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August 26, 2025 1 min

At its core, TweetDelete connects to your X account via OAuth and lets you create rules. The default menu offers age-based deletion of everything older than 30 days, six months, or a custom window, as well as keyword filters. You press “Delete,” and within minutes, thousands of posts vanish. Setting Up: Five Minutes, No CodingThe onboarding flow at the site TweetDelete is refreshingly straightforward. After authorizing the app, you see a checklist: choose an age filter, enter up to three keywords, decide whether to include retweets, and hit save. For my experiment, I asked TweetDelete to remove any tweet containing the words “beta” or “draft” that was older than 90 days. The interface estimated 1,842 matches. I clicked confirm, went to get coffee, and by the time I returned, the timeline looked squeaky clean. No CSV uploads, no regex, no arcane API keys, just clicks.

Automation in Practice

Scheduling is where many competitors stumble, but TweetDelete’s cron job runs reliably. Premium accounts ping Twitter’s API roughly every 72 hours; free users can trigger manual reruns whenever they like. Over a two-week span, my test rules executed five times without a hiccup, removing an average of 76 tweets per pass.

What About Likes and Retweets?

Likes are often overlooked, yet they can reveal more about your interests than tweets themselves. TweetDelete treats likes as first-class citizens: the same filters you create for tweets also appear in a “Likes” tab. I scheduled a weekly purge of likes older than six months; the next morning, 1,200 little hearts had vanished.


st vs Value: Is Premium Worth It?

The free tier is generous enough for casual users who just want to wipe the last few months. However, Twitter caps API access at 3,200 most-recent tweets, so anyone with years of activity quickly hits a wall. Premium, at $3.99 monthly, unlocks archive upload.

Privacy and Security Checks

Giving any third-party app delete permissions raises eyebrows, so I probed TweetDelete’s security posture. First, the platform doesn’t ask for your Twitter password; OAuth tokens can be revoked at any moment from X’s settings page. Second, the privacy policy states that deleted data is not stored; only aggregate counts remain for analytics.


Who Should Use It?

If you tweet a dozen times a year, TweetDelete is overkill. The sweet spot is high-volume accounts, marketers live-tweeting events, developers sharing daily changelogs, or influencers whose opinions evolve quickly. Job hunters performing reputation audits will appreciate the keyword filter; a quick sweep for politically sensitive terms can save uncomfortable interview moments.

Final Verdict

After living with TweetDelete for a month, I’d summarize its effectiveness in one sentence: it does exactly what it says on the tin and then gets out of your way. The automation loop is rock solid, the interface is idiot-proof, and the price is fair. It won’t solve Twitter’s deeper data-retention quirks, and it can’t protect you from screenshots, but as a pragmatic toolkit for pruning public-facing content, it’s hard to beat. 


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