Seeding is the most direct way to bring a live audience to a Telegram channel: you pay the author of another channel for a promo post, and their subscribers come to you. Sounds simple, but seeding is exactly where budgets get wasted most often — people buy ads in fake-followed channels, don't calculate the cost per subscriber, and don't track results. Let's break down how to buy Telegram seeding in 2026 deliberately: where to find channels, how to vet them and how not to overpay.

What seeding is and how it differs from Telegram Ads

A seed is a promo post in someone else's channel that you pay the owner for directly or through an exchange. Unlike the official Telegram Ads platform, where a short ad is shown by the algorithm at the bottom of channels, a seed is a full post from the author with your text, image and link.

  • Trust. A recommendation from a familiar author works stronger than a faceless ad — it's native advertising.
  • Format. A seed can include detailed text, a video note, a poll — not just a couple of lines like Telegram Ads.
  • Entry barrier. Seeding is available on a small budget and without platform moderation, while Telegram Ads has historically required a high minimum deposit.

For a young channel, seeding usually delivers a more predictable and cheaper inflow of subscribers at the start.

Where to find channels for advertising

There are three working purchase channels, and experienced advertisers combine them:

  • Exchanges and catalogs. Telega.in, exchanges and analytics services like TGStat show channels by topic with metrics and prices. Convenient for starting and comparing.
  • Directly. You message the author privately — it's cheaper because there's no exchange fee, but the risk of running into a dishonest owner is higher.
  • By referrals. Ask in niche advertiser chats where there was already good return. Verified placements save budget.

Build a list of 10–15 channels in one topic so you have something to choose from and negotiate over.

How to vet a channel before buying

This is the key step that separates a successful seed from wasted money. A fake-followed channel will show pretty subscriber numbers but give zero clicks. What to look at:

  • Post reach (views). Compare average views to subscriber count. A healthy figure is 20–50% reach of the audience; if 100,000 subscribers get only 1,000 views, the channel is dead or fake-followed.
  • ER and reactions. Live reactions and comments under posts are a sign of real engagement. Their absence alongside big numbers is suspicious.
  • Growth chart. TGStat shows subscriber history. Sharp vertical jumps of thousands in a day are traces of fake-following, not organics.
  • Content and ad quality. If a channel is plastered with 10 ads a day, your post will sink and the audience is blind to it.

Don't hesitate to ask the author for stats screenshots of recent posts — honest owners show them without a problem.

How much it costs: CPM, CPS and budget calculation

Seed price is calculated with two metrics. CPM is the cost per thousand impressions: divide the post price by expected reach and multiply by 1,000. CPS (cost per subscriber) is the actual price of one acquired subscriber: divide the post budget by the number who came.

CPS is the main efficiency metric. To find it, you need to measure how many people subscribed specifically from this seed. A reasonable cost per subscriber depends on the niche: somewhere it's tens of cents, somewhere a few dollars. Plan in advance that your first 1–2 purchases will be tests — you're buying not subscribers but data on which channels work.

Don't put your whole budget into one placement. Split the sum across several small test seeds, find the channels with the best CPS, and pour the main budget there.

How to write the ad post and tracking

Even on a good channel, a weak creative gives a weak result. A working ad post follows the scheme: a hooking first screen → value for the reader → a clear call with a link.

  • Nativeness. A post written in the donor channel's style reads organically and gathers more clicks than dry "in-your-face advertising".
  • One link, one offer. Don't scatter attention — lead to the channel with one clear promise.
  • Tracking labels. Use different Telegram invite links for each seed — this way you'll see exactly how many subscribers a specific channel delivered.

Agree with the author on the time and duration of placement: usually the post stays at the top of the feed for an hour, then a day in the channel — that's enough to gather the main reach.

How to measure results and scale

After a seed, tally the numbers: how many subscribers came via the label, what CPS came out, how many of them stayed after a week. Channels with low CPS and good retention are yours — scale your purchases there.

An important nuance: new subscribers judge your channel by first impression. If they arrive at a space with empty views and no reactions, some unsubscribe right away — this reduces the return on every seed. So before buying ads, it's worth warming up the channel: top up basic post views and reactions so the arriving audience sees live activity, not silence.

Here the combination works like this: Heroverin helps lift the channel's starter metrics and strengthen social proof — for example, through a free trial you can test views with no investment. And seeding brings a live audience that converts to subscriptions better on a warmed-up channel. Boosting starter metrics and buying live traffic complement each other, not replace.