X makes it more expensive to post links through its API

X makes it more expensive to post links through its API

Image Credits:TechCrunch

Social network X has made it more expensive to post links through its API. The change is designed to thwart spam and “vectors of misuse,” the company said. The new pricing increased costs from $0.01 per link to $0.20

Last week, the X developer account posted changes to its API rates. The two most notable hikes were an increase in link posting price and an increase in posting price, which went up from $0.01 to $0.15 per post.

These changes are designed to drive healthier developer behavior and curb vectors of misuse.

More great features & updates coming very soon.

— Developers (@XDevelopers) April 16, 2026

This move might discourage many publications from posting links. For instance, tech news aggregator Techmeme stopped adding links to the original articles in its posts on X this week. Instead, the posts say “Visit Techmeme dot com for the link and full context!”

The US DOJ says a former ransomware negotiator pleaded guilty to helping cybercriminals extort companies in cyberattacks in five different incidents (@lorenzofb / TechCrunch)

(Visit Techmeme dot com for the link and full context!)

— Techmeme (@Techmeme) April 21, 2026

Earlier this week, Techmeme said that the price increase was one of the reasons to remove links, which it said may return later. The publication also cited a Nieman Lab study, which noted that including links with posts on X resulted in dropped engagement.

FYI: We're now omitting links in @Techmeme tweets. Why?

1. Links limit reach (see embedded study)
2. The cost for posting links using X's API increased today by 1900%.

Links may return later, but we're still exploring how we might accomplish that. https://t.co/nqVpp5ymy1

— Techmeme (@Techmeme) April 20, 2026

X’s head of product, Nikita Bier, refuted the study’s results and said that accounts covered in the study were “habitual headline+link posters” that posted no additional context. He also replied to the Techmeme founder Gabe Rivera, that there is “no there is no code that is deboosting links.”

He added that Techmeme should post a screenshot of reactions to the news along with the link.

Techmeme should screenshot these and put them in the parent post. To succeed with links, the linked content must bleed into the post. pic.twitter.com/w353RExKVM

— Nikita Bier (@nikitabier) April 20, 2026

Earlier in the week, Rivera reacted to API price changes and said that this would force news sites to pay hundreds of dollars or post manually.

“I think they’re saying if you have a news site that tweets links, and you don’t tweet them manually, you now have to pay X hundreds of dollars per month?” he argued.

The debate of X reducing the reach of posts with links is not new. A few years ago, the company cut headlines from the link previews on the platform but reverted the change after a few weeks.

When you purchase through links in our articles, we may earn a small commission. This doesn’t affect our editorial independence.

Ivan covers global consumer tech developments at TechCrunch. He is based out of India and has previously worked at publications including Huffington Post and The Next Web.

You can contact or verify outreach from Ivan by emailing im@ivanmehta.com or via encrypted message at ivan.42 on Signal.

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