How to See Who Unfollowed You on Bluesky (and Spot Ghost Followers)
Bluesky's open data makes follower changes trackable. How to see who unfollowed you, how to find ghost and inactive followers, and what to actually do about churn without hurting your account.
Bluesky does not tell you when someone unfollows you, but the information is not hidden either. Because follows are public records on an open protocol, anyone can compare your follower list over time and see exactly who left. That is how every "who unfollowed me" tool works, and it is why follower tracking is more accurate on Bluesky than it ever was on closed networks. This guide covers how to see who unfollowed you, how to find the ghost followers dragging down your engagement, and, most importantly, what to do with that information.
- Follows on Bluesky are public data, so unfollows are detectable by comparing your follower list across two points in time.
- You can track it manually, with a browser extension, or with a tool that snapshots your followers on a schedule.
- Ghost followers are real accounts that never engage; they quietly lower the engagement rate that feeds distribution.
- Do not mass-unfollow the moment someone leaves. Reactive churn reads as manipulation and rarely helps.
How unfollow tracking works on Bluesky
Every follow on Bluesky is a public record in the AT Protocol. A tracker takes a snapshot of who follows you today, compares it against a snapshot from last week, and reports the difference: new followers in one column, lost followers in the other. There is no secret API and nothing invasive about it. The only real variable is how often the snapshots are taken. Compare once a month and you will know someone left but not when; snapshot daily and you can line an unfollow up against the post that preceded it.
A chunk of your apparent follower loss is people whose accounts were suspended, deactivated, or deleted, not people who chose to leave. Bluesky's follower counts can even lag behind reality here. A good tracker separates true unfollows from accounts that simply disappeared.
Four ways to see who unfollowed you
| Method | Effort | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Manual list comparison | High, manual each time | One-off curiosity on a small account |
| Browser extension | Low, on demand | Quick checks while you browse |
| Dedicated tracker app | Low, automatic | Ongoing monitoring and history |
| Growth tool with analytics | Low, built in | Tracking tied to who you followed and why |
Manual comparison is free and private but painful past a few hundred followers. Extensions and standalone trackers are convenient and often show real-time changes. The advantage of tracking inside a growth tool is context: it can tie an unfollow back to the campaign or post that won that follower, so you learn which sources bring people who stay.
Ghost followers and why they matter
A ghost follower is a real account that follows you but never likes, replies, or reposts. They are not necessarily bots. Often they followed once and drifted away, or they are dormant accounts from an early sign-up wave. They do not hurt you directly, but they dilute your engagement rate, and engagement rate is part of what decides how far your posts travel. An account with 5,000 followers and 20 likes a post looks weaker than one with 1,500 engaged followers.
The instinct is to purge them. Resist it. Some "ghosts" are lurkers who read every post and never tap anything, and unfollowing readers can cost you quiet advocates. The better move is to treat ghost-follower counts as a content signal first and a cleanup task a distant second.
A little churn is normal. Model how steady, relevant follows outrun ordinary unfollows so you can stop reacting to every departure.
What to do about unfollows and ghosts
- Watch the trend, not the individual departures
- Separate real unfollows from suspended and deleted accounts
- Use unfollow spikes as feedback on a specific post or cadence
- Clean up gently and infrequently, after a fair wait
- Keep lurkers and anyone who has ever engaged with you
- Mass-unfollow people the instant they leave
- Refollow someone hoping to bait a re-follow
- Treat every ghost follower as a bot to be purged
- Obsess over daily wobble in a large follower count
- Let a cleanup pass churn people you followed days ago
Reactive churn, following and unfollowing to manipulate who follows back, is precisely the inauthentic behavior Bluesky's guidelines describe, and it ages badly with the people on the other end. Steady, relevant growth paired with the occasional gentle cleanup beats a churn cycle every time. The full case is in how to grow on Bluesky without spammy bulk following.
How SkyFollowing tracks your followers
SkyFollowing snapshots your followers automatically and shows follows and unfollows over time, with real unfollows separated from accounts that were suspended or deleted. Because it also runs your follow campaigns, it can connect each lost follower back to the source that won them, so your follow-back rate reflects people who stay rather than a one-day spike.
Cleanup is handled by engagement-aware auto-unfollow rather than a blunt purge: anyone who liked or replied to you is kept, and the pass runs slowly, after a fair wait, so it never looks like churn. You get the visibility of a tracker and the restraint that keeps your account healthy, in one place. All of it connects through official OAuth, never your password.
Frequently asked questions
Can I see exactly who unfollowed me on Bluesky?
Yes. Because follows are public records, comparing your follower list between two points in time reveals who left. A tracker automates that comparison and keeps a history so you are not doing it by hand.
Does Bluesky notify me when someone unfollows?
No, Bluesky itself does not send unfollow notifications. That is why third-party trackers and growth tools exist: they snapshot your followers and report the changes for you.
What is a ghost follower?
A real account that follows you but never engages. Ghosts dilute your engagement rate, which can affect distribution, but many are harmless lurkers, so treat the count as a content signal rather than a purge list.
Should I unfollow people who unfollowed me?
Usually not, and never reflexively. Reactive follow-unfollow churn reads as manipulation and burns goodwill. If you clean up, do it gently, infrequently, and keep anyone who ever engaged with you.
If you would rather see your follower changes and act on them without stitching three tools together, start a free SkyFollowing trial. Tracking, safe cleanup, and growth run in the same dashboard.
SkyFollowing applies these safety rules to every campaign it runs. Free for 7 days, no card required.