How to Warm Up a New Telegram Account to Avoid Bans
Whether you registered an account yourself or bought a fresh one, how you use it in the first days largely decides whether it survives. A warm-up routine builds trust signals gradually instead of tripping automated flags. Here's a sensible baseline.
Day 1: set up like a real user
Add a profile photo, a bio and a username. Enable two-factor authentication immediately — it protects the account and looks like normal behaviour. Don't join dozens of groups or send messages on the first day.
Days 2–4: light, human activity
Join a few public channels that match a believable interest. Read, react, and occasionally reply. Keep join counts low and spread across the day rather than in bursts.
Days 5–7: ramp gradually
Increase activity slowly. Send a handful of messages to real contacts or groups where participation is welcome. Avoid identical repeated messages — that's the fastest way to get flagged.
What to avoid
- Mass-joining groups in the first 48 hours
- Sending the same message to many chats
- Running many accounts from one IP without separation
- Skipping 2FA
Start with the right account
Aged or PVA accounts tolerate faster warm-up because they already have history. If you need day-one stability, aged accounts or PVA accounts are the safer starting point.