RSS to
RSS to X / Twitter
Turn any RSS feed into automated X (Twitter) posts. Set it up once, never copy-paste again.
Paste your RSS feed URL into Feedloop, pick your X (Twitter) account, and we'll poll the feed continuously. Every new item becomes a X (Twitter) post — formatted via a per-platform template you control.
- Native X (Twitter) publishing via the official API
- Per-platform message templates with {{title}}, {{link}}, {{description}}
- Deduplication built in — no double posts on feed refresh
Auto-publish to X (formerly Twitter) from RSS feeds, blogs, or your own composer. Feedloop posts via the official v2 API — text, images, and link-card previews land exactly as if you'd posted from the app.
Frequently asked questions
- How does RSS to X (Twitter) work?
- Paste your RSS feed URL into Feedloop, pick your X (Twitter) account, and we poll the feed continuously. Yes — text-only RSS items publish fine, and X (Twitter) happily accepts a featured image if your feed includes one (most do via <media:content> or the first <img> in the description). The per-output template editor controls formatting, and the live preview shows exactly how the post will look on X (Twitter) before anything ships.
- Can I customize the X (Twitter) post template?
- Yes. Each output gets its own template with variable chips for {{title}}, {{description}}, and {{link}} — click to insert at the cursor instead of typing. You can write a different template for X (Twitter) than for, say, LinkedIn (same RSS source, different messaging per platform), and the preview re-renders as you type.
- Can I track clicks on the links Feedloop posts to X (Twitter)?
- Yes — the built-in link shortener wraps any outbound URL into a feedloophq.com/l/xxxxx redirect with UTM parameters tagged per platform. Click counts roll up per-link, so you can see exactly which X (Twitter) post drove which clicks without setting up Google Analytics.
- What happens if my RSS feed is slow or down?
- The poller retries with exponential backoff and never duplicates a post — we store the last item ID so even if the feed re-publishes, you won't see double posts on X (Twitter).