You launch a campaign and the first hours look promising: clicks are coming in, leads drop, CPM is reasonable. A day later — everything crashes. Ban, zero delivery, or the dreaded “ad account restricted”. The reason is often simple and underestimated — duplicate accounts. In traffic arbitrage, this is one of the quietest profit killers.
What Duplicate Accounts Are and Why They’re Dangerous
In traffic arbitrage, duplicate accounts are not just multiple profiles. These are any accounts the platform (most often Facebook Ads) considers connected: by device, IP, payment method, behavior, cookies, or ad-launch patterns.
The problem is that the platform doesn’t have to explain where exactly you got caught. It simply decides: “We’ve seen this advertiser before.” And then the system does the rest.
When Duplicate Accounts Really Kill a Campaign
Not every duplicate equals an instant ban. But there are situations where duplicates guarantee campaign failure:
1. Scaling too aggressively
You launch the same campaign on 3–5 accounts in a row. Similar creatives, the same landing page, the same offer. The algorithm detects a pattern — and cuts everything. Especially common in iGaming and nutra.
2. Shared or “almost shared” payments
Even if the cards are different, but:
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the same BIN
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the same bank
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similar limits
— for Facebook Ads, this is often a red flag. Real case: a campaign survived four days until a “backup” card was added. Six hours later — all accounts gone.
3. Anti-detect without discipline
An anti-detect browser is not a silver bullet. If:
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login timings are identical
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user behavior follows the same logic
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the same setup mistakes repeat
— duplicate accounts form on a behavioral level.
Why Sometimes Duplicates Don’t Hurt
There’s another side. In some offers (especially eCom or white-hat nutra), duplicates may live longer if:
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landing pages differ
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creative approaches vary
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warm-up scenarios are different
But this is the exception, not the rule. In gray verticals, duplicate accounts almost always work against you.
Pros and Cons of Duplicates in Traffic Arbitrage
Pros:
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fast launch
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easier scaling
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less time spent on farming
Cons:
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chain bans
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campaign death at the algorithm level
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loss of trust in offers and accounts
In short: the pros are tactical, the cons are strategic.
Practice: How Not to Kill a Campaign with Duplicates
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Separate entities
One account = one logic. Creatives, texts, even setup order should differ. -
Don’t clone — adapt
Copying a campaign is the worst move. Rebuild the campaign from scratch for the same offer. -
Watch the details
Launch time, first actions, test budgets — this is where duplicate accounts usually form. -
Think like the algorithm
The platform doesn’t see you — it sees millions of patterns. The less you resemble “yesterday’s version of yourself”, the longer your campaign survives.
Conclusion
Duplicate accounts are not evil by default. But in unskilled hands, they kill a campaign faster than bad creatives or a weak offer. In traffic arbitrage, winners are not those who create more copies, but those who manage differences.
If your campaign dies “for no reason”, start with a simple question: have you become too similar to yourself?















