Free-tier limit page

TweetDelete Free Limit (2026)

Free-limit queries show up when users hit a wall. The issue is usually not just price. It is whether the free plan actually reaches older tweets, larger histories, and the filters needed to finish the cleanup properly.

Why this page exists

Understand TweetDelete free-tier limits, why older tweets often remain, and when users outgrow a cloud-based free plan.

Captures one of the strongest existing GSC query groups
Explains why free cloud tiers stop short of full cleanup
Connects plan limits to archive depth and older tweets
Creates a strong bridge into the local product offer

Safer than cloud tools

No backend servers processing your account activity.
No stored OAuth tokens or always-on account access.
One-time $15 purchase instead of subscription pressure.

How it works

1

Check whether the free plan matches the age and volume of your account.

2

Review whether older tweets and archive-based cleanup are included.

3

Move to a full local workflow if the free tier stalls out.

Product proof

100K+
tweet capacity
Zero
cloud storage
100%
local processing
$15
one-time price

Why users search this query

They search it after the product stops short. Usually the deletion count is capped, older tweets remain untouched, or the user is pushed toward a paid plan before the actual cleanup is finished.

Why free tiers often hit a wall

Free plans are designed to introduce the product, not necessarily complete large historical cleanup jobs. That is especially true for accounts with years of content.

Older tweets may sit outside the easy-access window
Archive-based workflows are often limited or unavailable
The free plan may only solve part of the problem

What changes with a local tool

Delete My Tweets is built for deeper one-time cleanup. Instead of hoping a free SaaS tier is enough, you run the deletion locally and keep the archive, session, and job control on your own machine.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why does TweetDelete free access feel limited?

Because free plans in this niche usually cap deletion depth, speed, or access to older history. They are often enough to demonstrate the product, not finish a large cleanup.

Does the free plan usually cover old tweets?

That is exactly where many users run into problems. Older history often needs deeper access or archive-based workflows that sit outside a simple free tier.

What is the alternative if the free tier stops early?

A local cleanup workflow is usually the clearest alternative because it is designed for full account cleanup rather than free-plan sampling.

Explore Related Cleanup Paths

Ready to clean up your account properly?

Delete My Tweets is built for bulk cleanup without cloud access, OAuth storage, or subscription lock-in.