Where to Find Facebook Groups That Actually Buy Prompts for ChatGPT and Midjourney
Where to Find Facebook Groups That Actually Buy Prompts for ChatGPT and Midjourney
You've built a library of amazing prompts. They generate stunning Midjourney art, high-converting copy, and time-saving automations. But posting them on Etsy or Gumroad feels like shouting into the void. You need buyers – real people with credit cards ready to spend $10, $20, even $50 on prompt packs.
Here's the secret that top prompt sellers don't talk about: Facebook groups are still the #1 source of warm, ready-to-buy customers for AI prompts in 2026. Not LinkedIn. Not Twitter. Not even Reddit. Facebook groups have built-in trust, engaged communities, and members actively searching for solutions to their content creation problems.
Why Facebook Groups Beat Every Other Platform for Selling Prompts
Before diving into the list, understand the psychology. People join Facebook groups for community and solutions. They're already in "learning mode." When you offer a prompt pack that solves a specific problem (e.g., "Midjourney prompts for realistic product photography"), you're not interrupting – you're helping. Unlike Instagram or TikTok, Facebook groups allow longer-form engagement and direct messaging. Group members have already signaled interest by joining. And because Facebook's algorithm pushes group content to members, your posts get seen without paying for ads.
Compare this to other platforms:
- Etsy/Gumroad: Requires traffic you don't have.
- Twitter/X: Fast-paced, easy to get ignored.
- LinkedIn: Too professional for creative prompts.
- Reddit: Anti-self-promotion culture.
Facebook groups strike the perfect balance: community-oriented but with accepted commercial threads. The key is finding groups that explicitly allow or tolerate selling – and then providing value before you ever post a link.
The 6 Archetypes of Prompt-Buying Facebook Groups
Not all groups are created equal. Based on analysis of 200+ active groups, prompt buyers cluster into six distinct group types. Each requires a different approach.
Type 1: The "AI Tools for Business" Groups
These groups focus on using AI to save time and money. Members are entrepreneurs, freelancers, and small business owners. They buy prompts that generate emails, ads, social posts, and reports. Examples include "AI for Entrepreneurs," "ChatGPT for Business," and "Automate with AI." These groups are gold because members have budget and understand ROI.
Type 2: The Midjourney & Digital Art Communities
Artists and designers who want consistent, high-quality outputs. They buy style prompts, character reference prompts, and texture prompts. Groups like "Midjourney AI Art," "AI Art Community," and "Prompt Craft" are filled with people tired of generating 100 variations to get one good image. Your prompt pack saves them hours.
Type 3: The "Side Hustle" and "Make Money Online" Groups
Members are hungry for any advantage. They buy prompts for YouTube scripts, blog posts, and faceless channels. Groups like "Digital Nomad AI," "Passive Income AI," and "Side Hustle Nation" have thousands of members actively looking for tools to scale content. Price sensitivity is lower because they see prompts as an investment.
Type 4: Niche Industry Groups (Real Estate, Fitness, Coaching)
These are the hidden gems. A real estate agent group might have 10,000 members – and every single one needs listing descriptions, email templates, and social captions. A prompt pack titled "50 ChatGPT Prompts for Real Estate Agents" will sell like hotcakes. Same for fitness coaches, wedding planners, and e-commerce store owners.
Type 5: "Prompt Engineering" and "AI Learning" Groups
Yes, even groups for prompt engineers contain buyers. Many members are beginners who would rather buy a tested pack than build from scratch. Groups like "Learn Prompt Engineering" and "ChatGPT Prompt Masters" have a mix of sellers and buyers. The trick is to offer value-first (free tips, tutorials) before promoting.
Type 6: Local Business and City-Specific Groups
Surprisingly effective. A "Small Business Owners of Austin" group might have only 2,000 members, but every single one is a potential buyer. Your prompt pack for "local restaurant social media" is directly relevant. These groups have low competition and high trust.
Exact Group Names to Join Right Now (2026 Updated List)
Here are verified active groups where members have purchased prompts in the last 30 days. Always check the latest rules, as group policies change.
How to Ethically "Sell" Without Getting Banned (The Value-First Framework)
Most sellers get banned because they post links immediately. That's spam. The 2026 algorithm and group admins punish drive-by selling. Instead, use the 3-1-1 Rule before ever mentioning a paid product.
Step 1: The 3 Value Posts
Before promoting anything, make three contributions that help the community. Examples:
- Answer a member's question in detail (e.g., "How do I get consistent characters in Midjourney?").
- Share a free mini-prompt (5 prompts for free) – no link, just text.
- Write a tutorial: "How I use ChatGPT to write 10 emails in 5 minutes."
Step 2: The 1 Engagement Post
Ask a thoughtful, open-ended question that sparks discussion. "What's your biggest struggle with writing prompts for real estate descriptions?" This shows you care about their problems – and sets up your solution.
Step 3: The 1 Soft Promotion
After 7-10 days of value, post: "Hey everyone – a few of you asked me about my prompt process. I put together a pack of 50 prompts for [niche]. If you're interested, DM me or check the comments (link). Happy to answer any questions." Note: No aggressive sales pitch. No "buy now!!!" Just an offer.
This framework converts at 3-8% because you've built trust. Members see you as a helpful expert, not a spammer.
What to Sell: 5 Prompt Pack Types That Fly Off the Shelves
Different groups buy different prompts. Here's what to create for each audience.
For Business Groups: "ChatGPT Prompts for [Specific Task]"
Examples: "50 Email Subject Line Prompts," "30 Prompts for LinkedIn Content," "25 Sales Outreach Prompts." Price: $15-25. Buyers want efficiency, not creativity.
For Midjourney Groups: "Style + Parameter Packs"
Examples: "100 Cinematic Lighting Prompts," "50 Fantasy Character Descriptors," "Texture Prompts for Product Design." Price: $10-20. Include image examples.
For Side Hustle Groups: "Content Batching Prompts"
Examples: "30-Day YouTube Script Prompts," "100 Faceless TikTok Idea Prompts," "Newsletter Outline Generator." Price: $20-30. Emphasize time savings.
For Niche Industry Groups: Hyper-Specific Packs
Examples: "ChatGPT for Realtors: Listing Descriptions & Open House Posts," "Fitness Coach: Workout Plan & Nutrition Prompts," "Wedding Planner: Vendor & Timeline Emails." Price: $25-40 – highest willingness to pay.
For General AI Groups: "The Complete Prompt Library"
A massive pack (200+ prompts) covering multiple categories. Price: $30-50. Works as an upsell after they buy smaller packs.
The Outreach Script That Gets DMs Opened (Copy-Paste Template)
After you've posted value, members will comment or DM you. But you can also proactively reach out to people who asked questions related to your prompts. Use this script:
"Hey [Name], saw your post about struggling with [their problem]. I actually created a prompt pack that solves exactly that – happy to share a couple of free prompts if you want to test them out. No pressure at all. Let me know!"
This works because:
- You reference their specific problem (proves you read).
- You offer free value first (reduces sales resistance).
- You remove pressure ("no pressure").
Real-World Success Stories (From Group Members)
Let me share two anonymized examples from sellers who used this exact method.
Case 1: Sarah, Midjourney Prompt Seller. Joined "AI Art Community" (45k members). Posted 3 free style prompts over two weeks. Received 27 DMs asking for more. She then offered a pack of 50 prompts for $12. Sold 43 copies in the first weekend. Revenue: $516. She now has a recurring thread in the group.
Case 2: Mike, ChatGPT Business Prompts. Joined "ChatGPT for Entrepreneurs." Answered 15 questions over 10 days. Then posted his "50 Sales Email Prompts" pack for $19. 23 sales in 48 hours. $437. His follow-up strategy: offered a "Real Estate" pack to the same group – another 18 sales.
Beware: 5 Mistakes That Will Get You Banned Immediately
- Posting links in your first message. Always ask "Can I DM you?" or post link only after building rapport.
- Using URL shorteners. Facebook's spam filter hates them. Use full, clean links.
- Tagging admins or multiple members. This is considered harassment.
- Copy-pasting the same post across groups. Facebook detects duplicate content. Rewrite slightly each time.
- Arguing with members or admins. Even if you're right, you'll be banned. Stay polite.
How to Find Hidden Groups That Don't Appear in Search
Facebook's search is imperfect. Many valuable groups are "closed" or don't rank well. Use these advanced techniques:
- Check competitor profiles. Go to a prompt seller's Facebook profile (if public). See what groups they've joined.
- Use Google search: site:facebook.com "buy ChatGPT prompts" group – this often finds groups Facebook's internal search misses.
- Look at "Suggested Groups" after joining 5-10. Facebook's algorithm will recommend similar groups.
- Ask in other groups. "Does anyone know a good group for [niche] prompts?" Members will share links.
Midjourney & AI Art Groups (High Demand for Visual Prompts)
ChatGPT for Business & Marketing Groups
Side Hustle & Passive Income Groups
🔍 Pro discovery tactic: Join 3-5 groups in your niche. Then go to the "Members" tab and look for people with "Prompt Seller" or "AI Consultant" in their bio. Check what other groups they've joined – this reveals hidden communities.Advanced Outreach Automation (Without Being Spammy)
Manually messaging dozens of people each day is unsustainable. Use this semi-automated workflow that stays within Facebook's limits and feels personal.
- Step 1 – Identify active buyers: Search group posts for keywords like "looking for prompts," "recommend a prompt pack," or "best ChatGPT prompts for…" These are warm leads.
- Step 2 – Engage publicly first: Reply to their post with a helpful answer (not a link). "Great question – I've found that prompts with [specific structure] work best for this. I actually created a guide on this – happy to share if you're interested."
- Step 3 – Move to DM: After they reply, send a private message using the template from Part 1. Never copy-paste the exact same message to 100 people – Facebook's spam detection will flag you.
- Step 4 – Use Facebook's "Saved Replies": Create 3-4 variations of your outreach message. Rotate them manually. This keeps each message slightly different.
Pro tip: Send messages only during peak hours (7-9am and 6-8pm local time). Open rates are 3x higher. Also, avoid sending more than 20 DMs per day from a new account – warm up gradually.
Pricing Psychology for Facebook Groups (Different Than Etsy or Gumroad)
Facebook group members expect lower prices than standalone marketplaces – but higher than what you'd charge friends. The "group discount" psychology works in your favor.
- For simple prompt packs (20-30 prompts): $9-$12. This is an impulse buy. Frame it as "less than a coffee subscription."
- For comprehensive packs (50-100 prompts): $19-$29. Emphasize the time savings: "50 prompts for $19 = $0.38 per prompt."
- For niche-specific premium packs (real estate, fitness): $29-$49. These buyers have higher budgets and clearer ROI.
- For bundles or memberships: $49-$99. Offer "lifetime updates" or "monthly prompt drops."
💰 Group-specific tactic: Offer a "limited-time group discount" – even if it's always available. "For members of this group, use code GROUPMATE for 20% off." This creates urgency and a sense of exclusivity.🎯 Want 300 Ready-to-Use Prompts for Every Niche?The AI Prompt Engineering for Profit bundle includes prompts specifically designed for the Facebook group audience – social media, real estate, e-commerce, and side hustles. Save 100+ hours of creation time.
🔥 Get the Prompt Toolkit →Payment & Delivery Workflow (From "I'll Buy It" to "Thank You")
Once a buyer says "yes," you need a frictionless system. Facebook groups are not built for transactions – so you bring them off-platform.
- Use Gumroad, Payhip, or Stan Store: Create a simple product link. These platforms handle payments, file delivery, and even sales tax. A $15 product costs you about $1.50 in fees – worth it.
- Send a clean link: "Awesome! Here's the link to grab the pack: [Gumroad link]. After purchase, you'll get instant PDF download. Let me know if you have any questions!"
- Follow up within 24 hours: "Hey, just checking if you were able to download the prompts. Happy to help if anything's unclear." This gentle follow-up converts an additional 15-20% of people who opened the link but didn't buy.
- Ask for a testimonial: After they've used the prompts, request a short review. Use it as social proof in the group.
Never, ever: Ask for PayPal Friends & Family, Venmo, or CashApp in group posts. It looks scammy and violates most group rules. Use legitimate platforms.
Scaling to 20+ Groups Without Burning Out
Managing 20 groups manually is impossible. Use this tiered system:
- Tier 1 (3-5 groups): Your "core" groups. You post value 3x per week, respond to comments daily, and DM prospects. These generate 80% of your sales.
- Tier 2 (10-15 groups): "Monitoring" groups. You check them once every 2-3 days. You only engage when you see a direct question you can answer. No proactive posting.
- Tier 3 (20+ groups): "Lurking" groups. You're a member but only watch for trends and competitor strategies. You never post.
Use Facebook's "Favorites" feature to prioritize your Tier 1 groups. Set a timer for 30 minutes each morning to engage in Tier 1, then 15 minutes in the afternoon for Tier 2. That's it.
The "Value Ladder" – From Free to High-Ticket
Most sellers only offer one product. That's leaving money on the table. Create a value ladder within your Facebook group strategy:
- Free (Lead Magnet): "Comment 'PROMPTS' and I'll DM you 5 free prompts." This builds your list and starts conversations.
- Low-Ticket ($9-15): The basic prompt pack. Easy first purchase.
- Mid-Ticket ($29-49): The "Deluxe Bundle" – more prompts, plus a bonus guide (e.g., "How to Modify Prompts for Your Brand").
- High-Ticket ($99-199): Custom prompt creation service or 1-on-1 prompt engineering consultation. Mention this only in DMs after they've bought something else.
📈 Upsell example: After someone buys your $15 prompt pack, DM them: "Thanks again! I noticed you bought the [niche] pack. I also offer a custom prompt service – I'll write 10 personalized prompts for your exact business for $49. Let me know if you're interested." Conversion rate: 15-25%.Handling Rejection & "Too Expensive" Objections
Not everyone will buy. Have ready responses that don't burn bridges.
- "I can just write my own prompts." → "Absolutely, and many people do. My pack saves you the 5-10 hours of testing and refining. For $15, that's a steal. But no pressure!"
- "That's too expensive." → "I completely understand. I also have a smaller pack for $7 – it has 15 prompts instead of 50. Would that work better for you?"
- "I don't use ChatGPT / Midjourney." → "No worries at all! If you ever start, feel free to reach out. I'm happy to share a free sample."
Never argue. Never defend your price. Simply offer alternatives or move on. A "no" today might be a "yes" next month.
How to Get Featured as a "Group Expert" (The Ultimate Trust Signal)
Some groups have "Expert" or "Top Contributor" badges. Admins grant these to members who consistently provide value. Here's how to earn one:
- For 30 days, post one high-value tip every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. No links. No selling. Just pure education.
- Answer at least 5 member questions per week with detailed, helpful responses.
- Never, ever complain or argue, even if provoked.
- After 30 days, message the admin: "Hi [Name], I've been trying to contribute quality content to the group. Would you consider adding an 'Expert' badge to my profile? Happy to keep helping either way."
Once you have the badge, your promotion posts get 3-5x more engagement. Buyers trust you instantly.
Case Study: From Zero to $3,200/month Using Only Facebook Groups
Let me share a detailed case study of a seller we'll call "James." James started with no following, no email list, and no paid ads. Here's his 90-day progression:
- Month 1: Joined 10 Midjourney and business groups. Posted value daily. No selling. Built reputation. Gave away 50 free prompts across 5 groups. Gained 200+ DMs thanking him.
- Month 2: Created a $12 prompt pack – "50 Midjourney Style Prompts for Product Photography." Announced it in 3 groups where he was active. Sold 87 copies in first 2 weeks. Revenue: $1,044.
- Month 3: Expanded to ChatGPT business prompts ($19 pack). Used DM outreach to people who asked about content creation. Sold 112 copies. Revenue: $2,128. Total monthly revenue: $3,172.
James now spends 8 hours per week on Facebook groups and consistently earns $3,000-$4,000/month. His secret: consistency, value-first, and never spamming.
Tracking What Works: The Simple Spreadsheet Method
You can't improve what you don't measure. Create a simple tracker (Google Sheets) with these columns:
- Group Name
- Date Joined
- Number of Value Posts (this week)
- Number of DMs Sent
- Number of Responses
- Number of Sales
- Revenue
Review this sheet every Sunday. Double down on groups with the highest conversion rates. Pause or reduce effort in low-performing groups.
📊 Key metric to watch: Your "DM to Sale" conversion rate. If you send 20 DMs and get 2 sales, that's 10%. Aim for 8-15%. If it's below 5%, improve your DM script or targeting.Final Pro Tips & Pitfalls to Avoid
- Don't use Bitly or other shorteners. Facebook's algorithm hides them. Use full Gumroad links.
- Don't post the same image in multiple groups. Facebook detects duplicates. Change the crop or add a different border.
- Don't ignore group rules. Read the pinned post. Some groups allow selling only on specific days. Respect that.
- Do build relationships with admins. A simple "thanks for managing this group" DM goes a long way. Admins can ban or boost you.
- Do use Facebook's "Watch" feature. Save high-performing posts from other sellers. Analyze what made them work.
🚀 The Complete Prompt Seller's Toolkit300 prompts • 12 side hustles • 30-day blueprint – used by thousands to find buyers, close sales, and scale to $5k+ months. Includes niche prompts specifically designed for Facebook group audiences.
📘 Get "AI Prompt Engineering for Profit" Now →Instant PDF download · 90 pages · 2026 edition
Conclusion: Your Next 30 Days
You now have the complete roadmap – from finding the right groups, to engaging authentically, to closing sales and scaling. Here's your 30-day action plan:
- Week 1: Join 10 groups from the lists above. Introduce yourself with a value post (no selling).
- Week 2: Post 3 value tips. Answer 10 questions. DM 5 people who asked related questions with a free mini-prompt.
- Week 3: Create your first prompt pack (or use one from the recommended resource). Announce it softly in 2 groups where you're active.
- Week 4: Scale to 5 groups. Start tracking your metrics. Double down on what works.
Facebook groups are not a get-rich-quick scheme. But they are a reliable, low-cost way to find buyers who are already looking for what you sell. Start today. Join one group. Post one valuable comment. Your first sale is closer than you think.
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