I'm working on a college project and I need access to APIs from various social media platforms. I've already tried using Reddit's API and now I'm looking to integrate Twitter, since it has a lot of valuable data about public sentiment. However, I find that the official Twitter API is quite pricey, and the free tier isn't very helpful as I hit the limit during my tests. I've heard about alternatives like TwitterAPIio, but I'm curious if there are other free options available. Are there sources for free APIs that I can use? Also, how does TwitterAPIio compare to other alternatives? Any suggestions would be appreciated!
4 Answers
Using any kind of API wrapper usually ends up costing more than going directly to the source. If you’re doing a college project, most of the time you shouldn’t need to spend any money. The nature of your project might also play a role here. It’s worth looking for academic access programs; many social platforms offer free access for students who qualify. If you have a university email, you might be able to get access just by explaining what your project is about. Just remember it has to be strictly for educational purposes.
You’re definitely not alone in this struggle. Twitter has made it hard to find reliable free alternatives. Most free options have either gone away or operate at a much smaller scale. Instead of looking for live APIs, you might want to check out open datasets. Kaggle has a bunch of archived tweets and other sentiment datasets you can analyze. You could also look into other platforms like Reddit or Mastodon since they still provide more open API access. If you prove your concept with existing data first, you won’t be dependent on APIs that might stop working suddenly.
I've got a script I wrote using jina.ai that might help you out. You can check it out on GitHub; there's a tweet fetch script there that's pretty useful! Let me know if you want the link!
You can find Twitter trends and more on RapidAPI. There are even options available to tap into Twitter's data without breaking the bank. I'd definitely recommend checking that out!

Thanks! I’m definitely interested in that script. Can you share it here?