What are Twitter reports and how do they work?
You know those “report” buttons on Twitter (X)? That’s basically what these are — you flag a tweet or account for breaking rules like spam, abuse, or scams. Here on this page you buy a bunch of them at once, paste the tweet link or username, and then different accounts send reports automatically to get X to look at it quicker.
What is the difference between Tweet Reports and User Reports?
Tweet reports go after one specific post — they target just that single tweet for removal or hiding. User reports hit the whole account instead, which can lead to suspensions, shadowbans, or restrictions on everything the account does.
How many Twitter reports should I submit for visible results?
It depends on what you’re reporting, but usually 50–200 reports get noticed pretty fast. For small or obvious violations, even 20–50 can sometimes do the trick, while bigger or trickier cases need more to really push X into action.
How fast are Twitter reports processed after purchase?
Reports normally start going out within a few minutes up to an hour after you send the link and pay. The actual review or action from X can take anywhere from a couple hours to a few days, depending on how backed up they are.
What situations are Twitter reports commonly used for?
People usually buy these when they’re getting buried under spam replies, dealing with some annoying troll or stalker that won’t stop, or trying to take down an impersonator pretending to be them. It’s also pretty common when competitors are using fake accounts to mess with your engagement numbers or when bots keep dropping scam links everywhere.