Keep in mind that there is no guaranteed way to determine the identities of users who visit your profile, and any service or method claiming to do so is either inaccurate or a scam. It's also worth noting that, thanks to the News Feed's algorithm, visiting people's profiles is less common than it used to be.
Quick Summary
1. Open Facebook.
2. Click your name.
3. Click Friends.
4. Review the top 10 to 20 results.
5. Consider each of your top friends.
6. Look at friend suggestions.
2. Click your name.
3. Click Friends.
4. Review the top 10 to 20 results.
5. Consider each of your top friends.
6. Look at friend suggestions.
1Using Your Friends List
- 1Open Facebook. Go to https://www.facebook.com/ (desktop) or tap the Facebook app icon (mobile). This will open your News Feed if you're logged into Facebook.
- If you aren't logged into Facebook on desktop, first enter your Facebook email address and password in the upper-right side of the page, then click Log In.
- On mobile, you can log into Facebook by entering your email address and password when prompted and then tapping Log In.
- 2Click your name tab. It's in the upper-right corner of the Facebook page. Doing so takes you to your Facebook profile page.
- On mobile, tap ☰ in the bottom-right corner of the screen (iPhone) or the top-right corner of the screen (Android).
- 3Click Friends. This is near the top of your profile page. This will bring up a list of your Facebook friends.
- On mobile, tap Friends in the menu.
- 4Review the top results. The top 10 to 20 friends in this list are the people with whom you have the most frequent interactions, which means that they most likely visit your profile more often than other people.
- 5Consider each of your top friends. Someone who has a few hundred friends is much more likely to view your profile than is someone who has a few thousand friends; this will help narrow down the list of people who are likely to be viewing your page.
- If you see a person with whom you don't go out of your way to interact, they're probably viewing your page a fair amount.
- 6Look for friend suggestions. If you receive a Facebook notification urging you to add certain people, the people in question are most likely friends of one (or more) of your most frequent profile visitors.
2Using a Status
- 1Open Facebook. Go to https://www.facebook.com/ (desktop) or tap the Facebook app icon (mobile). This will open your News Feed if you're logged into Facebook.
- If you aren't logged into Facebook on desktop, first enter your Facebook email address and password in the upper-right side of the page, then click Log In.
- On mobile, you can log into Facebook by entering your email address and password when prompted and then tapping Log In.
- 2Select the status text box. Click or tap the text box near the top of the News Feed page. This text box usually has a phrase such as "What's on your mind?" in it.
- 3Type in a neutral status. This might be a joke, a fact, or a general statement, but stay away from topics that will evoke strong emotions in your friend group.
- Avoid mentioning sensitive or partisan issues.
- Don't tag anyone in your status, as doing so will skew the test results.
- 4Click Post. It's in the bottom-right corner of the status window.
- On mobile, you'll tap Share in the upper-right corner instead.
- 5Wait to see who likes the status. After a certain amount of time (e.g., 8 hours), review the status to see who liked it.
- If applicable, make a note of who commented on the status as well.
- 6Repeat this test several more times. You'll want at least 5 different statuses to compare against each other.
- 7Compare the mutual people who liked your statuses. If you noticed that a large number of the same people liked and/or commented on your Facebook statuses each time, they're probably visiting your Facebook page more often than other people in your friends list.
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