
How to delete your Twitter history
- by The Verge
- Aug 19, 2023
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Aug 29, 2023, 12:23 PM UTC
Illustration by Samar Haddad / The Verge A pop-up will ask if you’re sure. If you are, click on Delete.
Deleting a single tweet is not a problem. It’s deleting them in bulk that can be problematic.
Step three: pick a service
There are many services out there designed to help you manage your Twitter history and wipe it clean. Some are free, and some charge a subscription fee. None can immediately delete more than your most recent 3,200 tweets. (This is a function of Twitter’s API.) However, most of the apps have found a way of getting around it by helping you download your archive (see step one above) and then using the archive to, in essence, delete a specified range of tweets that were created before those 3,200.
And even if you’ve used one of these to delete all your past tweets, it’s a good idea to go back and check. There have been reports, including from Verge staffers, that “deleted” posts have mysteriously reappeared.
Current apps include:
TweetDelete, one of the best known, is a web tool that lets you both delete your Twitter history and set a timer for the deletion of future tweets. The free version only deletes those most recent 3,200 tweets. The company does offer three paid plans: a Starter plan for $5.99 a month or $35 a year that will delete up to 500 tweets a month; a Pro plan that, for $6.49 a month or $40 a year, will delete up to 3,200 tweets a month; or the Premium plan for $6.99 a month or $44 a year that attempts to get around the 3,200-tweet limitation by uploading your Twitter data file and then letting you delete a range of specific tweets. According to TweetDelete’s privacy policy, the data files are automatically removed after three days; there is also a button on the page that, according to TweetDelete, will delete your account and all associated stored data.
TweetEraser is owned by the same company — TD Social LLC — that owns TweetDelete. So, not surprisingly, it is similar and offers similar features. In fact, its list of premium features is almost identical to that of TweetDelete, and its prices are exactly the same except that, instead of a Starter plan, Pro plan, and Premium plan, TweetEraser offers a Beginner plan, Advanced plan, and Expert plan. The only differences are that TweetEraser does not offer a free version, and it claims “extra fast” deletion in the Advanced plan and “super fast” deletion in the Expert plan. We’ve contacted TweetEraser for information about how you can delete your data from the service if you wish.
TweetDeleter will also delete your older tweets using the same strategy as the previous two apps: by using your Twitter archive to find and delete those posts. If you only want to delete certain tweets, you can find them using keywords or whether they’re attached to media. TweetDeleter offers a Standard plan that lets you delete up to 100 tweets per month for $7.99 a month or $47.88 a year; the Advanced plan deletes up to 3,000 posts and 3,000 likes for $9.99 a month or $59.88 a year, and the Unlimited plan lets you delete an unlimited number of tweets and likes (including all at once) for $11.99 a month or $71.88 a year. According to the company, uploaded archive files are permanently deleted from their servers, uploaded tweets are retained until manually deleted, and the data of users who leave the service is deleted after two months.
Redact is a downloadable app for macOS, Windows, and Linux that deletes posts from an impressively wide variety of services. The free version deletes unlimited posts on Reddit and Twitter and 30 days’ worth of posts from Facebook and Discord. For $84 annually, you can delete an unlimited number of posts from all of those services; remove posts from, according to Redact, over 40 services in total; schedule bulk deletions; and enjoy beta access to new features, among other features. Its privacy policy states that all user data will be deleted upon request.
Update August 29th, 2023, 8:23AM ET: This article was originally published on July 26th, 2018. It has been updated to reflect recent changes to Twitter / X and tweet-deleting services and to add information about the privacy policies of these services.
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