What happens if I have two Facebook accounts

We’re making it simpler for you to personalize your Facebook experience when you have multiple personal profiles.

You can easily manage who you share things with and what content you view for different aspects of your life by creating multiple personal profiles.

Today marks the beginning of the global rollout of the ability to create multiple personal profiles, which will continue over the coming months.

Select a name and up to four more personal profiles with a @username.

To ensure that every profile has a personalized Feed with pertinent content and shared interests, connect with the individuals or communities of your choice.

You don’t need to log in to switch between your profiles with ease.

Some Facebook features, like Professional Mode, Dating, Marketplace, and payments, won’t be accessible to additional personal profiles at launch.

Initially, messaging will be accessible for more personal profiles on the Facebook website and in the Facebook app.

The default settings are automatically applied when you create a new personal profile.

Each profile has its own set of settings that can be adjusted, such as who can accept friend requests and view the posts made on that profile.

Now let’s discuss will Facebook find out if I have multiple accounts?

You wouldn’t want to have two accounts, though, for the following two reasons. The primary explanation is that it is against Facebook’s Terms of Service for users to have multiple personal accounts. They will therefore close your two personal accounts if they discover you have two.

Facebook does not impose any restrictions on professionals. Without the social network even realizing it, you can create multiple pages for your company. But ought you to?

We don’t advise it for the majority of businesses. There’s only so much time you have in a day to spend on Facebook, so why overextend yourself to manage multiple pages?

The second reason is that managing two personal accounts would be difficult even if it weren’t against their terms. Is there enough content on both platforms for you to feel complete? Where should the distinction be made between the two? Which account will you show your industry-related friend? Rather than drawing boundaries between two aspects of your life, you ought to make use of Facebook’s extensive privacy settings.

Briefly put: Make it easy. Don’t make more pages and accounts than you require.