of P2P account marketplaces. AccsZone aged Facebook accounts — personal profiles, Business Manager accounts, ad accounts, and marketplace-enabled accounts spanning 2007–2026 — are built on a different model. This guide explains exactly what aged Facebook accounts are, when you need them, what they cost in 2026, and how AccsZone's model — in-house production, published pricing, instant delivery, and 24/7 live human support — is built differently from every other platform in this space.
Key definitions (quick reference)
An aged Facebook account is a Facebook profile created in a previous year and maintained until sale; its value comes from the creation date, friend connections, and activity history attached to it.
Facebook's ad trust scoring assigns higher starting spend limits, faster ad approvals, and lower restriction risk to older accounts with consistent activity history.
Account warmup is a gradual activity schedule — typically 14 days — that moves a purchased account from normal browsing to full ad spend in small increments to avoid triggering automated restrictions.
The four main Facebook account types sold for business use are personal accounts, Business Manager (BM) accounts, ad accounts, and marketplace-enabled accounts; each serves a different operational role.
Why People Buy Aged Facebook Accounts
Marketers, agency operators, and growth teams buy aged Facebook accounts for four primary reasons:
1. Advertising infrastructure. Facebook's ad system treats account age as a trust signal. A profile created in 2015 with 200+ friends and consistent activity history has a higher baseline trust score than one created yesterday. That translates to faster ad approvals, higher initial spending limits, and a lower probability of getting flagged during the first campaign.
2. Facebook Marketplace operations. Selling on Facebook Marketplace is restricted on new accounts. Aged profiles — especially those with marketplace activity history — can list products immediately without the waiting period that fresh accounts face.
3. Community management and page growth. Running Facebook Groups or Pages from an aged, established account carries more weight than running them from a new profile. Group admins with older accounts attract more organic trust from members.
4. Bulk operations. Agencies running multi-client ad campaigns or e-commerce operations across multiple regions need multiple accounts. Buying them aged and ready-to-use is faster and more reliable than trying to age accounts yourself over months.
The underlying economics are simple: aging an account in-house takes 12–24 months of consistent, realistic activity per account before it carries meaningful trust signals. Buying an already-aged account converts that time cost into a fixed dollar cost — which is why marketers buy aged accounts instead of aging new ones.
What "Aged" Actually Means — and the Common Buyer Confusion
"Aged" refers to the account's creation date, not its activity level. A 2015 Facebook account that was created and never used is technically aged but has no activity history, no friends, and no behavioral signals that Facebook's system trusts.
The most valuable aged accounts combine:
- Old creation date (2007–2018 is the premium range)
- Real friends (organic connections added over time)
- Activity history (posts, likes, group memberships)
- Phone verification using a real SIM card (not a VOIP number, which Facebook can identify and flag)
- Marketplace-enabled status (already unlocked, no waiting period)
When you're shopping for aged accounts, always check whether the listing specifies these details. At AccsZone, every listing title includes the creation year, friend count range, and feature set — so you know exactly what you're getting before you buy.
Facebook Account Types Explained
Personal Account. The standard Facebook profile. Used for community management, Facebook Marketplace, and as the anchor for Business Manager access. Aged personal accounts with real friends are the most common purchase.
Business Manager (BM) Account. A meta-level account that lets you manage multiple ad accounts, Pages, and team permissions from one dashboard. Required for agency-scale ad operations. BM accounts need to be aged and in good standing to avoid restrictions.
Ad Account. The specific account inside Facebook (or linked to a BM) that runs paid campaigns. Aged ad accounts with spend history are more trusted by Facebook's system. These are the most in-demand product for performance marketers.
Marketplace-Enabled Account. Personal accounts that have already been verified and cleared for Facebook Marketplace activity. These are pre-unlocked — no waiting period required after purchase.
How Account Age Affects Facebook's Ad Trust Score
Facebook doesn't publish its trust scoring methodology, but the behavioral patterns are well-documented across the advertising community. Here's how account age maps to practical ad account behavior:
| Account Age | Typical Starting Ad Limit | Approval Speed | Ban Risk (First 30 Days) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fresh (0–3 months) | $25–$50/day | Slow (1–3 days) | High |
| 1–2 years old | $50–$100/day | Moderate (hours) | Medium |
| 3–5 years old | $100–$250/day | Fast (under 1 hour) | Low–Medium |
| 7+ years old (pre-2018) | $250–$500+/day | Near-instant | Low |
A 2007 or 2009 Facebook account is the platform equivalent of a long-standing business address. Facebook's system recognizes it as a real, established presence — and its ad infrastructure responds accordingly.
That gap between a fresh account capped at $25/day and an aged 2009 account with a $500+/day potential is the entire reason the market for aged Facebook accounts exists.
AccsZone Pricing — All Facebook Account Tiers (2026)
AccsZone publishes all prices publicly. No account creation required to browse. No negotiating with a seller. Here are the current live tiers from accszone.com/all_ads/buy-facebook-accounts:
Live catalogue screenshot — USA Facebook account tiers with published per-piece pricing and real-time stock, June 2026.
Standard Aged Facebook Accounts
| Account Type | Age / Creation Year | Key Features | Price Per Account |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fresh with friends | 3–8 months | 20–100 real friends, 2FA, cookies, Outlook email | from $0.80 |
| 2017 Aged | 2017 | Random friends, Marketplace enabled, USA IP, Gmail access | from $35 |
| 2018 Aged | 2018 | Random friends, Marketplace enabled, USA IP, Gmail access | from $40 |
| 2015 Aged | 2015 | 150+ friends, USA IP, Marketplace enabled, Gmail access | from $21 |
| 2010 Aged | 2010 | Random friends, USA IP, cookies login | from $20 |
| 2010 Aged (High Friends) | 2010 | 5,000 friends, USA IP, cookies | from $25 |
| 2009 Aged | 2009 | Random friends, USA IP, cookies | from $28 |
| 2007 Ultra-Aged | 2007 | 450+ friends, Marketplace enabled, USA IP | from $100 |
| 2008 Ultra-Aged | 2008 | Random friends, USA IP | from $1,000 |
| 2013 Premium | 2013 | 250+ friends, Marketplace enabled, Gmail access | from $300 |
Facebook Ad Accounts (Aged, BM Active)
All AccsZone Facebook ad accounts include: Personal Ad Account + Business Manager active, USA SIM verified (+1), Page created, clean — no violations, ads-eligible, registered from USA IP.
| Ad Account Year | Friend Count | Pricing |
|---|---|---|
| 2022 Aged | 100–250 real friends | Live price on catalogue page |
| 2022 Aged | 250–500 real friends | Live price on catalogue page |
| 2019 Aged | 100–250 real friends | Live price on catalogue page |
| 2014–2016 Aged | 100–250 real friends | Live price on catalogue page |
| 2020 Aged | 800+ real friends | Live price on catalogue page |
| 2015 Aged | 3,500–4,000 real friends | Live price on catalogue page |
| 2012 Aged | 1,750–2,000 real friends | Live price on catalogue page |
| 2013 Aged | 1–50 real friends | Live price on catalogue page |
Bulk discounts apply automatically: 5% off orders of 500+ accounts, 10% off orders of 2,000+ accounts. Deposit bonuses: 3% on deposits under $500, 5% at $1,000+, 7% at $2,000+.
How AccsZone Creates Accounts In-House
Most account marketplaces are P2P platforms. A seller lists their accounts. You buy from that seller. If the seller goes offline, misrepresents their product, or disappears after the transaction, you're left dealing with a slow support ticket system.
AccsZone operates differently. Every account in the catalogue is created in-house by AccsZone's own team — not sourced from third-party sellers.
The creation process for every account includes:
- Real USA devices (not emulators or virtual machines)
- Genuine USA SIM cards for phone verification (not VOIP numbers, which Facebook detects)
- Country-specific IP addresses at the time of creation
- Manual profile setup: real activity patterns, friends connections, and behavioral history
- Cookies and session files included with delivery for clean first login
This matters because Facebook can identify how an account was created. Accounts made with VOIP numbers, datacenter IPs, or emulators have a different behavioral fingerprint than accounts made on real devices with real SIMs. The in-house model exists to produce accounts whose creation history is consistent with how ordinary user accounts are made — which is what determines their long-term stability.
Marketplace Comparison: AccsZone vs. The Alternatives
| Platform | Account Types | Price Transparency | Delivery | Buyer Protection | Support Speed |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AccsZone | Facebook, BM, Ad Accounts, 50+ categories (2007–2026) | ✅ Published prices, no negotiation | Instant (automated) | Pre-login refund/replacement | Minutes (live human chat) |
| FameSwap | Social media channels (P2P) | ❌ Seller-set, negotiated | Seller-dependent | Escrow during transfer only | 24–72 hours (ticket) |
| SocialTradia | Instagram focus | ❌ Quote-based | Broker-arranged | 100% transfer refund | 24–72 hours (ticket) |
| Flippa | Online businesses (bundled SM) | ❌ Auction/seller-set | Post-auction transfer | 7-day inspection, Escrow.com | 24–72 hours (ticket) |
| G2G | Gaming + some social (P2P) | ❌ Seller-set | Seller-dependent | Basic escrow | 24–72 hours (ticket) |
The critical difference is not just price — it's control. On AccsZone, you know exactly what you're buying, at what price, and it arrives in your dashboard immediately after payment. On P2P platforms, you're dependent on whether the seller has the account available, whether they're online, and what price they decide to accept.
How to Safely Log In to a Purchased Facebook Account
The login step is where most purchased accounts are lost. Follow these steps every time:
Step 1: Set up an antidetect browser. Use Dolphin Anty, AdsPower, or GoLogin. Create a new browser profile for each account. The profile should match the account's registered country — a USA-created account needs a USA browser fingerprint.
Step 2: Assign the right proxy. Mobile proxies are the gold standard for Facebook accounts. They rotate IP addresses naturally (the way real phones do on mobile networks), which is the closest match to Facebook's expectation for organic user behavior. If mobile proxies aren't available, residential proxies are the next best option. Avoid datacenter proxies for Facebook.
Step 3: Match the timezone. Your browser profile's timezone must match the account's registration country. A USA-created account logged in from a Moscow timezone raises an immediate flag.
Step 4: Clear browser history before first login. Never log into a new account from a browser that has existing Facebook session data. Use a fresh profile with no prior Facebook cookies.
Step 5: Wait 24 hours before changing the password. This is the most commonly skipped step and one of the most common causes of post-login bans. Facebook treats an immediate password change as a potential account takeover. Wait at least 24 hours after first login before changing any credentials.
Step 6: Warm up before running ads. Do not launch an ad campaign on the day you receive the account. The warmup process starts with normal browsing behavior.
AccsZone's step-by-step antidetect browser setup and first-login guides for each account type are available in the AccsZone Help Center.
How to Warm Up a Facebook Account Before Running Ads
A warmup schedule reduces the risk of the account being flagged after you start using it for advertising. Here is a practical 14-day warmup schedule for an aged Facebook account:
| Day | Activity | Ad Spend |
|---|---|---|
| Day 1–2 | Browse feed, like posts, visit groups — no ad activity | $0 |
| Day 3–4 | Create or claim a Facebook Page. Add profile and cover photo | $0 |
| Day 5–6 | Post content to the Page. Add Page description and contact info | $0 |
| Day 7 | Create first ad campaign — small budget only | $5/day |
| Day 8–9 | Run the $5/day campaign, no changes | $5/day |
| Day 10–11 | Increase budget if no restrictions triggered | $10–$15/day |
| Day 12–13 | Scale to $25/day if account remains clean | $25/day |
| Day 14 | Begin normal campaign operations | Your target budget |
For accounts aged 2007–2015 with established friend counts and activity history, this warmup can often be compressed — the account's prior trust score carries weight. For younger aged accounts (2017–2020), follow the full 14-day schedule.
Buyer Risk Checklist — 5 Things to Verify Before Buying Any Facebook Account
Use this checklist regardless of where you buy:
- Creation date confirmed — is the listing year the actual account creation year or just an estimate? On AccsZone, the creation year is part of the product specification, not a seller claim.
- Phone verification type — was the account verified with a real SIM card or a VOIP number? AccsZone uses only real USA SIM cards. VOIP-verified accounts carry a higher restriction risk.
- Friend count is real — are the friends real profiles with activity history, or are they empty/bot accounts? AccsZone listings specify real friend count ranges.
- Delivery method — is delivery instant and automated, or does it depend on a seller being online? AccsZone delivers to your dashboard immediately after payment.
- Refund policy is clear — does the platform have a published refund policy, or is it up to each seller? AccsZone's policy is simple: bad before first login = 100% replacement or refund, no exceptions.
Platform Policy, Risk, and Compliance — What Buyers Should Know
This section exists because any honest guide to this market has to state the rules clearly.
Meta's Terms of Service prohibit the sale and transfer of Facebook accounts. Purchasing an account does not change that. The practical consequence of a policy violation is platform enforcement — account restriction or permanent suspension — not legal liability in most jurisdictions. Buyers in this market are typically performance marketers and agencies who treat account suspension as a known, priced-in business risk, the same way they treat ad disapprovals or rising CPMs.
Three things follow from this that every buyer should internalize before purchasing:
- No account is suspension-proof. Age, friends, and clean history lower restriction probability; they do not eliminate it. Any seller claiming otherwise is misrepresenting the product.
- Risk allocation is standard across the industry. Sellers (including AccsZone) cover failures before first login; everything after first login — proxy mistakes, activity spikes, ad policy violations — is operational risk that sits with the buyer.
- Compliance with advertising law is separate from account sourcing. The content of the ads you run must independently comply with Meta's advertising policies and the consumer-protection laws of the markets you target, regardless of where the account came from.
AccsZone publishes this openly because informed buyers make better operational decisions — and because the buyers who succeed in this market are the ones who manage risk deliberately rather than assuming it away.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is it legal to buy a Facebook account?
Buying a Facebook account violates Facebook's Terms of Service, but it is not illegal in most jurisdictions. The legal risk sits with platform suspension, not with law enforcement. This is standard practice for performance marketers, agencies, and multi-account operators who treat account costs as a business expense.
What is the difference between a Facebook ad account and a personal account?
A personal account is the main Facebook profile. A Facebook ad account is the specific account (inside a Business Manager or linked directly) where campaigns are created and run. You need a personal account in good standing to access and run an ad account. AccsZone sells both separately.
Why are older accounts more expensive?
Older accounts carry more trust signals — creation date, activity history, established friend connections — that Facebook's system values. A 2007 account has 19 years of perceived behavioral history. A 2025 account has none. That trust differential is what you're paying for.
Why do marketers buy aged accounts instead of aging new accounts themselves?
Time and reliability. Aging an account in-house requires 12–24 months of consistent, realistic activity before Facebook's systems treat it as established — multiplied across every account an operation needs. Buying aged converts that time cost into a fixed, known dollar cost, with the account's trust signals already in place on day one.
What does a 14-day Facebook account warmup look like?
Days 1–6: normal browsing, page creation, and content posting with zero ad spend. Day 7: launch a single small campaign at $5/day and leave it unchanged through day 9. Days 10–13: step the budget up to $10–15/day, then $25/day, only if no restrictions appear. Day 14 onward: normal campaign operations at your target budget. Older accounts (2007–2015) with real friend history can often compress this; younger aged accounts (2017–2020) should follow it in full.
Do I need an antidetect browser to use a purchased Facebook account?
Yes. Logging into a purchased account from your regular browser, which already has Facebook session data tied to your own account, is one of the fastest ways to trigger a security check. An antidetect browser creates a clean, isolated browser environment for each account.
What proxy type should I use with Facebook accounts?
Mobile proxies are the strongest option for Facebook. They rotate IPs the way real mobile devices do, which matches Facebook's expectation for real user behavior. AccsZone sells dedicated mobile proxies for Facebook accounts.
How quickly is delivery after payment?
AccsZone uses fully automated delivery. After payment is confirmed, account credentials are delivered to your dashboard — typically within minutes. There is no seller to wait for.
What if the account doesn't work when I receive it?
If an account fails before your first successful login, contact AccsZone support via live chat immediately. AccsZone's policy is a 100% replacement or refund for any account that is non-functional before first login.
Can I buy Facebook accounts in bulk?
Yes. AccsZone's bulk discount tiers start at 500+ accounts (5% discount) and scale to 2,000+ accounts (10% discount). For orders above 5,000 accounts or custom configurations, contact the AccsZone team directly via Telegram @accszone1.
How does AccsZone differ from platforms like FameSwap or SocialTradia?
FameSwap and SocialTradia are P2P marketplaces — individual sellers list their accounts, set their own prices, and control delivery timing. AccsZone creates every account in-house, publishes fixed prices publicly, delivers instantly via an automated system, and provides 24/7 live human support. There is no seller involved.
Can I get a refund if my account gets banned after I've used it?
No — on AccsZone and every other platform in this category, post-login bans are buyer risk. Once an account has been successfully logged into and used, the cause of any subsequent restriction is typically the buyer's usage patterns (proxy issues, sudden activity spikes, policy violations). AccsZone's refund policy covers pre-login failures only.
Where to Start
AccsZone's full Facebook account catalogue — from $0.80 fresh accounts to $1,000+ ultra-aged 2008 profiles — is available at accszone.com/all_ads/buy-facebook-accounts.
Prices are published. Delivery is instant. If you have questions before you buy, AccsZone's live support team is available 24/7 via chat — not a ticket queue, not a 72-hour wait. Real people, available now.
Published pricing · Instant delivery · 24/7 live support · Telegram @accszone1
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