The honest answer is yes, when you treat the purchase as the start of the work, not the end. The accounts we sell are not bots, scraped profiles, or recycled bans. They are real, hand-warmed X accounts that have lived on residential IPs for at least 12 months, with organic posting, follows, and likes. When you receive one, X already classifies it as trusted. That trust is the entire point.
Where buyers run into trouble is what they do in the first 24 hours. Logging in from a flagged datacenter IP, changing the username, bio, profile picture, and posting style in the same hour, or running automation immediately, all trigger the same review flags that protect new spam accounts. None of that is the account's fault. It is the buyer signaling to X that the account changed hands, and changed behavior, in ways that look automated. The 0% ban rate we report on aged accounts is calculated for buyers who follow the warm-up guide we ship with every order. Buyers who skip it see different results.
What works is gradual, normal-looking activity. Log in, scroll the feed, like a few posts, follow a few accounts in your niche. Post nothing for the first 24 hours. Change the bio on day two, the profile picture on day three. By the end of the first week, the account looks like an existing user who simply got more active. From there you can run the strategy you bought it for, whether that is content marketing, DM outreach, niche building, or community work.
Buyers who follow that pattern report stable accounts months and years later. Several of our agency customers have managed the same purchased X accounts for clients since 2023 with zero issues. The accounts behave like aged accounts because that is what they are.