How to Embed a Threads Feed on Your Website (2026 Guide)
Threads is the newest major platform to embed from: single-post embeds exist, a full profile widget still doesn't, and here's what that means for brands using it today.
Threads is the youngest platform in this series, and its embed tooling shows it. Meta ships an official way to embed a single Threads post, but there is no equivalent of a full profile or hashtag timeline widget the way older platforms eventually built. That gap is normal for a platform this age; it's also exactly the gap a moderated wall is built to fill.
In this article
Method 1: Embed a single Threads post
Any public Threads post can be embedded individually: Meta provides an embed code (via the post's share menu) that renders the post with its author, text and media intact. It's a solid, no-maintenance way to quote a specific post, the same role publish.twitter.com plays for X and LinkedIn's "Embed this post" plays for LinkedIn.
As with every single-post method, it doesn't scale into a feed: each embed is its own snippet, there's no auto-update, and a wall of several posts means several independent embeds on the page.
Method 2: The Threads API
Meta's Threads API, launched in 2024, is built primarily for managing and publishing content through approved third-party apps rather than for pulling a public, read-only feed onto a website. That's a meaningfully different shape from Instagram's Graph API, which does support read access for exactly this kind of embed use case.
The honest assessment: treat Threads today the way you'd have treated X in its early years, or Instagram before the Graph API matured. The tooling is likely to improve; it isn't there yet for a self-serve "show my feed" widget.
Method 3: A moderated wall that already includes Threads (Idukki)
Because Idukki treats Threads as one source among Instagram, TikTok, X, YouTube and the rest, adding it to an existing gallery is a connect-the-source step rather than a new integration project. Posts by handle or campaign tag flow through the same moderation layer as everything else, and the wall itself doesn't need to know or care which platform a given post came from.
Embed on your site
The same gallery mechanics apply regardless of source mix: a Shopify theme block via the Idukki app, a WordPress/WooCommerce shortcode via the plugin, or one script tag anywhere else.
Sources
- 1Meta: Threads API documentation · Scope of the Threads API as a publishing/management surface
- 2Nielsen Global Trust in Advertising · 92% earned-media trust figure (representative)
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