If you are looking for a TweetDelete alternative, start with the privacy model, not the price table.
The real choice is cloud account access versus local browser-session deletion.
What actually changes between alternatives
The useful comparison points are:
- cloud execution versus local execution
- ongoing account access versus one-time local workflow
- subscription pricing versus one-time purchase
- recent-history cloud limits versus deeper browser-session cleanup
Those choices matter more than surface-level UI differences.
When cloud alternatives are fine
A cloud alternative can still make sense if:
- you want the fastest setup
- your account is relatively small or recent
- convenience matters more than control
- you are willing to revoke access after the cleanup
When a local alternative is the better fit
A local browser-session workflow is usually the better fit if:
- privacy is one of the reasons you are deleting
- you do not want a third-party service connected to your account
- you expect older history to be part of the job
- you want a one-time cleanup instead of an ongoing subscription
Delete My Tweets is the local option in that category: a Windows app that deletes tweets, replies and reposts through your own browser session. No cloud service performs the deletions.
Best next comparisons
If this is your decision path, read:
Bottom line
Pick the model you are comfortable with first. Price and UI matter after that.
If you want the local model, Delete My Tweets is built for it. See how it works.