Tool Review · 2026

TweetDelete Review 2026

Free tier limits, safety risks, pricing, and how it compares to local-only alternatives.

Quick Verdict

Safety
OAuth token stored on cloud servers
Free Tier
Capped — older tweets locked out
Pricing
Subscription — recurring cost

Is TweetDelete Safe?

TweetDelete functions as a cloud service — you grant it OAuth access to your Twitter account, and it performs deletions on remote servers. This means:

Your OAuth token lives on their servers. An OAuth token grants permission to act on your Twitter account. TweetDelete holds this token for as long as you use the service.
Deletion activity is processed remotely. Your tweet data passes through TweetDelete's infrastructure, not just your own machine.
Third-party exposure exists until you revoke access. You can revoke the OAuth token via Twitter Settings → Apps, but the access existed while the token was held.

TweetDelete has operated for years without a known breach. The concern is structural — cloud tools are inherently a different risk profile than local tools, regardless of reputation.

Free Tier Limits Explained

TweetDelete's free plan stops short for most users. The root cause is how cloud tools access Twitter's API.

The 3,200 tweet window

Twitter's API historically exposes only the most recent ~3,200 tweets to third-party apps. Cloud tools operating via the API are subject to this ceiling. If you've been active for years, this means the bulk of your archive is unreachable on the free tier — and often on paid tiers that don't use archive imports.

Total tweets deleteable per period — restricted on free tier
Age of accessible tweets — restricted on free tier
Deletion speed (rate limited) — restricted on free tier
Archive-based deletion (often paid-only) — restricted on free tier

TweetDelete Pricing in 2026

TweetDelete charges a recurring subscription. For a task most users only need to do once — clean up an old account — this means paying monthly or annually for something you may use once.

TweetDelete
Subscription
Monthly or annual renewal
DeleteMyTweets
$15 once
No renewal. Lifetime updates.

TweetDelete vs DeleteMyTweets

FeatureTweetDeleteDeleteMyTweets
OAuth token storage
Stored on cloud servers
Never stored — no servers
Where deletion runs
Remote cloud servers
100% on your machine
Free tier cap
Limited — older tweets locked
Unlimited — no server cap
API key / Twitter account access
Required — grants app permissions
None — browser session only
Subscription required
Yes — monthly or annual
No — one-time $15
Data retained after use
Possible — server-side logs
None — nothing to retain
Works offline after auth
No — requires cloud connection
Yes — local execution
What you can revoke
OAuth token (after the fact)
Nothing to revoke — no access granted
No OAuth. No cloud. No subscription.
DeleteMyTweets runs locally on your machine. Nothing leaves your computer. One-time $15.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is TweetDelete safe to use?

TweetDelete works, but it operates by storing an OAuth token on its cloud servers and processing deletions remotely. This means your Twitter account credentials pass through a third-party infrastructure you do not control. Whether that is acceptable depends on your risk tolerance. For users who want zero third-party exposure, a local-only tool like DeleteMyTweets processes everything on your own machine and never receives account access.

What are TweetDelete free tier limits?

TweetDelete's free plan restricts how many tweets you can delete and typically limits access to older content. The underlying reason is the Twitter/X API's historical 3,200 tweet access window, which cloud tools are subject to unless they use archive-import methods. Free tiers are designed to demonstrate the product, not complete large deletions. If you have thousands of old tweets to remove, the free plan will stop before the job is done.

What is TweetDelete pricing in 2026?

TweetDelete charges a recurring subscription — either monthly or annually. This contrasts with one-time purchase tools like DeleteMyTweets ($15, no renewal). Over time, subscription costs compound. For a single cleanup job, a one-time tool is typically more cost-effective.

What are the best TweetDelete alternatives in 2026?

The main alternatives fall into two categories: (1) other cloud tools (TweetDeleter, Semiphemeral, Redact) which have similar OAuth and server-side risks, and (2) local-only tools like DeleteMyTweets which run entirely on your machine. If privacy and account security are priorities, local tools are the safer category.

Does TweetDelete store your Twitter password?

TweetDelete does not store your password directly — it uses OAuth, which means Twitter issues a token that grants the app deletion permission. However, that token lives on TweetDelete's servers, which means a third party holds ongoing access to your account. You can revoke it at any time via Twitter settings, but the access existed in the interim.

Can TweetDelete delete tweets older than 3,200?

On the free tier, older tweets are typically inaccessible due to API limits. Paid tiers may offer archive-import support to reach older content. The limitation isn't TweetDelete-specific — it's how cloud tools interact with Twitter's API. Local tools that use browser automation sidestep this limitation by scrolling your profile directly.

The Local Alternative

DeleteMyTweets takes a structurally different approach. It runs entirely on your computer using your own browser session — the same way you'd manually delete tweets, just automated.

No servers — your data has nowhere to go
No OAuth token — nothing to store or revoke
No API limits — browser automation reaches all your tweets
No subscription — one payment, lifetime updates
Works on Windows and macOS

Ready to Delete Without the Cloud Risk?

One-time $15. Runs locally. No OAuth tokens, no servers, no subscription. Download immediately after purchase.

30-day money-back guarantee. Windows & macOS.