Retweeting is a great way to spread the word when somebody says something that you think should be shared easily. X, formerly known as Twitter, has an official "retweet" action that allows you to do this. Luckily, if you retweet something that you later decide you would rather not share, you can just as easily revert the action and delete any trace of your retweet. Poof!

Method 1
Method 1 of 4:

From the Mobile App

PDF download Download Article
  1. Find a black icon with a white X, and the letter X underneath it, then tap it to open the app.
  2. On the bottom-right corner of your screen, there will be the gray outline of an avatar with the word "Me" underneath it. Tap this button to open your X profile.
    Advertisement
  3. Your profile contains the full history of all of your tweets and retweets. Retweets will show two green arrows cycling between each other beneath the tweet. They will also have the image of the user who posted the original tweet to the left of the tweet.
  4. This will remove the tweet from your profile, so that neither you nor other users will see it on their X feeds.
    • This will not delete the original tweet from the user's timeline.
  5. Advertisement
Method 2
Method 2 of 4:

Delete Your Retweets

PDF download Download Article
  1. To do this, click or tap on the picture of your avatar at the top-right corner of your screen. A drop-down menu will appear. Click on the name of your X handle (or, on the mobile site, tap on "Profile"). You will now be on your X profile, which contains the history of all of the tweets, replies, and retweets you have made and received.
  2. Scroll through your X profile to see the full history of your retweets. You can recognize which tweets you have retweeted by looking below the tweet for the retweet icon: two green arrows pointing in a circle.
  3. If the retweet was done over 6 months ago, it will show your username and icon in the list of people who have retweeted it, but the retweet arrow circle will be grey, not green. To delete these original retweets, you must retweet it again, which will make the retweet icon green, then you can immediately delete that retweet by clicking the green retweet icon. This will also remove the original retweet you made over 6 months ago along with it.
  4. This will "undo", or remove the retweet you made from your profile, so that neither you nor other users will see it on their X feeds.
    • This will not delete the original tweet from the user's timeline.
  5. Advertisement
Method 3
Method 3 of 4:

Delete Copied Tweets from Others

PDF download Download Article
  1. One way a tweet that somebody else has written may end up on your profile is if you manually re-post their tweets. This happens when you copy and paste a tweet from another user into a tweet of your own and then post the tweet. These are technically not retweets and the process of removing them is the same as it would be for a regular tweet, so what follows is an explanation of how to delete tweets from your X profile.
  2. The way you find your profile depends on whether you're using X on your computer or on your phone:
    • On the mobile app, do this by tapping the avatar at the bottom-right corner of your screen that says "Me".
    • On a web browser, click on the picture of your avatar at the top-right corner of your screen. Click on the name of your X handle as it appears in the drop down menu.
  3. Scroll through your profile to see the full history of your tweets, until you come across the tweet you would like to delete.
    • If you remember what the tweet said, you can type keywords from the tweet into the search bar at the top-right corner of your screen to search for a specific tweet (although this method will give you results from other users, too).
  4. A list of options will appear.
  5. The tweet will be removed from your profile!
  6. Advertisement
Method 4
Method 4 of 4:

Hide Retweets from Others

PDF download Download Article
  1. Occasionally, somebody you don't follow will tweet something, which will then be retweeted by somebody you do follow. You can recognize those by the gray "[X user] retweeted" just above the tweet, along with a green retweet icon.
  2. Click or tap on the name of the user as it appears above the retweet.
  3. The button is just to the left of the blue "Following" button. Tap or click on the cog to see a drop-down menu of options.
  4. This will prevent you from seeing any future retweets that the user makes. You cannot delete retweets from others from your timeline, so your only recourse, should it become a problem, is to selectively turn off retweets from specific users. Also, there is no method for bulk blocking of retweets. You have to deal with each user individually. To reduce the clutter, visit the home page of the users that you follow.
    • You will still see the user's original tweets.
    • Note that this is not retroactive: all previous retweets will remain on your timeline. [1]
  5. Advertisement

Community Q&A

Search
Add New Question
  • Question
    When I delete a retweet, is the original tweeter notified?
    WF
    Top Answerer
    No.
  • Question
    How do I retweet again if I accidentally deleted a retweet?
    Community Answer
    Just go back to the original tweet and hit the retweet button again.
  • Question
    How to delete a liked tweet?
    Community Answer
    If it is your tweet, click the three dots (...) and select "Delete Tweet." If you want to remove a tweet from your favorited tweets list, simply press the favorite button again and the tweet will be removed.
See more answers
Ask a Question
      Advertisement

      Tips

      Submit a Tip
      All tip submissions are carefully reviewed before being published
      Name
      Please provide your name and last initial
      Thanks for submitting a tip for review!
      Advertisement

      About This Article

      Article Summary X

      1. Open the Twitter app.
      2. Go to your profile.
      3. Find the tweet you retweeted.
      4. Tap the two arrows below the tweet.

      Did this summary help you?
      Thanks to all authors for creating a page that has been read 575,935 times.

      Is this article up to date?

      Advertisement