Twitter Is Finally Launching Its Edit Button in the U.S. — but Only for Paying Subscribers (and It’s Still in Test Mode)

Twitter at long last will give users in the U.S., its biggest geographic region, the ability to edit their tweets.

However, for now, the company will limit access to the “Edit Tweet” feature only to subscribers of Twitter Blue, its service with enhanced features for power users that costs $4.99 per month in the U.S.

The tweet-editing function will roll out to Twitter Blue users starting Thursday, according to the company. That came after it opened up the option to edit tweets on Oct. 3 for Twitter Blue members in Canada, Australia and New Zealand.

The Edit Tweet button, which for years has been the most-requested feature among Twitter users, will let you edit tweets a few times within a 30-minute window after they’re posted. Twitter said it is limiting the ability to make edits to only the first 30 minutes to “help protect the integrity of the conversation and create a publicly accessible record of what was said.”

Edited tweets will appear with an icon, label and timestamp so “it’s clear to readers that the original tweet has been modified,” the company said in a blog post last month. Tapping or clicking on the label will take viewers to the tweet’s Edit History, showing past versions of the post.

The company noted that the tweet-editing feature is still in a testing period. Users with access to the feature can only edit the text or media on original tweets and quote tweets — you can’t currently edit other types of tweets, including threads, replies, promoted tweets, polls or tweets composed using third-party apps.

Twitter noted that even if you’re not in a test group with access to the Edit Tweet feature, you will still be able to see if a tweet has been edited.

Twitter shared an example of what an edited tweet will look like:

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is Twitter-Edit-Button.jpg
This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is Twitter-Edit-Button.jpg

Twitter in April announced that it was working on the feature. The company denied it was influenced by a Twitter poll on the subject fielded that same week by Elon Musk, the tech billionaire who was eager to get his hands on the social network before he wasn’t — and then this week told Twitter that he’s reversed that decision and agreed to the original $44 billion price tag.

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