Tips & Tricks
Troubleshooting, how to see websites visited with screen time on iphone & ipad.
With Screen Time, you can keep an eye on what websites are visited and accessed on an iPhone or iPad. This Screen Time capability is completely separate from searching through Safari browser history to find past viewed websites, as it’s intended to keep track of web usage and what sites have been visited, which can be particularly helpful for iPad or iPhone setup for a child, though there’s obviously many other use cases too.
For some quick background, Screen Time is a feature in modern iOS, iPadOS, and macOS versions that allow users to keep track of their device usage, and it doubles as a set of parental control tools to restrict the content that children and other users are able to access on a device. The ability to view the list of websites visited is one such tool that could come in handy especially if you want to block any unwanted websites that are being accessed from the device.
Let’s take a look at how you can view which websites have been visited by using Screen Time on an iPhone or iPad.
How to View Which Websites Have Been Visited on iPhone or iPad with Screen Time
Before you go ahead with this procedure, keep in mind that you can only access this list if Screen Time is enabled on your device. Now, without further ado, let’s take a look at the necessary steps.
That’s how you can see the websites visited on an iOS or iPadOS device with Screen Time. Remember, this only works if Screen Time has been enabled.
It’s worth noting that you can only see the list of websites that were visited using Safari. Therefore, if the person uses third-party browsers like Chrome or Firefox, you won’t be able to keep track of the data. In that case, you can still check that specific browser’s history and then use Screen Time to restrict access to specific websites, or restrict access to a particular app by putting a passcode lock on it or any other restriction you see fit.
When you observe that the user is spending too much time on a specific website, you can set daily limits for that website. Or, if you see that the user is accessing an unwanted site, you can block any website using Screen Time on iPhone or iPad too . Blocking websites using Screen Time should make it inaccessible from any browser and not just Safari.
We highly recommend you to use a Screen Time passcode and keep changing it frequently to make sure the user doesn’t mess around with your Screen Time settings and make unnecessary changes.
Do you use a Mac? If so, you’ll be pleased to know that you can also see the list of websites visited on the Mac using Screen Time in an identical way. Plus, you can also block access to specific websites with Screen Time on macOS if preferred.
Were you able to use Screen Time to see websites viewed from an iPhone or iPad? What other parental control features do you use to restrict the device usage? Let us know your tips, thoughts, and opinions on Apple’s Screen Time in the comments section.
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Related articles:
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- How to Set a Time Limit for Websites on iPhone & iPad with Screen Time
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I would add that the back and forward buttons shown in the 4th screen shot, with the “this week” at the top of the screen are highly useful to narrow down which day you want to check. You can check data usage patterns for specific days or weeks, and it’s very helpful to track habits of loved ones who are misusing/hiding/cheating with the device – such as amount of time, what apps are being used, time of day, etc. I would add that someone could be listening to a podcast or music or the radio while at work, driving, or at school, and it might show up as hours on Safari or YouTube or something, so it’s NOT necessarily that this person is browsing for hours a day. This settings feature is extremely useful to track patterns, catch misbehavior, and to set limits for certain content! I don’t check the history or cache anymore, since people just delete that, and cache (advanced website data) saves all kinds of useless crap that is more confusing than helpful.
Hi. My husband is cheating and he’s clearing all days but it still show on his iPad mini 2 that he was on safari but I can view the website. Is there a way to narrow down the time he was on safari ?
This only shows that he’s using Safari but it doesn’t provide the websites like shown in your screenshot
This only shows me that he’s using Safari it doesn’t list the websites like in the picture.
I was unable to view the websites I recently visited via safari by following the instructions in the article. Is this because I always have private browsing turned in? If so, it could be mentioned in the article, no?
Yes Private Browsing is called private because it does not keep cache, history, or other browsing details on the local device. That is the function of that feature.
However, a connected wi-fi router, ISP, DNS service providers, etc, may still have access to that browsing data via DNS lookups, unsecured data transmission, etc.
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Do you need to check your Safari browser history? In a few simple steps, you can easily view all the websites you accessed in the past. You can also search for specific websites in your history and clear any website data you don't want. This wikiHow will teach you how to view and delete your Safari history on iPhone, iPad, and macOS.
Things You Should Know
- On iPhone, you can click the book icon, then the clock icon to find your Safari history.
- On macOS, you can click the "History" tab, then "Show History".
- You can search for specific websites and clear your history data.
- If needed, you can change your General Settings .
- If you're signed in with the same Apple ID to you use to log into your Mac, your Mac's Safari history will appear in this list as well.
- You may have to swipe down on the History page to find it.
- The results will load as you type.
- You can also swipe left on individual websites in your history, then click Delete .
- Be sure to update Safari.
- If you're logged into the computer with the same Apple ID you use on your iPhone or iPad, you'll also see sites you've visited on those devices.
- A list of matching results from your history will appear. Click a site to load it in Safari.
- Select a time frame from the drop-down menu, then click Clear History .
- You can also delete cookies from Safari .
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You Might Also Like
- ↑ https://support.apple.com/guide/safari/search-your-browsing-history-ibrw1114/mac
- ↑ https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT201265
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iPhone/iPad: 1. Open Safari . 2. Tap the book icon. 3. Tap the clock button. macOS: 1. Open Safari . 2. Click History . 3. Click Show All History . Did this summary help you? Yes No
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Safari - History time stamp?
I am not an expert on Macs so forgive me.
We have a macbook with os 10.4.11.
We can check the History of websites visited in Safari and can get the date but not the time.
Is there a way of getting the time they were visited too?
Indeed there is. It works for me with Safari 5, although I haven’t tested it in previous versions.
Navigate to this folder:
/Users/yourname/Library/Caches/Metadata/Safari/History/
Switch to List View, and sort by Date Modified, and you’ll have a nice neat list of all sites visited, sorted chronologically.
Of course, if somebody has emptied the browser cache, this won’t work.
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How to Manage Browsing History on Safari for iPad
Protect your privacy on your mobile device
What to Know
- Open Safari . Select the Bookmarks icon.
- Choose the Clock icon to open the History pane displaying the list of sites visited during the past month.
- Select Clear and indicate which entries to delete using one of the four options: The last hour, Today, Today and yesterday, and All Time.
This article explains how to manage browsing history on Safari for iPad, including how to view and delete the iPad Safari history, cookies, and stored website data. This article applies to all iPad devices with iOS 10 or iPadOS 13 or later. The process for managing browser history in Safari on an iPhone is slightly different.
How to View and Delete Your iPad Browser History in Safari
Reviewing your iPad browser history is a straightforward process. Safari stores a log of websites you visit along with other related components, such as the cache and cookies. These elements enhance your browsing experience, but you may want to delete your browsing history for privacy reasons.
You can manage your web browsing history on the iPad in two ways. The easiest option is to do it directly in Safari:
Open the Safari web browser.
Select the Bookmarks icon (it looks like an open book) at the top of the screen.
Select the clock icon to open the History pane. A list of sites visited over the past month appears.
To delete a single website from the browser history, swipe left on its name.
Select Clear at the bottom of the panel to reveal four options: The last hour, Today, Today and yesterday, and All time.
Select your preferred option to remove the browsing history from your iPad and all connected iCloud devices.
How to Delete History and Cookies From the iPad Settings App
Deleting the browser history through Safari doesn't remove all the data it stores. For a thorough cleaning, go to the iPad Settings app. You can also delete the browsing history and cookies from the Settings app. Clearing the history this way deletes everything Safari saved.
Select the gear icon on the Home screen to open the iPad Settings .
Scroll down and select Safari .
Scroll through the list of settings and select Clear History and Website Data to delete the browsing history, cookies, and other cached website data.
Select Clear to confirm, or select Cancel to return to the Safari settings without removing any data.
How to Delete Stored Website Data on iPad
Safari sometimes stores additional website data on top of a list of web pages you visited. For example, it can save passwords and preferences for frequently visited sites. If you want to delete this data but don't want to clear the browsing history or cookies, selectively delete specific data saved by Safari using the iPad Settings app.
Open the iPad Settings app.
Scroll to the bottom of the Safari settings screen and select Advanced .
Select Website Data to display a breakdown of the data each website currently stores on the iPad.
Select Show All Sites to display the expanded list if necessary.
Select Remove All Website Data at the bottom of the screen to delete the site data at once, or swipe left on individual items to clear items one at a time.
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How to view and clear your web browsing history in Safari on iPhone or iPad
Easily wipe your browsing history in Apple's Safari web browser in seconds.
What you'll need
How to find your web-browsing history, how to clear your web browsing history.
Clearing your browsing history on iPhone and iPad in Safari has been a straightforward affair for years now.
Sometimes you want to clear your history to get rid of bloat and streamline your browsing experience. Other times, you're trying to hide a gift purchase from a loved one.
Apple makes it very easy to clear your browsing history on both the iPhone and iPad and we're here to show you how. Here's how you can make a fresh start in Safari and debloat your web browsing experience.
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Viewing your web history in iOS 17 and iPadOS 17 is very easy to do, here's how:
- In Safari, tap the Bookmarks button in the toolbar that's below the address bar.
- Tap the History icon in the upper right corner. Here, you can view your entire web history.
- Use the History search bar to find previously viewed pages.
If the time calls to wipe most or all of your web browsing history in Safari, here's how to do it on both iPhone and iPad.
To note, the below steps will be the same if you attempt to wipe your web browsing history on an iPhone 15 Pro Max or an iPad Mini 6 , all Apple devices require the same steps.
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- In Safari, tap the Bookmarks button.
- Select the History icon in the upper right corner.
- Tap Clear and select how much history you'd like to clear: the last hour, the last day, 48 hours' worth, or all recorded history.
One more thing… A feature no one talks about
Privacy on the web matters more than ever in these modern times. Websites store the pages you click on, especially when you sign into a page that can contain personal information about you.
It's great to have a feature like this in Safari — but it would be good to have this automated in iOS 18 . If Apple's web browser could automatically clear history after 24 hours it would be very useful, as you wouldn't leave a trail behind.
Regardless, it's still a good feature, and one you should use every week.
Daryl is iMore's Features Editor, overseeing long-form and in-depth articles and op-eds. Daryl loves using his experience as both a journalist and Apple fan to tell stories about Apple's products and its community, from the apps we use everyday to the products that have been long forgotten in the Cupertino archives.
Previously Software & Downloads Writer at TechRadar, and Deputy Editor at StealthOptional, he's also written a book, ' The Making of Tomb Raider ', which tells the story of the beginnings of Lara Croft and the series' early development. He's also written for many other publications including WIRED, MacFormat, Bloody Disgusting, VGC, GamesRadar, Nintendo Life, VRV Blog, The Loop Magazine, SUPER JUMP, Gizmodo, Film Stories, TopTenReviews, Miketendo64 and Daily Star.
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How To View History in Safari on a PC, Tablet, or Mobile Device
Lee Stanton Lee Stanton is a versatile writer with a concentration on the software landscape, covering both mobile and desktop applications as well as online technologies. Read more July 19, 2022
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Safari for iOS provides a convenient way to keep track of your browsing history. You can use it to call up web pages quickly you’ve visited. You can easily go down the rabbit hole when performing searches online. This makes it difficult to remember exactly where you found a valuable piece of information. Reviewing your browsing history can retrace your steps, saving you the arduous task of finding the data from scratch. This article covers how to see your history in Safari. Check out how to do that below.
How to View History in Safari on an iPhone
Safari stores your browser activity, making it possible to revisit sites at a later date. You could either view your most recent history or check out the entire list of previously visited websites. This is how to do that.
You have now accessed your recent history on Safari.
If you would like to view your complete Safari browsing history, here’s how to do that.
You’ve now accessed your Safari browsing history.
How to View History in Safari on an iPad
Safari allows users to keep track of their browsing history. This feature can then be used to revisit sites that might be of interest. You could either view recent history or peruse all your browsing data. The steps listed here detail how to do that.
You have now viewed the recent history on your iPad.
To view your complete browsing data, follow the steps outlined here.
How to View History in Safari on a Mac
Your Safari browsing history allows you to revisit sites you viewed in the past. You can even use the search tool so that you don’t have to scroll through the entire list of results to find what you are looking for. Here’s how to view your browsing history on an iPhone.
- Click on it to open the page in your browser.
You can now see your history in Safari. If you signed in to your device using the same Apple ID that you use on your other Apple devices, that history would also be displayed on your Mac.
Can You View History From Private Browsing?
Private Browsing is a feature that prevents Safari from storing information on sites you have visited. It ensures there’s no record of your online activity, including passwords or autofill information. It also prevents iCloud from storing data on any tabs that you open. To provide an additional layer of privacy, Safari prevents sites and content providers from tracking you. Any cookies you might have picked up are deleted once you close the tab.
This means that Safari doesn’t store your browsing history when you activate Private Browsing. You will therefore be unable to view it in the future.
How to Clear History in Safari
If your Apple device is lagging or otherwise misbehaving, you might consider clearing your browsing data. This is how to do that.
Your browsing data will now be removed from your device.
Retracing Your Steps
Like many web browsers, Safari stores information on websites you’ve visited. This data can come in handy when you want to go back to a particular site. This guide shows you how to retrieve the browsing history stored on your Apple devices.
Have you viewed your browsing history on Safari? What did you think of the process? Let us know in the comments below.
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Safari User Guide
- Get started
- Go to a website
- Bookmark webpages to revisit
- See your favorite websites
- Use tabs for webpages
- Import bookmarks and passwords
- Pay with Apple Pay
- Autofill credit card info
- View links from friends
- Keep a Reading List
- Hide ads when reading
- Translate a webpage
- Download items from the web
- Add passes to Wallet
- Save part or all of a webpage
- Print or create a PDF of a webpage
- Interact with text in a picture
- Change your homepage
- Customize a start page
- Create a profile
- Block pop-ups
- Make Safari your default web browser
- Hide your email address
- Manage cookies
- Clear your browsing history
- Browse privately
- Prevent cross-site tracking
- See who tried to track you
- Change Safari settings
- Keyboard and other shortcuts
Clear cookies in Safari on Mac
You can see all the websites that have stored cookies and website data on your Mac, and you can remove some or all of it.
Open Safari for me
Click Manage Website Data.
Select one or more websites, then click Remove or Remove All.
Removing the data may reduce tracking, but may also log you out of websites or change website behavior.
Note: Removing cookies and website data in Safari may change or remove them in other apps.
IMAGES
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COMMENTS
NOTE: I'm running Safari 9.0.3 and El Capitan 10.11.3. I've done some research and found some files in ~/Library/Safari. The file History.db file looks possibly promising but I haven't been able to figure out how to find the timestamp from this yet.
Your Safari history is organized by the date you visit the websites listed in your history. Learn more about Safari history here: Go back to webpages you already visited in Safari on Mac. Also, you may find the information in this similar conversation helpful: History time stamp. Cheers! View in context.
The history is saved in a database file named History.db located in Safari folder inside your Library. If you're familiar with SQL you can copy that database file somewhere, open it with the app DB Browser for SQLite, choose Browse Data and select under the Table dropdown menu history_visits.
Select "Library" from the dropdown. Click the "List" view button in the Finder toolbar. 1. Click open the Caches folder and scroll down the list. 2. Scroll down the list and click open the "Metadata" folder. Click open the "History" folder. Look for the item. At the top right corner sort by category.
Head over to "Settings" from the home screen of your iPhone or iPad. In the settings menu, scroll down and tap on "Screen Time". Here, tap on "See All Activity" located right below the graph. Now, you'll be able to see a list of "most used" apps as shown below. Tap on the "Show More" option to view all the data.
The first thing you should see (in the left hand pane) is a list of the tables in the database. Now select Query from the tool bar and enter this query: select datetime(v.visit_time + 978307200, 'unixepoch', 'localtime') as date, i.domain_expansion, i.url. from history_items i left join history_visits v on i.id = v.history_item.
I use Safari on my MacBook. I'm disappointed the History page doesn't show times a site was loaded. How can I view the times that a website was visited? Other answers on this site don't work for me on High Sierra, the path ~/Library/Caches/Metadata doesn't exist.
Open Safari. It's the blue compass icon with a red and white dial inside. You'll usually find it on the home screen. 2. Tap the sidebar icon in the top left. This will open a sidebar with a number of options. 3. Tap the History button. The History option has a blue clock icon next to it.
Here's how to manage Safari's history on a Mac: Open the Safari browser and select History in the menu bar located at the top of the screen. You'll see a drop-down menu with the titles of the web pages you visited recently. Select a website to load the respective page or select one of the previous days at the bottom of the menu to see more options.
For some reason, Safari in iOS dosen't tell you exactly when a website was visited, only relative times, like "this afternoon". Is there any way to find a time stamp on Safari's history? after doing some googling I went to the library->caches->metadata->safari->history and my….
I am not an expert on Macs so forgive me. We have a macbook with os 10.4.11. We can check the History of websites visited in Safari and can get the date but not the time. Is there a way of getting the time they were v…
Select the gear icon on the Home screen to open the iPad Settings . Scroll down and select Safari . Scroll through the list of settings and select Clear History and Website Data to delete the browsing history, cookies, and other cached website data. Select Clear to confirm, or select Cancel to return to the Safari settings without removing any ...
Tap Clear and select how much history you'd like to clear: the last hour, the last day, 48 hours' worth, or all recorded history. To clear History, tap the Bookmarks button, then choose the History icon. Tap Clear than select how much history you'd like to erase. (Image credit: Future / Apple) One more thing….
There's no time stamp for history entries in Safari. Some 3rd party routers maintain an activity log of sites visited. There also exist 3rd party web monitoring programs to keep track of internet usage activity. . To decipher that code to a human time, have a read of this post.
In Safari when you click History > Show Full History, it doesn't show the times, only the date. Does Safari just not record the timestamp information? comments sorted by Best Top New Controversial Q&A Add a Comment. verdi1987 • ...
Open Safari and head to the menu bar located at the top of the page. Tap "History" then "Show All History" to reveal the list of websites you have visited. To find a particular website ...
Safari is not recording browsing history Big Sur I have been using Big Sur for more than a month. A few days ago Safari on my Mac Book Pro stopped recording my browsing history. It has history from 5 days ago, but the only recent history is from my iPad. I have not changed any settings, but I did just upgrade to 11.2.3.
However, I am having trouble retrieve the complete browsing history on Safari. I have done some searches and know that, on Mac, Safari stores history records in these two files : /Users//Library/Safari/ History.plist (storing the "last visit" time of a page and visit count)
To convert the visit_time value in the history.db in an excel spread sheet, open the history.db file in a tool such as DB browser for SQLLite (Windows) and export the history_visits values to a CSV file. Open the CSV file and create a column where you will populate your values in human readable time adjusted to your time zone, and use the ...
Note: Removing cookies and website data in Safari may change or remove them in other apps. See also Prevent cross-site tracking in Safari on Mac Enable cookies in Safari on Mac Clear your cache in Safari on iPhone Clear your cache in Safari on iPad
safari history timestamp I am working with a MacBook Pro running OS Sierra 10.12.6, running Safari version 10.1.2. I am trying to figure out how to find the timestamp for the history of webpages visited.
Safari history timestamp. How do I find the safari history time stamps on macOS Ventura 13.3.1 or 13.4? The safari folder does not seem to have the history.db folder as mentioned in one of the community answers from 4 years ago. ... History time stamp - Apple Community the history.bd file is still there in Monterey. Seems that file is not one ...