What is the best email server for a Facebook account farm?

Elmago13

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I've tried several. But Facebook picks up most of them right away. And Outlook is quite difficult to configure with multiple IMAP accounts.
 
My advice is that you should use your phone number or Gmail address.
 
There is no best one,, there's no "perfect" email server that Facebook won't eventually pick up—they flag based on patterns, not just the domain. Free providers (Gmail/Outlook) get flagged fast if you spin up lots of accounts without solid device/IP history. I usually use a reliable and long-established Gmail account for all my work.
 
Outlook/Gmail are fine for a few accounts, but once you scale up, using your own domains and clean rotation usually results in fewer flags than using default free email services. Authenticity and a natural approach are the only way to succeed.
 
Warm up every mailbox slowly, keep sending patterns human-like, and focus on real conversations rather than volume to maintain long-term deliverability.
 
I've tried several. But Facebook picks up most of them right away. And Outlook is quite difficult to configure with multiple IMAP accounts.
Would go a Gmail account
Better and quicker access
 
Warm up every mailbox slowly, keep sending patterns human-like, and focus on real conversations rather than volume to maintain long-term deliverability.
 
I've tried several. But Facebook picks up most of them right away. And Outlook is quite difficult to configure with multiple IMAP accounts.
If Facebook is picking up most of your accounts quickly, try to ensure that your account recovery options, notifications, and privacy settings are optimized to prevent unauthorized or mistaken account linkages.
 
Phone number, Gmail and Outlook will work perfectly for you.
 
I've tried several. But Facebook picks up most of them right away. And Outlook is quite difficult to configure with multiple IMAP accounts.
FB is insanely hard to crack lately. They have zero tolerance for proxy inconsistencies, and if your device ID looks even slightly suspicious, they'll nuke the account before you can even set a profile picture. Same with Outlook—managing multiple IMAP accounts is a headache that usually ends in a mass ban. I'm hoping the mobile setup videos here actually show a workaround for FB's phone verification, because that’s the biggest hurdle I’m facing right now. Standard methods are definitely dead for these two.
 
You also need to pay attention to your IP address and device when creating an account. Are you using a browser that avoids detection?
 
It acknowledges the issue and moves the conversation forward without blame.
 
I’ve been through this too. FB now spots any server faster than you can blink. If Outlook with a bunch of IMAP accounts is a pain, try lightweight services like ProtonMail or Zoho Mail — sometimes FB doesn’t catch them as quickly. Another trick is to give each account its own domain plus proper SPF/DKIM/DMARC records so it doesn’t look like a “farm.” Honestly, there’s no perfect solution; it’s more about having the right setup and configuration than a specific server.
 
If Facebook is picking up most of your accounts quickly, try to ensure that your account recovery options, notifications, and privacy settings are optimized to prevent unauthorized or mistaken account linkages.
Yeah, I agree. Tweaking account recovery, privacy settings, and notifications really helps so Facebook mixes up accounts less or links them by mistake. It’s not a 100% guarantee, but it definitely reduces headaches, especially if you’re running multiple accounts.
 
This is a common problem. Facebook is very good at detecting behavioral patterns, so many settings get flagged quickly regardless of the provider.
 
I've tried several. But Facebook picks up most of them right away. And Outlook is quite difficult to configure with multiple IMAP accounts.
You can easily buy Outlook accounts in bulk at a low price.
 
The key lies in the account creation environment (clean IP, incognito browser) and the email nurturing method. Don't rush to send mass emails; start slowly, creating genuine conversations to trick the system's filters.
 
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