Home / Karmflow vs MoreThanPanel

Two transparent panels, different depth

Karmflow vs MoreThanPanel

Published by Karmflow · July 1, 2026

Both of us publish real pricing and how-it-works information instead of hiding behind a sales call. Where we actually differ is how deep that transparency goes on any one platform.

At a glance

Karmflow's column reflects our own published service. MoreThanPanel's column shows only what's independently verifiable — anything we haven't confirmed is marked as such rather than guessed at.

Attribute Karmflow MoreThanPanel
Platform scope Reddit only Multi-platform (broad catalog)
Publishes public pricing Yes — full per-service rate, min/max, delivery window Yes — runs its own public pricing + how-it-works pages
Published safety/policy content Yes — dedicated pages on Reddit policy risk, detection mechanics, and safe-ordering tactics Not publicly stated at this level of detail
Payment method Crypto only (NOWPayments), no KYC Not publicly stated
Refund policy Automatic proportional refund on cancelled/partial orders Not publicly stated
Minimum order 3 units (votes), 1 (comments) Not publicly stated

Giving credit where it's due

MoreThanPanel runs a full public site with its own pricing pages and a how-it-works section, which is a genuinely good sign in an industry where plenty of services push visitors toward a vague "contact us" step before revealing a single real number. That's worth saying plainly rather than pretending Karmflow is the only service that does this.

So this comparison isn't about transparency versus opacity, since both panels clear that bar. It's about what the transparency actually covers, and how deep it goes once you're looking at one specific platform instead of a broad catalog.

Broad pricing pages versus platform-specific depth

A multi-platform panel's public pricing and how-it-works pages, by nature, need to cover many services across many platforms, which means each individual line item gets a reasonable but necessarily limited amount of explanation. That's not a criticism. It's a structural consequence of covering more ground.

Karmflow's public content goes narrower and deeper, since Reddit is the only thing being explained. Every service, post upvotes, comment upvotes, post downvotes, comment downvotes, and custom comments, has a dedicated page covering not just price and delivery time but the actual mechanics: order minimums and maximums, why downvotes only work on content under 24 hours old, and how the custom comments service handles multi-line submissions and replies to specific existing comments.

The part most panels, transparent or not, tend to skip

Publishing a price list is one kind of transparency. Publishing honest content about the actual policy risk of buying engagement is a different, rarer kind. Karmflow has a dedicated page on whether buying Reddit upvotes is actually against Reddit's rules, distinguishing that from whether it's illegal, since the two get conflated often. There's a separate page on how Reddit's vote-manipulation detection generally works, described in qualitative terms rather than invented technical specifics. And a third page walks through the practical pacing and sizing decisions that reduce the more obvious signals, without claiming any of it makes an order risk-free.

We can't say whether MoreThanPanel publishes anything comparable for its own services, since we haven't reviewed its full site in that kind of detail. What we can say is that this level of honest, specific risk content is the kind of thing that tends to get built when one platform is the entire product, rather than one line among many in a broader catalog.

What a Reddit-only price list can afford to explain

Karmflow's public pricing doesn't stop at a rate per 1,000. Each of the five services lists its own minimum and maximum order size, its average delivery window, and a short description of exactly what the service does, custom comments' one-line-per-entry format, downvotes' 24-hour content-age limit, and so on. That level of per-line detail is easier to sustain when there are five services total rather than dozens spread across many platforms.

Payment is handled the same way: crypto-only through NOWPayments, no card option, no identity verification, with a wallet balance that draws down per order rather than requiring a new payment each time. That's a specific, verifiable fact about how Karmflow works, not a comparison claim about how MoreThanPanel structures its own payment flow, which we haven't reviewed closely enough to describe accurately.

Deciding what actually matters for your situation

If you need a transparent panel covering many platforms with real, published pricing and no bait-and-switch sales process, MoreThanPanel's public site structure suggests it's a reasonable option in that category. If Reddit is specifically what you're focused on, and you want the deepest available public explanation of pricing, mechanics, and honest risk for that one platform, that's the gap Karmflow is built to fill.

How Karmflow stacks up against the broader field of SMM panels generally, beyond this one comparison, is a wider question that deserves its own treatment rather than an answer squeezed into a single competitor write-up.

On pricing specifically

We don't have current, independently verified numbers from MoreThanPanel to set beside our own, and pricing on any panel shifts over time. Our own rates are laid out in full, with no hidden fees, in our pricing breakdown: $20.00 per 1,000 for Reddit upvotes or downvotes, $200.00 per 1,000 for custom comments.

Transparency is a floor, not a finish line

A published price list tells you what something costs. It doesn't tell you whether the service actually understands the platform it's selling engagement for, or whether the risk involved has been explained honestly rather than glossed over. Both Karmflow and, as far as we can tell, MoreThanPanel clear the first bar. Clearing the second bar is a separate, higher standard, and it's the one we've tried to hold ourselves to specifically for Reddit.

That's a reasonable filter to apply to any panel you're evaluating, not just the two named here. Published pricing rules out the services hiding behind a sales call. Genuine platform-specific depth, honest risk disclosure, mechanics explained rather than glossed over, is the next thing worth checking once pricing transparency is confirmed.

Frequently asked questions

From what's publicly visible, yes, it runs a full site with its own pricing and how-it-works pages, which is a real, positive sign of a service that isn't hiding basic information behind a sales call. That much is genuinely comparable to how Karmflow operates.

Scope and depth of Reddit-specific content, not transparency about pricing in general. MoreThanPanel's public pages cover its catalog broadly. Karmflow's public pages go deep specifically on Reddit: the actual policy risk of buying engagement, how Reddit's detection generally works, and practical tactics for reducing obvious signals, none of which makes sense to build unless Reddit is the entire product.

It's less common than you'd expect. Plenty of panels push visitors toward a sales conversation or a vague "contact us" step before revealing real numbers. Both Karmflow and, as far as we can tell, MoreThanPanel skip that step, which is worth acknowledging as a shared strength rather than pretending only one of us does it.

Dedicated pages on whether buying Reddit upvotes is actually against Reddit's rules, on how Reddit's vote-manipulation detection generally works, and on the practical tactics that reduce the more obvious signals. Content like that only makes sense to build out in depth when one platform is the entire focus.

We don't have current, verified MoreThanPanel pricing to compare against ours directly, and any panel's rates can change. Our own numbers are public: $20.00 per 1,000 for upvotes or downvotes, $200.00 per 1,000 for custom comments.

It's a good filter for ruling out services that hide basic information, but it doesn't tell you everything. Once you've confirmed a service is upfront about pricing, the next question is whether its depth on the specific platform you care about matches what you actually need.

Yes, for every service. Upvotes and downvotes range from 3 to 150 units per order, custom comments from 1 to 300, all listed alongside the rate and average delivery time.

It's split across three dedicated pages: one on whether buying Reddit upvotes is actually against Reddit's rules, one on how Reddit's detection generally works, and one on the practical tactics that reduce the more obvious signals. Each covers a different angle rather than repeating the same ground three times.

No. The published rate per service already reflects our standard delivery window, whether that's 1 to 30 minutes for upvotes and downvotes or 30 to 120 minutes for custom comments. There's no separate rush-delivery upsell.

See the depth for yourself

Full Reddit-specific pricing and mechanics, published openly, no sales call required.

See Karmflow's Full Pricing →