How It Works
Our service uses WebArchive (also known as the Wayback Machine) to retrieve archived Twitter data. When tweets are deleted or accounts are suspended, the content often remains accessible through WebArchive, which has been crawling and archiving web content for decades.
Here's how our simple 3-step process works:
Enter Username
Simply type in any Twitter @username in our search box. We'll check WebArchive to see how many archived tweets are available for that user.
See Count
We'll show you exactly how many tweets, retweets, and media files we can retrieve from WebArchive. No commitment required at this stage.
Get Archive
If you're satisfied with the count, proceed with payment. We'll crawl WebArchive, process all the data, and package everything for download.
What We Retrieve
Our crawler searches through WebArchive's extensive database to find all archived tweets for the specified username. This includes:
- All original tweets posted by the user
- All retweets (RTs) with original content
- All images and videos attached to tweets
- Timestamps and metadata for each tweet
- Deleted tweets that are no longer visible on Twitter
Why WebArchive?
WebArchive is the largest public web archive in the world, with over 800 billion web pages archived since 1996. Twitter content is regularly crawled and archived, making it possible to recover tweets that have been deleted or are from suspended accounts.
Our service automates the process of finding and extracting this archived data, saving you hours of manual searching through WebArchive's interface.
Ready to Get Started?
Try our service now - check how many tweets we can retrieve for any username, completely free.
Check Tweet Count Now