You check your phone at 7 AM. There’s an email from Facebook.
Your ad account is disabled. Just like that. No warning. No explanation that makes sense.
Your campaigns? Gone. Your data? Locked. Your revenue? Stopped cold.
I’ve been there. Most advertisers have. Last year alone, Facebook restricted over 40,000 ad accounts. That’s roughly 110 accounts every single day getting the axe.
But some marketers never deal with this problem. They run campaigns at scale, spend $50,000+ per day, and their accounts stay active.
What’s different about them?
They stopped relying on regular Facebook ad accounts years ago.
I’m going to show you exactly how they do it. You’ll learn four methods that actually work in 2025, and I’ll tell you which one makes the most sense for your situation.
Why Facebook Keeps Banning Your Accounts

Facebook’s automated system reviews millions of ads hourly. It’s looking for violations, weird patterns, anything suspicious.
The catch? It’s not very good at its job.
Here’s what trips the alarm:
- You create a fresh account and immediately try spending $500/day
- Your logins come from different cities or countries
- A payment fails or a card gets declined
- You’re selling stuff in touchy categories (weight loss, crypto, dating)
- Too many of your ads get rejected in a week
I know a guy who runs a totally legit shoe store. He got banned three times in two months. His ads followed every rule. Didn’t matter.
The truth is simple: Facebook doesn’t trust new accounts. Period.
That’s why you need multiple accounts ready to go. One goes down? You’ve got backups warming up. Your business keeps running no matter what Facebook throws at you.
Four Ways to Get More Ad Accounts (That Actually Work)
I’ve tested all of these. Some work better than others, depending on your budget and timeline.
Method 1: Use an Agency Account Provider (Fastest Solution)
This is what I recommend for anyone spending serious money.
Companies like UpRoas sell access to agency-level ad accounts that come pre-approved with unlimited spending power. These accounts come from Meta Marketing Partners who’ve worked directly with Facebook for years.
Why this beats everything else:
Agency accounts have trust built into them already. Facebook’s system recognizes them as legit from day one. Your ads get approved faster. You get banned way less often.
With UpRoas specifically, you’re getting accounts that pass moderation in under 5 minutes. They give you 24/7 support, they’ll replace your account instantly if something breaks, and there’s no spending cap from the start.
The real numbers:
Their accounts get approved 87% faster than regular ones. Your CPMs can drop by 30-50% because these accounts have better reputations. You don’t need to warm anything up. You can spend whatever you want immediately.
What you’re actually getting:
They build your whole account setup correctly from the beginning. If something goes wrong, you won’t lose your pixel or your conversion data. They create separate “safehouse” business managers who protect everything important.
You’ll pay a monthly fee plus a cut of your ad spend (usually 4-5%). For most people spending $5K or more monthly, this pays for itself through better performance and zero downtime.
Who this works for: Anyone spending over $5,000 monthly who can’t afford to have campaigns shut down randomly. You can buy from UpRoas and get set up the same day.
Method 2: Farm Accounts From Scratch
This takes longer but costs less upfront.
You’re basically creating fake Facebook pages that look real, then building them up slowly until they’re trustworthy enough to run ads.
Here’s how you do it:
Make new Facebook profiles. Use anti-detect browsers like Multilogin so each profile has a different fingerprint. Give each one realistic info – different names, photos, birthdays, jobs. Don’t use the same details twice.
Let the account sit for a full day after you create it.
Then start using it like a normal person would. Join some groups. Comment on random posts. Like a few pages. Browse websites that have Facebook pixels. This builds up cookies and makes the account look authentic.
Wait about a week. Then add a credit card and run tiny campaigns promoting pages ($5-10 daily max). Do this for 2-3 weeks while gradually increasing spend.
Critical stuff you can’t skip:
Get residential or 4G proxies. Cheap proxies get caught immediately. Make sure your proxy location matches your profile location and your credit card’s country.
Never ever use the same credit card on two accounts. If Facebook bans one account, they’ll flag that card permanently across their whole system.
Who this works for: People with technical skills and patience. Good if you’re on a tight budget and can wait a month to scale up.
Method 3: Buy Aged Accounts
You can buy Facebook ad accounts that are 1-5 years old from various sellers.
These come with existing friends, post history, and some built-in trust.
Why older accounts help:
Facebook’s system sees an account from 2021 as more legitimate than one from last week. It has real activity, real connections, and normal behavior patterns.
You still need to warm them up before advertising. But it’s faster than starting from zero.
How to warm them up:
Set up each account in its own browser with its own proxy. Log in and act natural for 3-5 days. Scroll feeds. React to posts. Send a few messages.
Then run small engagement campaigns. Spend $2-3 daily on page likes. Let Facebook charge your card successfully three times.
After that, create a new business manager and add your first real ad account.
Where to buy them:
Several marketplaces exist. Prices run $50-200, depending on how old the account is and its quality. UpRoas also sells verified aged accounts if you want better quality control.
Who this works for: Marketers who want a faster setup than farming but don’t need to scale immediately. It’s a decent middle option.
Method 4: Rent Agency Accounts Month-to-Month
Some providers let you rent agency accounts without committing long-term.
You get the benefits of agency accounts while maintaining flexibility.
How it works:
You get a pre-warmed agency account for a fixed monthly rate. The provider manages compliance stuff. You just run your campaigns.
Account gets restricted? They swap it out immediately. Your campaigns keep running.
What it costs:
Monthly fees range from $500-1,500, depending on how much you spend. Some add percentage fees (3-8% of spend) on top.
Who this works for: Businesses testing new offers or running seasonal campaigns. Also good for beginners who want agency-level access without a huge upfront investment.
Keeping Your Accounts Alive (This Part Matters More)

Getting accounts is easy. Keeping them active is where most people screw up.
Here’s what actually works:
Don’t put everything in one business manager. Create multiple BMs to spread out your risk.
Make one “safehouse” BM just for your pixel and catalog. Keep this squeaky clean. Never run ads directly from it.
Use separate “media buyer” BMs for your actual campaigns. One gets restricted? Your pixel and data stay safe.
Match everything to one location. Your profile, your proxy, your credit card, your targeting – all in the same country. Mismatched stuff triggers fraud alerts.
Warm up your payment methods. Don’t add a card and immediately blast $5,000. Start small ($20-50 daily). Let Facebook bill you successfully 3-5 times first.
Wait 3 days before running conversion campaigns. Start with engagement or page-like objectives. They’re safer. After 3 days and several successful charges, switch to conversions.
Watch your account health. Check your quality score in Business Manager regularly. Look for warning signs – frequent rejections, payment issues, low scores. Fix problems before they become bans.
Mistakes That’ll Kill Your Accounts Fast
Don’t scale from $100 to $5,000 overnight. Double your budget every 3-4 days max when things are stable.
Don’t use the same IP for multiple accounts. Each needs its own browser profile and proxy.
Don’t ignore ad quality. Low engagement tells Facebook your ads suck. Test properly before scaling.
Don’t rely on one account. Keep backups ready and warmed up.
Don’t skip warm-up periods. Even-aged accounts need time to build trust in your hands.
What It Actually Costs (Real Numbers)
Farming accounts yourself: $50-100 per account plus 2-4 weeks of time. Moderate ban risk. Good if you’re spending under $2,000 monthly.
Buying aged accounts: $50-200 per account plus 1 week warm-up. Moderate ban risk. Good if you’re spending $2,000-5,000 monthly.
Agency accounts: $500-1,500 monthly plus 4-5% of spend. Very low ban risk. Worth it above $5,000 monthly spend.
Example: You spend $20,000 monthly on ads. Agency fees run about $1,500-2,000. But you save more than that through lower CPMs, no downtime, and faster approvals.
What You Should Do Next
Pick the method that fits your situation:
Need accounts today? Contact UpRoas or a similar provider. You’ll be running campaigns in hours.
Prefer building your own? Start farming 3-5 profiles this week. Get proper tools. Follow the process. Plan for 3-4 weeks.
Want to test first? Buy 2-3 aged accounts. Warm them properly. Test for a month. Then decide if you want to scale this method or switch.
Whatever you choose, set up a proper structure from day one. Use safehouse and media buyer BMs. Get separate proxies. Match everything to one location. Don’t skip warm-up.
Start small. Test. Scale gradually.
Account bans don’t have to wreck your business anymore. You’ve got options. Multiple methods that work. The advertisers winning long term are the ones building systems instead of relying on single accounts.
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