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Trump Truth Social Claims Tracker & Fact Check | 2026

Real-time tracking of Truth Social posts with independent fact-check ratings and legal case timeline correlation

This tool aggregates recent Trump Truth Social posts and cross-references them with fact-check ratings from established sources (AP Fact Check, Reuters, Snopes) and major news events. See what was posted, when it was posted, and what independent fact-checkers have determined about specific claims.

Users can filter by date, claim category (election integrity, legal defense, political opponents, other), and fact-check rating. A timeline view shows how posting frequency correlates with court appearances, unfavorable news cycles, and major political events.

This provides readers with context and verification status rather than making subjective judgments about rhetoric. All sources are cited and linked.

How to Use This Tracker

This tool aggregates Truth Social posts and cross-references them with fact-check ratings from established news organizations. Use the filters to narrow by date range, claim category, or fact-check rating.

Fact-Check Sources: We use ratings from AP Fact Check, Reuters, Snopes, and PolitiFact—organizations that maintain transparent methodology and corrections policies. Each claim is linked to the original fact-check article so you can read the full analysis.

Understanding Ratings: 'Verified True' means independent sources confirm the claim. 'Mostly True' means the core claim is accurate but may lack context. 'Mixed/Unclear' means parts are true and parts are disputed. 'Mostly False' and 'False' mean fact-checkers found significant inaccuracies. 'No Rating Yet' means the claim hasn't been formally fact-checked by our sources.

Why Post Timing Matters

Research shows political figures often increase social media activity around major news events, court appearances, or unfavorable coverage. This tool highlights correlations between post dates and significant events—not to imply causation, but to provide context.

For example, if multiple posts about 'election fraud' appear on the same day as a court hearing about election-related charges, users can see that correlation and decide for themselves what it means.

The timeline view lets you see posting frequency over time and cross-reference with major events in pending legal cases, allowing readers to form their own conclusions about messaging patterns.

Sources and Transparency

All posts are sourced directly from Truth Social's public feed. Fact-check ratings come from AP Fact Check, Reuters, Snopes, and PolitiFact—organizations that publish detailed methodology and corrections. We do not create our own fact-checks; we aggregate ratings from these established sources.

We update the tracker multiple times daily to capture new posts. Fact-check ratings may be updated when fact-checkers revise their assessments based on new information.

This tool is designed for readers who want to independently verify claims they see on social media, understand what fact-checkers have determined, and see the timing context around major news events and court dates.

Frequently Asked Questions

Quick answers to common questions

Why are some posts not rated by fact-checkers?
Fact-checkers prioritize claims that have significant public impact or are widely circulated. Subjective opinions, general statements, or posts with less engagement may not receive fact-check analysis. We label these as 'No Rating Yet' rather than assuming they're accurate or inaccurate.
Do you remove posts or censor anything?
No. We display all public Truth Social posts. We only add fact-check labels from independent sources—the posts themselves are shown verbatim.
Why do you correlate posts with court dates?
We flag when posts are made on or near court dates as contextual information. We're not claiming cause-and-effect—just noting that readers can observe when high-volume posting occurs relative to major events. You decide what that means.
Which fact-checkers do you use?
AP Fact Check, Reuters, Snopes, and PolitiFact. These organizations publish transparent methodology, have editorial standards, and issue corrections when they make errors. All fact-check ratings link to the original article.
How often is this updated?
The tracker checks for new Truth Social posts every 2 hours. Fact-check ratings are updated when our source organizations publish new assessments.
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