About A Fazenda Roça votes
A Fazenda runs one of Brazil's most intense public-vote mechanics. Every week, Record TV nominates a group of peões to the Roça — the elimination zone — and Brazilian viewers flood R7.com to save their favourites. Unlike shows that cap votes per user, A Fazenda accepts unlimited votes on the R7 portal, which means pure volume is the deciding factor. The contestant with the fewest save votes is eliminated live on air. This page covers how that mechanic works, why real Brazilian IP volume matters, and how we deliver votes that actually move a Roça result from $6.99.
About the A Fazenda Roça votes contest
A Fazenda launched on Record TV in 2009 and has run annually ever since, now approaching its eighteenth edition. The format is straightforward — a group of Brazilian celebrities live on a farm, compete in weekly tasks, and face a public elimination vote each week. The Roça is the heart of the show: typically on Tuesday nights, housemates cast internal votes that nominate two or three peões for elimination, the week's Fazendeiro (farm boss, won through a challenge) adds one more, and the group faces a public save-vote on R7.com. Voting opens immediately after the Roça is formed on air and runs until the live elimination episode — usually Thursday or Friday. Record TV draws 25 million or more viewers per season across Brazil, and decisive Roças see tens of millions of votes cast on R7. Season 17, which aired in late 2025, continued the pattern of audience records in high-drama elimination weeks — the final weeks routinely eclipse 100 million cumulative votes across all nominated peões. The show's ownership structure matters: A Fazenda is a Record TV production, entirely separate from TV Globo's Big Brother Brasil ecosystem, and targets a distinctly different viewer demographic within Brazil, skewing toward younger audiences from the Nordeste and Southeast. The show also runs special formats — double and quadruple Roças during the mid-season push, a Super Paiol vote that lets the public choose who enters the house, and a final-week audience vote that crowns the winner and awards the R$1.5 million prize.
Why A Fazenda Roça votes matter for your contest
Because A Fazenda accepts unlimited votes from a single user, the organic campaigns run by dedicated fan bases are not subject to any per-person cap. What determines a Roça outcome is the total mobilised support for each nominated peão. A contestant with a large, organised fandom consistently out-votes someone with casual viewers. The real-time percentages are displayed inside the Fazenda house itself — the peões can see the live vote split during the Roça, which adds psychological pressure and shapes their speeches for the Brazilian audience. That live feedback loop means a growing percentage has visible in-show momentum, not just a number on a website. An organic-looking vote pattern for A Fazenda is Brazil-national, delivered in waves that correspond to peak viewing hours — prime time on weeknights, with spikes after Record TV broadcasts and social media moments.
How we deliver A Fazenda Roça votes
When you place an order, you provide the current Roça vote URL on R7.com and the name of the peão you want to save. We confirm the vote is open and the format (standard, double, or quadruple Roça). Votes are then dispatched from unique Brazilian residential and mobile IP addresses across Claro, Vivo, TIM, Oi, and regional carriers, distributed across São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Belo Horizonte, Salvador, Fortaleza, Curitiba, and the rest of the country in proportions that mirror the show's viewer geography. Because R7 allows unlimited votes, we do not face a daily-cap constraint — instead, pacing focuses on delivery rate: votes arrive in organic-looking waves rather than a flat machine pulse, preventing rate-limiting on the R7 infrastructure. Progress is visible on your dashboard with hourly updates, and any votes that fail a quality check mid-order are automatically replaced at no additional charge.
How we avoid platform detection
R7.com is a high-traffic consumer portal, not a specialised anti-fraud voting system. Its primary defences are IP-based rate limiting at the session level and browser fingerprint checks to prevent single-session loops. What gets votes discarded is either a single IP sending thousands of requests in sequence, or a fingerprint pattern that looks robotic. We address both directly. Every vote originates from a distinct residential or mobile IP with clean traffic history and a real browser agent. Delivery rate is managed to stay within the range of credible fan-campaign behaviour — comparable to what a coordinated Twitter or WhatsApp fandom would generate, not a datacenter burst. The R7 infrastructure is built to handle enormous volume — the platform has processed tens of millions of votes in a single Roça window — so it does not block high volumes per se. What it detects is unnatural patterns: votes from a single IP block, robotic click intervals under one second, or a browser fingerprint with no cookie history. Our delivery mimics the noise profile of a genuine Brazilian fan campaign: varied inter-vote intervals, diverse residential IP ranges across multiple Brazilian states, and normal browser environments. For double and quadruple Roças, we split the campaign across the extended voting window so momentum builds steadily across all nominated peões you want to influence.
What is the best voting strategy for A Fazenda Roça votes?
The most effective A Fazenda campaigns combine genuine fan mobilisation with a controlled paid campaign. Share the Roça vote link through Brazilian fan communities, WhatsApp groups, and Twitter fan accounts to build an organic base, then use paid votes to close the gap or extend a lead on the hours between fan surges. Aim for a comfortable save percentage rather than a landslide — a peão saving with 60-70% looks like a popular contestant, while one saving with 98% against seasoned rivals can look implausible to the production team. Start the campaign as soon as the Roça is formed on Tuesday night; waiting until the final hours reduces delivery time and efficiency. For the weekly Fazendeiro challenge or Super Paiol entry votes, the same logic applies — early sustained volume outperforms a last-hour rush.
Legal scope and terms
A Fazenda is a consumer entertainment contest run by Record TV, a private broadcaster. It is not a political election, a government ballot, or a regulated voting process. Many Brazilian fan communities organise mass-voting campaigns openly as part of the show's culture. We do not interpret Record TV's terms of service or the R7 contest rules for you — review those yourself before ordering, and treat compliance as your responsibility. We do not serve political votes, public referendums, or any legally regulated voting process anywhere.
Getting started in two minutes
Getting started takes under two minutes. Paste the current Roça vote URL from R7.com into the order form or drop it in live chat, select the peão you want to save, choose a vote count, and note your Roça deadline. After payment, your order enters the delivery queue and most campaigns start within 60 minutes. If the vote URL changes between Roças — which happens every week — simply message us with the new link and we update your active order at no extra cost.