Free Tea App Takedown Letter Generator
Found a post about you on Tea App or TeaOnHer? Generate a professionally worded removal request that cites Tea's own Community Guidelines — then copy it or email it to their Trust & Safety team in under two minutes.
By Jay — Founder, Tea App Green Flags Updated
Takedown Letter Generator
Free, instant, and private — the letter is built in your browser and never leaves it.
Everything runs in your browser. We never see, store, or send what you type.
When a Takedown Letter Works
Tea moderates content against its published Community Guidelines, and a written request that names the specific violation is much harder to ignore than an anonymous one-tap report. Takedown letters work best when the post clearly crosses one of Tea's own lines: false statements presented as fact, private information shared without consent, photos posted without permission, or targeted harassment.
The letter does two more things a tap can't. It creates a dated paper trail — proof that you asked, when you asked, and on what grounds — which matters if you later escalate to Apple, Google, or a professional removal service. And it sets a response deadline, which turns silence into a documented failure to act instead of a dead end.
One honest caveat: a takedown letter is a formal request, not a court order. Nothing — no letter, no lawyer, no service — can guarantee a platform removes content. What you can control is sending the strongest, best-documented request possible. That's what this tool generates.
How to Deliver Your Letter
- 1
Report inside the app first (if you have access)
Open the post, tap the three-dot menu in its top corner, choose Report, pick the closest reason, and submit. Tea only verifies women for new accounts, so if you can't sign up, skip straight to email — it reaches the same team.
- 2
Send the letter via the app's support form or email
Email support@teaforwomen.com with the generated letter, or paste it into the support/contact form inside the app. Email is better for one reason: it gives you a timestamped record of your request.
- 3
Include what moderators need — and nothing more
Attach a screenshot of the post, name the city or group where it appeared, and the date you first saw it. Fill in every [BRACKETED] placeholder. Don't volunteer extra personal information the request doesn't need.
Realistic Expectations and Timeline
Expect anywhere from a few days to a few weeks. Clear-cut guideline violations — private information, non-consensual photos — tend to move fastest. Borderline cases sit longer. Platforms also frequently remove content without replying, so check the post itself rather than waiting for an email.
If 10 business days pass with no response and the post is still up, send one polite follow-up referencing your original message. Keep copies of everything: your letter, the date sent, screenshots, and any replies. That record is exactly what makes the next step credible.
If the Post Stays Up
A reasonable share of requests get ignored — that's the platform's failure, not yours. Your next moves: file the Apple/Google complaint (the second tab in the generator above cites both stores' user-generated-content policies), and consider whether the post rises to defamation that's worth professional attention.
If the post is false, damaging, and still spreading, a removal specialist can review your case for free and tell you honestly whether escalation is worth it — including when the answer is "keep doing it yourself."
Get a Free Case ReviewFrequently Asked Questions
Is this takedown letter generator really free?
Yes. The generator is completely free, requires no account or email signup, and runs entirely in your browser — nothing you type is uploaded or stored. We built it because most people can request removal themselves before ever needing to pay anyone.
Does a takedown letter actually work?
Often, yes — when the post clearly violates Tea's own Community Guidelines (false statements, private information, photos shared without consent, or harassment). A written request that cites the specific guideline is harder to ignore than a one-tap report, and it creates a paper trail you can use if you escalate later. It is a formal request, not a court order, so removal is never guaranteed.
How long does Tea take to respond to a removal request?
Response times vary from a few days to a few weeks depending on volume and how clear-cut the violation is. Sometimes content is removed without any reply at all, so re-check the post itself. If you hear nothing within 10 business days, send a polite follow-up referencing your first email, then consider escalating.
What if Tea refuses to remove the post?
You still have options: file a complaint with Apple and Google citing their user-generated-content policies (this generator includes that template), send a follow-up referencing your original request, or get a free case review from a removal specialist. No service can guarantee removal, but professionals who work on Tea App cases daily know which escalation paths actually move.
Do I need a lawyer to send a takedown letter?
No. A takedown letter is a formal request to the platform, not a legal filing — anyone can send one. A lawyer becomes relevant if you are considering a defamation lawsuit or need a formal cease-and-desist, which is a separate (and much more expensive) path. Start with the free letter first.
The Complete Removal Guide
The letter is one step of five. Read the full step-by-step guide to getting removed from the Tea App, from confirming what's posted to monitoring afterwards.
Not Sure What's Posted?
Use the free Tea App Checker to search for posts about you first — your letter is stronger when you know exactly what you're reporting.