Free Guide · Rate Limit Strategy · Creator Tested

Post Every Day
Without Getting Throttled.

RateBypass is the complete guide to X's rate limits — exactly what the limits are, which actions trigger them, and a day-by-day posting schedule that keeps you under the radar permanently.

X Rate Limits — The Real Numbers

ActionFree AccountPremium
Posts per day2,400 (but triggers at ~50 rapid)~10,000
Likes per day~500 (50/hour effective)~1,000
Follows per day4001,000
DMs per day5002,500
API reads (v2)1 million tweets/month10 million/month
Reply rateWatch: 100+ replies in 1hr flags accountHigher tolerance

📅 The No-Throttle Daily Schedule

7:00 AMPost 1 original post
7:05 AMLike 10–15 posts in your niche
9:00 AMReply to 5 large accounts (insights only)
12:00 PMPost 1 thread starter
12:10 PMLike 10–15 more posts
3:00 PM5 more replies to engaged accounts
6:00 PMPost 1 evening post or repost with comment
6:10 PMFollow 5–10 relevant new accounts
9:00 PMLike and reply to replies on your posts

5 Rules That Keep You Safe

01

Never burst more than 30 actions in under 15 minutes

X's rate limiting is time-based, not just daily totals. 30 likes in 10 minutes looks like automation. Space actions with at least 20–30 second gaps.

02

Follow no more than 50 accounts per hour

Even if your daily limit is 400, doing 400 follows in 2 hours will trigger a soft lock. Cap yourself at 50/hour with natural gaps between follow sessions.

03

Use the Schedule Tweet feature for thread posting

X's native scheduler spaces your tweets automatically. Posting a 10-tweet thread all at once can trigger rate flags — schedule replies 5 minutes apart instead.

04

Reply campaigns: max 20 per session, 3 sessions per day

Reply farming (mass-replying to trending posts) is the #1 cause of account restrictions. Cap each session at 20 replies with 5+ minute breaks between sessions.

05

If you hit a limit, wait the full reset window

Most X rate limits reset in 15 minutes or 24 hours. Fighting a rate limit by logging out and back in doesn't help — just wait. Repeated triggering escalates to longer locks.