How to See What a Public Profile Reshared
A step-by-step way to see what a public Instagram profile reshared — the posts it placed on its own grid from other accounts, with each original source still attached.
By Feedglance Editorial Team · Last updated June 15, 2026

To see what a public profile reshared, enter its public username in a reposts viewer. It gathers the items the profile placed on its own grid from other accounts, each one still linked to its original source.
Key takeaways
- Reshared items are posts a profile placed on its OWN grid that were originally created by another account.
- You look these up by entering the profile's public username — no login or follow is involved.
- Each reshared item keeps a reference to the original post and account it came from, so the source stays visible.
- This only works on public profiles; private accounts and their reshares are not reachable.
Sometimes you don't want a profile's whole grid — you want just the part it borrowed. The posts a public profile reshared from other accounts tell you what that account amplifies, curates, or aligns itself with. Pulling out only those reshared items, and keeping each one's original source attached, is a focused way to read a profile. Here's how to do it.
What "what a profile reshared" actually means
A reshared post is an item the profile placed on its own grid that was originally created by a different account. The reposting profile didn't make the content; it selected someone else's post and showed it to its own audience.
So "seeing what a profile reshared" means isolating those borrowed items from the profile's own original posts. A grid usually mixes both — things the account made and things it found elsewhere — and the goal here is to look at the second group on its own.
Crucially, each reshared item is not anonymous. It carries a reference to the original post and the account that created it, so when you look at the reshares you also see where each one came from.
Step by step: how to see the reshares
The process is short and requires nothing more than a public username:
- Get the public username. You only need the handle of the public profile you're interested in — no email, no password, no follow.
- Open a reposts view. Use the Instagram Reposts Viewer and enter that username.
- Let it gather the reshared items. The view collects the posts the profile placed on its grid from other accounts.
- Read each item with its source. Every reshared post stays linked to its original account, so you can see both the content and who first made it.
That's the whole flow. There's no step where you log in, request access, or touch a private account.
Why a dedicated reposts view helps
You could scroll a profile's entire grid and try to eyeball which items are reshares. But that's slow and error-prone, especially on accounts that post a lot. A dedicated reposts view does three things a manual scroll doesn't:
- It isolates. Only the reshared items are shown, so you're not sifting through original posts to find them.
- It preserves attribution. The original source stays attached to each item, instead of you having to hunt down where a piece came from.
- It organizes. The reshares are gathered together in one place rather than scattered across the grid in posting order.
The result is a clean view of the profile's borrowed content — what it chose to amplify — without the noise of everything else.
What the reshares tell you about a profile
Reading a profile's reshares is a different kind of insight than reading its original posts. Original posts show what an account makes. Reshares show what an account endorses or curates:
- A brand resharing customer content shows who its community is and what it values.
- A curator account resharing creators shows the taste and theme it's built around.
- An event or community account resharing attendees shows the network around it.
Because every reshared item keeps its source, you also build a picture of which accounts a profile draws from — a map of who it pays attention to.
What you can't do — and why
There are firm limits, and they're the same boundary that applies everywhere here:
- Private profiles are off-limits. If an account is private, its reshares are not reachable. Nothing here bypasses privacy settings, requests access, or logs into anything.
- No private data is exposed. A reshares view only organizes content the public profile already shared openly.
- This isn't an Instagram product. It's an independent way to look at public content and is not affiliated with Instagram or Meta.
These aren't arbitrary restrictions — they're the line between looking at public content and intruding on private accounts, and only the first is in scope.
Putting it together
Seeing what a public profile reshared comes down to one focused action: enter the public username into the Instagram Reposts Viewer, and the items the profile placed on its grid from other accounts are gathered for you, each still pointing back to the account that originally created it. You get a clear read on what that profile amplifies — drawn entirely from content it has already shared in public.
Privacy & safety
- Public profiles only. The viewer never accesses private accounts or anything behind a follow request.
- No login, no password. You enter a public username — nothing is posted, liked or followed, so the owner isn’t notified.
- Nothing is saved between lookups. Each view is a fresh, on-demand snapshot of already-public content.
Limitations
- A public feed view shows a current snapshot, not a full archive or a live auto-updating stream.
- It can’t reveal private accounts, Close Friends posts, or stories that have already expired.
- Figures and behaviour reflect how Instagram works publicly; they are not official Instagram data.
Common mistakes
- Expecting to see reshares from a private account — only public profiles and their public reshares are reachable.
- Assuming everything on the grid is original — some grid items are reshares of other accounts' content, and they are what a reposts view isolates.
- Thinking a reshare hides its source — each reshared item keeps a reference to the original account that made it.
Frequently asked questions
How do I see only the posts a profile reshared, not its own posts?
Use a reposts view, which isolates reshared items — content the profile placed on its grid from other accounts — and separates them from the profile's own original posts.
Do I need to follow the profile or log in to see its reshares?
No. You enter the public username and the reshared items are gathered. There is no login, no follow request, and no account access involved.
Will I see who originally made each reshared post?
Yes. Each reshared item keeps its attribution, so the original post and the account that created it stay linked to the reshared copy.
Can I see what a private profile reshared?
No. Only public profiles are reachable. A private account's content, including anything it reshared, is not viewable and is not bypassed here.
Related guides
Related tools
The Feedglance Editorial Team tests public Instagram viewing tools and documents how public profiles, stories, highlights, tags, reposts and following lists actually behave. We cover public content only.
About Feedglance →Methodology
These guides describe how Instagram’s public story features behave, based on hands-on testing of public profiles and Instagram’s documented behaviour. They cover only what is publicly visible.
Where a guide explains the viewer, it reflects how the tool reads already-public data — on-demand, read-only, public profiles only. We don’t claim official Instagram data and we revise guides as the platform changes.
Last updated June 15, 2026 · Feedglance
Browse a public profile’s stories
Open any public profile as one scrollable feed — no login, no app, public profiles only.
Open the Instagram Reposts Viewer