Insviewers

What Is the Tagged Tab on Instagram?

The tagged tab on an Instagram profile shows public posts that other accounts tagged that profile in — not the profile's own grid posts. Here's how it works.

By Feedglance Editorial Team · Last updated June 15, 2026

Quick answer

The tagged tab is the third tab on an Instagram profile. It collects public posts that OTHER accounts tagged that profile in — photos and videos where someone else added the profile as a person in the image, not posts the profile published itself.

Key takeaways

  • The tagged tab shows posts created by other accounts that tagged this profile, not the profile's own grid.
  • Only tags placed on public posts are reachable; tags inside private accounts' posts stay hidden.
  • A tag is a label other people place on their photo or video — it points back to the tagged profile.
  • Profile owners can hide individual tags or turn on tag approval, so the tab is curated, not exhaustive.

The tagged tab is one of the most misunderstood parts of an Instagram profile. People often assume it's another folder of the profile's own photos, but it works in the opposite direction. The tagged tab gathers posts that other accounts made and chose to tag this profile in. It's a window into how a profile appears across the wider community, assembled from everyone else's posts rather than the profile's own.

What the tagged tab actually contains

When you open a public Instagram profile, you'll see a row of tabs near the middle of the page. The first shows the profile's own grid posts. The next typically shows reels. The third — usually marked with an outline of a person — is the tagged tab.

This tab contains public posts where another account added this profile as a tagged person. If a friend posts a group photo and tags five people in it, that single photo can appear on all five of those profiles' tagged tabs. The original post still belongs to the friend who created it; the tagged tab simply collects every public post that points back to a given profile.

So the tagged tab is best understood as a reverse index: not "what did this profile post," but "where did other people name this profile."

How tagging works in the first place

A tag is a label an account places on its own photo or video. When someone uploads a post, Instagram lets them tap a part of the image and attach a username. That label links the post to the named profile. The tagged account doesn't have to do anything for the tag to exist — the person who created the post is the one who adds it.

Because the tag is created by the poster, the content on a profile's tagged tab is entirely outside that profile's authorship. The profile owner didn't take those photos, didn't write those captions, and may not even have known the post existed at the moment it went live. They were simply named in it.

You can browse this collection for any public profile with the Instagram Tagged Viewer, which pulls together the public posts that tag a given username.

Why only public posts appear

The tagged tab is bound by the same visibility rules as the rest of Instagram. A tag can only surface if the post carrying it is public.

If a private account posts a photo and tags a public profile, that tag exists on the private account's side — but it never appears on the public tagged tab, because the underlying post isn't viewable by anyone outside that private account's approved followers. The same is true for a viewer tool: only tags living on public posts are reachable. There is no way around the privacy boundary, and no tool should claim to provide one.

This means a profile's tagged tab is always a public subset of every tag that mentions it. Plenty of tags may exist in private posts; none of them show here.

Where to find the tab and what the icon means

On a profile page, the tab order is consistent enough to navigate by:

  • Grid tab (the default) — the profile's own posts, newest first.
  • Reels tab — the profile's own short-form videos.
  • Tagged tab — posts by other accounts that tagged this profile, marked by a person-outline icon.

If the tagged tab shows nothing, it usually means one of three things: no public post has tagged this profile yet, the owner has hidden the tags that exist, or the owner requires manual approval and hasn't approved any. An empty tagged tab is not proof that nobody mentions the profile.

How owners shape what the tab shows

Profile owners have real control over their tagged tab. They can:

  • Hide an individual tagged post from their profile without removing the tag itself.
  • Turn on tag approval, so a post only joins their tagged tab after they manually allow it.
  • Remove themselves from a tag entirely, which detaches the post from their profile.

Because of these controls, the tagged tab is a curated view. What you see is the set of public tags the owner has allowed to remain. That's why some heavily mentioned profiles have a near-empty tagged tab, while others show a rich gallery of community posts.

How the tagged tab fits next to other features

It helps to place the tagged tab against its neighbors:

  • It is not the profile's grid — that's the profile's own authored content.
  • It is not a mention — a mention is an @username inside someone's caption or story, which doesn't populate this tab.
  • It is a gallery of other accounts' public posts that formally tagged this profile as a person in the image.

Understanding this distinction makes the tagged tab far more useful. It's a social fingerprint: the public-facing trail of where a profile has been named by the people around it. To explore that trail for any public account, open the Instagram Tagged Viewer and enter a username.

A quick note on scope: this works only for public profiles and public posts. The tagged tab is not a way to see private content, and this site is not affiliated with Instagram or Meta. It simply organizes information that is already public.

Try the tool
Open the Instagram Tagged Viewer

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

  • Believing the tagged tab is content the profile chose to post — it's actually content from other accounts that named this profile.
  • Assuming a sparse tagged tab means nobody tags the profile — owners often hide tags or require approval, so the tab is curated.
  • Expecting to see tags from private accounts — only tags on public posts are reachable, and private posts never surface here.

Frequently asked questions

Is the tagged tab the same as a profile's own posts?

No. The tagged tab shows posts other accounts made and tagged this profile in. The profile's own posts live on the first grid tab.

Where is the tagged tab on a profile?

It's the third tab on a profile, usually marked with a person-outline icon, sitting after the grid tab and the reels tab.

Does every profile have a tagged tab?

Most public profiles do, but it only appears with content once at least one public post has tagged that profile and the owner hasn't hidden it.

Related guides

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Written & reviewed by the Feedglance Editorial Team

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

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Open the Instagram Tagged Viewer