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How Developers Can Leverage Threads APIs to Extract User Posts Efficiently

05 June 2026
Andrea Ramazzina
Chief Scientific Officer

If you’ve ever tried pulling Threads data at scale, you know how quickly things get messy: rate limits, changing endpoints, authentication headaches. A dedicated scraping API cuts through all of that.
EnsembleData’s Threads scraper API is a powerful tool for extracting valuable social media data. The API allows businesses and developers to crawl data from Threads which can be leveraged for analytics, marketing, tracking trends, and more.

Threads User Posts API is one of those crawling APIs that’s surprisingly useful once you have reliable access to it. Whether you’re using it for social media monitoring and listening, competitive research, influencer marketing, or building something data-driven, having a clean feed of structured data makes a real difference. That’s what EnsembleData is built for.

In this post, we’ll walk through how to use the EnsembleData API endpoints to scrape Threads User Posts, check the API docs if you want the full picture.


1. Create a free EnsembleData account

Head over to the EnsembleData dashboard and sign up, it’s free! Once you’re in, your API token is sitting in the top-left corner of the dashboard. You’ll need it for every request.

EnsembleData dashboard
Your API token is shown in the top left of the EnsembleData dashboard

2. Verify your email address

One small thing before you start making calls: verify your email address. There should be a confirmation email waiting for you, just click the link inside.

Requests won’t return any data until your email is verified.


3. Access our Threads Data API with Python

Here’s a working example using Python for scraping Threads User Posts:

import requests

root = "https://ensembledata.com/apis"
endpoint = "/threads/user/posts"
params = {
  "id": 195178788,
  "chunk_size": 10,
  "token": "YOUR-TOKEN-HERE"
}

res = requests.get(root+endpoint, params=params)
print(res.json())



That’s it. A few lines of Python and you’ve fetched structured data from the Threads API for User Posts, ready to use however you need. For the full list of parameters and response fields, take a look at the API documentation.

Questions? Reach out at ensembledata.com/contact or drop us a line at [email protected].