Our Grade – D
This service fails nearly all of our trustworthiness checks.
At a Glance
Pathsocial.co is a new Instagram growth service that fails all of our trustworthiness checks. They primarily get new customers from Google ads and they make outrageous claims on their site about how the service works and what results a typical customer can expect.
Business Analysis
Item | Result |
Growth Type | SaaS |
Quality of Service | Low |
Business Registry / Location | Los Angeles |
Traceable Team | No |
Functioning Phone | No |
Longevity | Roughly 1 Year |
Doesn’t Misuse IG Branding | True |
Active Blog | No |
External Sites | None |
Dashboard / Account Management | No |
Offsite Testimonies | Trustpilot |
Forthcoming About Password Handling | No |
Pricing
Path Social offers two plans which are priced somewhat competitively amongst bot services.
Service Details
Path Social tries to win you over with an impressive website. All of their claims are generic and they don’t tell you anything specific about how the service works. Each plan offering involves running your account on their botting software. You will be eligible for action blocks and the results will probably suck. Also, there’s a high chance that your password won’t be stored securely.
Integrity & Reputation
Path Social claims to have “24,000+” individuals and brands as customers. This is plausible for services with huge numbers of clients and deep histories, but it is a boldfaced lie coming from a service that is relatively new.
The website has only been around since 2020. Before then, it was the website for “Trail Track Club” which I’d imagine had nothing to do with social media growth. You can probably guess where I’m going with this, the website launched claiming to have the trust of 24,000+ people. That’s not cool.
They also guarantee large amounts of followers and run Google ads. Not to say that running ads is awful, but if you run ads and make outrageous claims on your website, that’s a bad combination.
Path Social has terrible Trustpilot reviews. They have not responded to any of the negative reviews, all of which provide specific testimony to bad customer experiences.
These are some of the worst reviews we’ve seen. Also, they claim to have “Los Angeles Support” which hilariously sounds like the entire city of Los Angeles will support angry customers. In reality, we can’t identify anybody involved with this service, it’s likely a single owner ordeal. All these things combined — this is a very bad service.
Conclusion
This service impressed us by how unconvincing it is. It is becoming more clear that any service running Google ads should be trusted less, since these services most likely are preying on customers who may not read reviews before they sign up.