Bulkoid looks the part. The site is clean, the platform menu is enormous (Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, Twitch, Spotify, X, Telegram, SoundCloud, Facebook, and more), the free tools are a decent hook, and the marketing promises real followers with fast delivery and no password required. On the surface it reads like a competent multi-platform provider. The problem, and it's the problem that defines the whole experience, is what happens after the followers land: the independent review record is full of buyers reporting that the followers drop off within days, that 50% or more vanish within a week, that refunds don't come and support doesn't answer, and (most damaging) that the company claims thousands of Trustpilot reviews it doesn't actually have. This review presents that picture directly, because the gap between how the site presents itself and what the documented buyer experience shows is wide enough to be the entire story.
Table of Contents
- Flash Verdict
- Overview
- How We Evaluated
- Score Breakdown by Platform
- Platform Coverage & Services
- Pricing
- The Drop-Off Problem and the Trustpilot Claim
- Pros & Cons
- Real User Reviews
- Is It Safe to Use?
- Who Bulkoid Is Best For
- Final Verdict
- Alternatives
- FAQ
Flash Verdict
Score: 4/10
A broad multi-platform provider covering Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, X, Twitch, Spotify, and more, with fast delivery, low entry pricing, free tools, and no password required. The fast delivery is real and the platform breadth is genuine, but the documented buyer experience is meaningfully negative: SmartCustomer rates it 1.2 stars across 15 reviews, multiple buyers report followers dropping 50-100% within a week with no refund and no support response, and several reviewers specifically call out that the company claims thousands of Trustpilot reviews it doesn't actually have. There are isolated positive delivery reports, but the consistent drop-off and support complaints define the actual experience. Hard to recommend over better-documented alternatives.
Bulkoid Overview
Bulkoid is a multi-platform social media growth service with one of the broader menus in the category, covering Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, X, Facebook, Twitch, Spotify, Telegram, SoundCloud, and more, with packages for followers, likes, views, comments, shares, subscribers, and various platform-specific engagement types. The site also offers free tools (username and caption generators, shadowban checkers across multiple platforms) as a lead-generation hook, and those tools are functional and add some side value even if you never buy anything.
On paper, the breadth and the clean presentation make it look like a competent generalist in the mold of the better multi-platform providers. The site promises real followers, fast delivery, 24/7 support, and explicitly no password or account access required, which is the right baseline security posture and clears the floor every legitimate provider should clear.
The problem is the gap between that presentation and the documented experience, and it's a wide one. The site doesn't have an "about" page or any clear explanation of how the followers are sourced or delivered, which is a transparency gap on its own, and the independent review consensus is mixed-to-negative, with the biggest concerns clustering tightly around three things: delivery consistency, follower retention, and customer support responsiveness. We'll get into the specifics, but the short version is that this is a provider whose marketing significantly outruns its documented results.
How We Evaluated Bulkoid
We assessed the platform menu and pricing, compiled the independent review record across multiple third-party platforms and hands-on reports, looked specifically at the retention and support complaints that recur across sources, checked the company's review claims against reality, and weighed the isolated positive reports against the consistent negative pattern.
The most useful framing here is the gap between the company's self-presentation and the documented buyer experience, since that gap is the defining feature. We cross-checked findings against the SmartCustomer review collection (15 reviews at 1.2 stars), the ScamDoc complaint record, the Quora discussion with both positive and negative hands-on reports, and the E-Commerce Entrepreneur analysis. Worth noting upfront: several of the "review" sites that rank it favorably are affiliate operations pushing their own alternative service, so they're noisy in both directions and we weighted the documented buyer complaints above the affiliate framing.
Bulkoid Score Breakdown by Platform
The per-platform scores below reflect a provider that's genuinely fast and cheap but fails on the retention and support that actually matter, with the scores held down across platforms by the consistent drop-off complaints.
| Category | Score |
|---|---|
| Delivery Speed | 8 / 10 |
| Follower Quality | 4 / 10 |
| Pricing | 7.5 / 10 |
| Retention | 3.5 / 10 |
| Support | 3 / 10 |
TikTok
| Category | Score |
|---|---|
| Delivery Speed | 8 / 10 |
| Follower Quality | 4 / 10 |
| Pricing | 7.5 / 10 |
| Retention | 3.5 / 10 |
| Support | 3 / 10 |
Twitter/X
| Category | Score |
|---|---|
| Delivery Speed | 8.5 / 10 |
| Follower Quality | 4.5 / 10 |
| Pricing | 7 / 10 |
| Retention | 4 / 10 |
| Support | 3 / 10 |
The shape is a budget-tier failure pattern: fast delivery (the one thing that works), reasonable sticker pricing, and then quality, retention, and support all scoring low because the documented experience is dominated by drop-off and unanswered support. The 3/10 support score across all platforms is among the lowest on this list, earned by the recurring "no response, no refund" complaints. X scores marginally higher on delivery because the one genuinely positive hands-on report (a Quora tester) was on the X product specifically, but the support failure applies everywhere.
Bulkoid Coverage & Services
Instagram: Followers, likes, comments, and video views. The menu looks complete, but the documented retention complaints concentrate here alongside TikTok, with one SmartCustomer reviewer reporting thousands of Instagram followers that disappeared within days and the company then claiming they weren't a real customer when contacted.
TikTok: Followers, likes, views, comments, and shares. This is where some of the most pointed complaints land, with multiple reviewers reporting that TikTok removed the purchased followers and likes entirely and that the promised refill didn't happen. The shares product is a useful engagement type on paper, but the broader quality problems make the menu depth less meaningful than it looks.
Twitter/X: Followers, views, retweets, likes, and comments. The one genuinely positive independent data point lands here: a Quora tester placed an order and reported followers and retweets arriving within 15-30 minutes, calling the delivery legit. That confirms the service does deliver on X in at least some cases, but it's a delivery-speed observation rather than a retention test, and the broader drop-off pattern still applies.
Other platforms (YouTube, Twitch, Spotify, Telegram, Facebook, SoundCloud): Covered, with YouTube being a particular focus historically. The YouTube product specifically has documented non-delivery complaints, including one buyer reporting $50 paid with nothing delivered and no response over three months.
Bulkoid Pricing
Pricing sits at the lower-to-middle end, with Instagram and TikTok follower packages starting cheaply and YouTube subscriber and X follower plans costing more depending on volume. On sticker price, it's affordable enough to look attractive for a first test.
But the same cost-per-retained-follower logic that sinks every budget provider applies here, and arguably harder, because the documented drop-off is severe. If you buy a cheap package and 50-100% of it disappears within a week (as multiple reviewers report), the effective cost per follower that actually stays balloons well past what the sticker price suggests, and you can end up paying more per retained follower than a mid-tier provider whose followers actually hold. A cheap package that evaporates isn't a cheap package, it's a small loss.
The checkout itself drew a specific complaint worth flagging: one SmartCustomer reviewer described the payment checkout as "shady" and said it took a while to complete because they were nervous about it, and the no-password posture (genuinely a plus) doesn't fully offset the broader trust concerns when refunds reportedly don't materialize. The honest framing on pricing: the sticker price is fine, the effective cost after drop-off is bad, and the refund difficulty means you can't reliably recover the spend when it goes wrong.
The Drop-Off Problem and the Trustpilot Claim
This deserves its own section because it's the heart of the review, and it has two parts: the retention failure that defines the product, and the false-review-claim that defines the trust problem.
The retention failure is documented consistently. The ScamDoc record carries a buyer reporting that 50% of purchased followers dropped within two days and 100% within a week, with no refund. The SmartCustomer reviews repeat the pattern across multiple buyers: followers delivered then removed the next day, subscribers that dropped off with refunds refused, thousands of Instagram followers gone within days. The recurring phrase across these complaints is some version of "you will lose your followers as quickly as you gain them," and the consistency across separate reviewers on separate platforms is what makes it credible rather than dismissable as a few bad experiences.
The Trustpilot claim is the part that moves this from "weak budget provider" to "trust problem." Multiple independent reviewers specifically report that Bulkoid's site claims it has thousands of Trustpilot reviews, and that when they checked, no such Trustpilot presence existed. One reviewer put it bluntly: the company says it has thousands of reviews on Trustpilot, they went to check, and it was a lie. Another flagged the broader pattern, accusing the company of buying reviews on sites that promote these services so it ranks first there, while the genuine independent reviews tell a different story. That's a serious accusation, and the fact that it recurs across multiple separate reviewers (rather than appearing once) is what makes it worth taking seriously. A company misrepresenting its review count is telling you something about how it handles the truth more generally, and it's the single biggest reason to be cautious here beyond the retention numbers themselves.
The honest synthesis: the drop-off is documented and severe, the support and refund failures are consistent, and the false-Trustpilot-claim is a trust red flag that compounds both. The service does deliver (sometimes fast, as the X test showed), but what it delivers tends not to stay, and the company's handling of the aftermath (no refunds, no responses, misrepresented reviews) is where it most clearly fails.
Pros & Cons of Bulkoid
Pros:
- Broad multi-platform menu covering Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, X, Twitch, Spotify, and more from one dashboard
- Fast delivery, with one hands-on X test reporting followers and retweets arriving within 15-30 minutes
- Low entry pricing on the sticker
- Free tools (username and caption generators, shadowban checkers) add some side value
- No password ever required at any point in the order flow
Cons:
- Severe documented drop-off, with multiple buyers reporting 50-100% follower loss within a week
- SmartCustomer rating of 1.2 stars across 15 reviews, with consistent scam, non-delivery, and no-refund complaints
- Multiple reviewers report the company falsely claims thousands of Trustpilot reviews it doesn't have, a serious trust red flag
- Customer support reported as nearly impossible to reach, with refund requests ignored
- TikTok reportedly removes the purchased engagement, and the promised refill doesn't materialize
- No "about" page and no explanation of how followers are sourced or delivered
- Documented YouTube non-delivery complaints, including a $50 order with nothing delivered over three months
- One reviewer described the payment checkout as "shady"
- Effective cost-per-retained-follower is poor once the drop-off is factored in
Real User Reviews of Bulkoid
The independent picture is consistent and mostly negative, and the consistency across separate platforms is what makes it credible rather than anecdotal.
The SmartCustomer collection sits at 1.2 stars across 15 reviews, which is among the lowest ratings of any provider examined. The complaints repeat the same themes across different buyers in different languages: followers delivered then removed the next day, 50% gone in two days and the rest within a week, subscribers dropped with refunds refused, thousands of Instagram followers vanishing while the company claimed the buyer wasn't real, and TikTok stripping the purchased engagement with no refill. The ScamDoc record carries the same drop-50%-then-100% pattern. The E-Commerce Entrepreneur review concluded it's "difficult to call the service legit," citing the lack of reliable testimonials, no explanation of how followers are delivered, slow support, and a real risk of account harm, and recommended against using it.
The counterweights, in fairness: there's one genuinely positive hands-on report on Quora where a tester ordered X followers and retweets and saw them arrive within 15-30 minutes, calling the delivery legit, so the service does deliver in at least some cases. And the on-site testimonials are uniformly glowing, though as with every provider in this category, heavily curated on-site reviews tell you essentially nothing. It's also worth being transparent that several of the harshest "reviews" come from affiliate sites (GetAFollower, Growthoid, others) that are pushing their own competing services, so those are noisy and self-interested in the negative direction the same way the on-site reviews are in the positive direction.
The honest read after weighting all of that: the genuinely independent buyer complaints (SmartCustomer, ScamDoc, the same Quora thread that also has the positive delivery report) are consistent enough on drop-off and support failure to be credible, the false-Trustpilot-claim recurs across multiple separate reviewers and is a real trust problem, and the isolated positive delivery report confirms the service can deliver but doesn't address whether what it delivers stays. The pattern is "delivers fast, doesn't last, doesn't refund, and misrepresents its reviews."
Is Bulkoid Safe to Use?
The basic security floor is fine: no password is required, orders use only your profile URL and email, and there's no account-access exposure, which the company states clearly and which is genuinely a plus.
The platform-level risk is the standard category risk plus the specific concern that comes with low-quality fast-delivery followers. Instagram's terms of service and TikTok's community guidelines both prohibit purchased engagement and run detection systems tuned to flag inauthentic followers, and the documented pattern here (fast delivery, then mass removal within days) is the visible signature of exactly that detection catching low-quality followers. One reviewer specifically noted that TikTok takes away all the likes and followers bought through the service, which is the platform doing its cleanup rather than the provider failing to deliver, but the practical result for you is the same: you paid for engagement that doesn't survive.
The bigger safety concern, separate from the platform risk, is the financial one. With refunds reportedly not materializing and support reportedly unresponsive, the practical risk is paying for something that drops off (or in the YouTube case, sometimes doesn't arrive at all) with no reliable way to recover the money. The false-Trustpilot-claim compounds this, because a company willing to misrepresent its review count is a company you should be cautious about trusting with your payment in the first place.
Practical guidance: if you test this despite the documented issues, spend the absolute minimum, use a payment method that allows chargebacks, don't expect the followers to stay or the refund to come if they don't, and understand that the fast delivery you might see in the first hour says nothing about whether the followers will be there in a week. For anyone with a real budget or a real goal, the documented drop-off and trust concerns make a better-documented provider the safer choice.
Who Bulkoid Is Best For
Honestly, the use cases are narrow, and it's more useful to be direct about that than to manufacture a fit.
The platform breadth is the one genuine point in its favor, so the closest thing to a fit is someone who specifically needs a niche platform (Twitch, Telegram, SoundCloud) that few other providers cover, who's willing to spend a small amount, and who fully expects the followers may not stick. Even then, the better move is usually a more reputable multi-platform provider that covers the same networks, since the breadth here isn't unique enough to justify the documented drop-off and trust concerns.
The second narrow case is someone who wants a fast, throwaway number bump for a single moment and genuinely doesn't care whether it lasts past a day or two, since the delivery speed is real even if the retention isn't. But that's the same narrow case that applies to every weak budget provider, and the cost-per-retained-follower math means even a budget-conscious buyer is usually better served elsewhere.
The wrong fit is essentially everyone with a real goal: anyone who wants followers that last (the drop-off is documented and severe), anyone who needs reliable support or refunds (the complaints are consistent), anyone who values dealing with a company that represents itself honestly (the false-Trustpilot-claim is a real concern), and anyone buying for Instagram or TikTok specifically (where the removal complaints concentrate). For those buyers, the alternatives below are better-documented and more reliable.
Final Verdict
This provider presents well, delivers fast in at least some cases, covers a broad menu of platforms, and clears the basic no-password security floor. Those are real points in its favor, and they're why the score isn't lower than 4. The service does function, and the X delivery test confirms it can deliver quickly.
But the documented experience is dominated by the things that actually matter, and they're consistently bad: severe follower drop-off (50-100% within a week across multiple reports), support that's reportedly nearly impossible to reach, refunds that don't materialize, and a false claim of thousands of Trustpilot reviews that multiple reviewers checked and found doesn't exist. That last one is the part that moves this from "mediocre budget provider" to "provider with a trust problem," because a company that misrepresents its own review count has told you something about how it handles the truth. The 1.2-star SmartCustomer rating and the recurring scam complaints aren't outliers, they're the pattern.
Net: a 4/10 service that earns even that much on delivery speed, platform breadth, and the no-password posture, and loses heavily on the retention failure, the support and refund complaints, and the false-review-claim that defines its trust problem. The fast delivery is real, but what it delivers tends not to stay, and the company's handling of the aftermath is where it most clearly fails. Better-documented alternatives exist at similar prices, and they're the safer choice.
Bottom line: Fast delivery, broad menu, and a clean-looking site, undercut by documented drop-off, ignored refunds, and a Trustpilot claim that multiple reviewers found to be false. The presentation outruns the results.
Alternatives to Bulkoid
SocialWick offers comparable budget pricing and broad platform coverage with a meaningfully longer track record (operating since 2017), a 60-day refill guarantee, and a free trial, making it the better budget multi-platform pick if you want low prices backed by an established operation rather than the documented drop-off here.
Media Mister covers 60-plus platforms with real country targeting, clearer guarantee policies, and a decade-plus track record, the better choice if platform breadth is what you actually need and you want it backed by transparent operations rather than a false-review-claim.
SocialPlug is the alternative if niche-platform coverage (Discord, Telegram) is the draw, with documented 85% Instagram retention and a more verifiable track record, though its own niche-platform quality is inconsistent, so it's a step up rather than a perfect fix.
FAQ
Is Bulkoid legit?
It's a real operating website that processes orders and delivers some services (the X delivery test confirms it can deliver quickly), so it's not purely a non-delivery scam. But "legit" in the sense that matters (delivers followers worth having and handles problems honestly) is where it falls down: SmartCustomer rates it 1.2 stars, multiple buyers report severe drop-off and refused refunds, and several reviewers found the company falsely claims thousands of Trustpilot reviews it doesn't have. So it delivers something, but what it delivers tends not to last, and the trust concerns are real. The "legit" label also doesn't change that buying followers violates Instagram's terms of service regardless of provider.
Why do Bulkoid followers drop off so fast?
Because the followers are low-quality enough that the platforms' detection systems remove them, and the fast bulk delivery makes the pattern obvious. Multiple reviewers report 50% gone within two days and the rest within a week, and one specifically noted TikTok stripping all the purchased engagement. The promised refill that's supposed to compensate reportedly doesn't materialize, and support reportedly doesn't respond, so the drop-off becomes a permanent loss rather than a recoverable one.
Does Bulkoid really have thousands of Trustpilot reviews?
According to multiple independent reviewers, no. Several SmartCustomer reviewers report that the site claims thousands of Trustpilot reviews, and that when they checked, no such Trustpilot presence existed. One reviewer also accused the company of buying favorable reviews on sites that promote these services so it ranks first there, while the genuine independent reviews tell a more negative story. A misrepresented review count is a real trust red flag and one of the bigger reasons to be cautious with this provider.
Is Bulkoid safe to use?
The basic security is fine (no password required, profile URL and email only), but the bigger concerns are platform-level and financial. The fast delivery with no gradual option carries the standard detection risk, and the documented mass-removal pattern shows that risk playing out. The financial risk is that refunds reportedly don't come and support reportedly doesn't respond, so a drop-off (or a non-delivery, as in some YouTube cases) can become an unrecoverable loss. Spend the minimum if you test it at all, use a chargeback-capable payment method, and treat the spend as potentially unrecoverable.
How does Bulkoid compare to better-rated providers?
Not favorably on the metrics that matter. Where providers like Media Mister or SocialWick offer documented guarantees, longer track records, and transparent operations, Bulkoid offers fast delivery undercut by severe documented drop-off, unresponsive support, refused refunds, and a false-Trustpilot-claim. The platform breadth is comparable, but the reliability and trust are not, and the better-documented alternatives deliver followers that actually stay at similar prices.