View Your Facebook Notifications in Your Favorite Feed Reader

If you’re an active Facebook user, then you probably check your Facebook Notifications at least once a day, if not more. Viewing your notifications is as easy as visiting the Facebook website or using a Facebook application (such as on your mobile device).

However, if you’re trying to stay away from Facebook or just looking for a quick way to view your notifications, you can also subscribe to your notifications via RSS and view them in your favorite feed reader.

To do this, simply visit this page (your Facebook Notifications page) in your web browser and look for the RSS link at the top – next to “get notifications via.” Right-click the RSS link and copy the link address.

Right-click the RSS link to copy your Facebook Notification's RSS feed link.

Now you can go to your favorite feed reader such as Feedly, and add the RSS feed that you just copied. For example, in Feedly you would go to “add content” and then paste in the RSS link.

Now you can quickly scroll through your notifications in your favorite feed reader as you’re reading your other favorite feeds.

Subscribe to our newsletter!

Our latest tutorials delivered straight to your inbox

Charnita Fance Avatar

Read next

Suzanne Simard sealed paper birch and Douglas fir seedlings inside plastic bags, fed them carbon-14 and carbon-13 dioxide, and nine days later found carbon had crossed between species through fungal threads in the British Columbia soil beneath her boots
A species of jellyfish called Turritopsis dohrnii can revert its adult cells back to a juvenile polyp stage when injured or starving, effectively restarting its life cycle, and biologists have so far failed to identify any natural limit to how many times it can do this.
A Japanese man named Jiroemon Kimura, who lived to 116, was born in 1897 when Queen Victoria still ruled and died in 2013, meaning a single human life personally overlapped with the invention of the airplane, the atomic bomb, the internet, and Instagram
The Hollywood sign originally read HOLLYWOODLAND when it was built in 1923 as a real estate advertisement for a housing development, and it was only meant to stand for 18 months, but nobody ever got around to taking it down and the city eventually adopted it as a landmark
Almost all of the world’s internet traffic does not travel by satellite but through fibre-optic cables lying on the ocean floor, a hidden web of wires crossing the deepest parts of the sea to connect the continents.
People who flip their phone face down on every table aren’t being secretive. They figured out that staying interruptible meant handing their time to whoever rang first
Twitch vs. Facebook Gaming vs. YouTube Gaming: What’s the Best Live Game Streaming Platform?
Chrome Extensions Ownership Transfer is a Direct Threat to You: How to Stay Safe