Date of creation of an Apple ID
Is it possible to determine the exact date and time (if possible) of creation of an Apple ID?
Is there any official or unofficial manner to establish this if you don't have the initial sign up recorded?
apple-id
add a comment |
Is it possible to determine the exact date and time (if possible) of creation of an Apple ID?
Is there any official or unofficial manner to establish this if you don't have the initial sign up recorded?
apple-id
add a comment |
Is it possible to determine the exact date and time (if possible) of creation of an Apple ID?
Is there any official or unofficial manner to establish this if you don't have the initial sign up recorded?
apple-id
Is it possible to determine the exact date and time (if possible) of creation of an Apple ID?
Is there any official or unofficial manner to establish this if you don't have the initial sign up recorded?
apple-id
apple-id
edited Dec 17 at 0:11
bmike♦
156k46282606
156k46282606
asked Dec 12 at 12:00
Nimesh Neema
14.4k43871
14.4k43871
add a comment |
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
You can request a copy of your data that Apple has (Apple ID account and Device Information) by visiting https://privacy.apple.com. It can take up to 7 days to prepare the report and you will have up to 14 days once it's ready to download it before it's deleted.
You will need to login with your Apple ID, password and two-factor authentication token. You will be able to select what data you wish to download.
Select Data to be downloaded...
You will then receive an email from Apple confirming the request...
When you Receive your report.
My report came in 4 days after the request. It was an email message that takes you to a secure Apple website (you must authenticate) and will allow you to download your report.
There were 3 files in mine. The Apple ID & Account Information.csv
is the file of interest.
After opening it in your application of choice (Excel or Pages is probably best), you will find a "Created Date" for your Apple ID in chronological order. So, looking at mine, my ID was created 5/13/2009 (not the actual date, I changed it for this answer). It includes the time as well; select the cell to see the time stamp.
Why so many entries? Everytime you update something, your address, your credit card info, your sharing, etc. it creates an entry. So, you may see many entries for the same Apple ID.
This report will provide you with every bit of information with respect to your Apple ID account info from creation to the last update. A lot of columns were hidden for privacy, but I encourage you to explore the report(s) to see what data is collected.
Thanks :) I have requested the data. I'll update once I have access to the data.
– Nimesh Neema
Dec 12 at 14:01
Thanks for updating the answer and displaying the sample entries :) I am yet to receive my report, but from your update I am assured that the actual date and time of creation can be obtained.
– Nimesh Neema
Dec 18 at 17:21
add a comment |
An indirect way is to search your email archive for messages from appleid@id.apple.com asking for verification of the email address you gave when creating the id.
Thanks. I recall using the Apple ID since 2011. I have purged older emails and no longer have access to the said email.
– Nimesh Neema
Dec 12 at 12:49
add a comment |
There is no way of knowing the exact data when the Apple ID was created:
As far as I know you can't. You can log into your account via the
Store > View Account menu option and see what the earliest purchase
that shows on the account is, that should give you a rough idea of the
date, but I don't that there is anywhere that you can see the actual
date.
Reference: https://discussions.apple.com/thread/6825980
If you are looking for an official answer this discussion is better:
https://discussions.apple.com/thread/7550913
Apple recommended this answer:
I don't think there is a way to find that out. However, you can find
the date of the first purchase you made with the ID: Store > View
Account, and look at the end of your Purchase History to find the
oldest item.
Thanks. I have already gone through the discussion. As it's just a thread on forum and not an official document, I am still looking for any relevant resource.
– Nimesh Neema
Dec 12 at 12:48
@NimeshNeema I found another discussion with the same answer and apple recommended it. I edited my post.
– Daniil Manokhin
Dec 12 at 12:50
I'm +1 this - there's lots of ways and this sheds some light on it's not a simple query or API call that's documented.
– bmike♦
Dec 17 at 0:10
add a comment |
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3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
You can request a copy of your data that Apple has (Apple ID account and Device Information) by visiting https://privacy.apple.com. It can take up to 7 days to prepare the report and you will have up to 14 days once it's ready to download it before it's deleted.
You will need to login with your Apple ID, password and two-factor authentication token. You will be able to select what data you wish to download.
Select Data to be downloaded...
You will then receive an email from Apple confirming the request...
When you Receive your report.
My report came in 4 days after the request. It was an email message that takes you to a secure Apple website (you must authenticate) and will allow you to download your report.
There were 3 files in mine. The Apple ID & Account Information.csv
is the file of interest.
After opening it in your application of choice (Excel or Pages is probably best), you will find a "Created Date" for your Apple ID in chronological order. So, looking at mine, my ID was created 5/13/2009 (not the actual date, I changed it for this answer). It includes the time as well; select the cell to see the time stamp.
Why so many entries? Everytime you update something, your address, your credit card info, your sharing, etc. it creates an entry. So, you may see many entries for the same Apple ID.
This report will provide you with every bit of information with respect to your Apple ID account info from creation to the last update. A lot of columns were hidden for privacy, but I encourage you to explore the report(s) to see what data is collected.
Thanks :) I have requested the data. I'll update once I have access to the data.
– Nimesh Neema
Dec 12 at 14:01
Thanks for updating the answer and displaying the sample entries :) I am yet to receive my report, but from your update I am assured that the actual date and time of creation can be obtained.
– Nimesh Neema
Dec 18 at 17:21
add a comment |
You can request a copy of your data that Apple has (Apple ID account and Device Information) by visiting https://privacy.apple.com. It can take up to 7 days to prepare the report and you will have up to 14 days once it's ready to download it before it's deleted.
You will need to login with your Apple ID, password and two-factor authentication token. You will be able to select what data you wish to download.
Select Data to be downloaded...
You will then receive an email from Apple confirming the request...
When you Receive your report.
My report came in 4 days after the request. It was an email message that takes you to a secure Apple website (you must authenticate) and will allow you to download your report.
There were 3 files in mine. The Apple ID & Account Information.csv
is the file of interest.
After opening it in your application of choice (Excel or Pages is probably best), you will find a "Created Date" for your Apple ID in chronological order. So, looking at mine, my ID was created 5/13/2009 (not the actual date, I changed it for this answer). It includes the time as well; select the cell to see the time stamp.
Why so many entries? Everytime you update something, your address, your credit card info, your sharing, etc. it creates an entry. So, you may see many entries for the same Apple ID.
This report will provide you with every bit of information with respect to your Apple ID account info from creation to the last update. A lot of columns were hidden for privacy, but I encourage you to explore the report(s) to see what data is collected.
Thanks :) I have requested the data. I'll update once I have access to the data.
– Nimesh Neema
Dec 12 at 14:01
Thanks for updating the answer and displaying the sample entries :) I am yet to receive my report, but from your update I am assured that the actual date and time of creation can be obtained.
– Nimesh Neema
Dec 18 at 17:21
add a comment |
You can request a copy of your data that Apple has (Apple ID account and Device Information) by visiting https://privacy.apple.com. It can take up to 7 days to prepare the report and you will have up to 14 days once it's ready to download it before it's deleted.
You will need to login with your Apple ID, password and two-factor authentication token. You will be able to select what data you wish to download.
Select Data to be downloaded...
You will then receive an email from Apple confirming the request...
When you Receive your report.
My report came in 4 days after the request. It was an email message that takes you to a secure Apple website (you must authenticate) and will allow you to download your report.
There were 3 files in mine. The Apple ID & Account Information.csv
is the file of interest.
After opening it in your application of choice (Excel or Pages is probably best), you will find a "Created Date" for your Apple ID in chronological order. So, looking at mine, my ID was created 5/13/2009 (not the actual date, I changed it for this answer). It includes the time as well; select the cell to see the time stamp.
Why so many entries? Everytime you update something, your address, your credit card info, your sharing, etc. it creates an entry. So, you may see many entries for the same Apple ID.
This report will provide you with every bit of information with respect to your Apple ID account info from creation to the last update. A lot of columns were hidden for privacy, but I encourage you to explore the report(s) to see what data is collected.
You can request a copy of your data that Apple has (Apple ID account and Device Information) by visiting https://privacy.apple.com. It can take up to 7 days to prepare the report and you will have up to 14 days once it's ready to download it before it's deleted.
You will need to login with your Apple ID, password and two-factor authentication token. You will be able to select what data you wish to download.
Select Data to be downloaded...
You will then receive an email from Apple confirming the request...
When you Receive your report.
My report came in 4 days after the request. It was an email message that takes you to a secure Apple website (you must authenticate) and will allow you to download your report.
There were 3 files in mine. The Apple ID & Account Information.csv
is the file of interest.
After opening it in your application of choice (Excel or Pages is probably best), you will find a "Created Date" for your Apple ID in chronological order. So, looking at mine, my ID was created 5/13/2009 (not the actual date, I changed it for this answer). It includes the time as well; select the cell to see the time stamp.
Why so many entries? Everytime you update something, your address, your credit card info, your sharing, etc. it creates an entry. So, you may see many entries for the same Apple ID.
This report will provide you with every bit of information with respect to your Apple ID account info from creation to the last update. A lot of columns were hidden for privacy, but I encourage you to explore the report(s) to see what data is collected.
edited Dec 17 at 0:14
answered Dec 12 at 13:14
Allan
42k1360154
42k1360154
Thanks :) I have requested the data. I'll update once I have access to the data.
– Nimesh Neema
Dec 12 at 14:01
Thanks for updating the answer and displaying the sample entries :) I am yet to receive my report, but from your update I am assured that the actual date and time of creation can be obtained.
– Nimesh Neema
Dec 18 at 17:21
add a comment |
Thanks :) I have requested the data. I'll update once I have access to the data.
– Nimesh Neema
Dec 12 at 14:01
Thanks for updating the answer and displaying the sample entries :) I am yet to receive my report, but from your update I am assured that the actual date and time of creation can be obtained.
– Nimesh Neema
Dec 18 at 17:21
Thanks :) I have requested the data. I'll update once I have access to the data.
– Nimesh Neema
Dec 12 at 14:01
Thanks :) I have requested the data. I'll update once I have access to the data.
– Nimesh Neema
Dec 12 at 14:01
Thanks for updating the answer and displaying the sample entries :) I am yet to receive my report, but from your update I am assured that the actual date and time of creation can be obtained.
– Nimesh Neema
Dec 18 at 17:21
Thanks for updating the answer and displaying the sample entries :) I am yet to receive my report, but from your update I am assured that the actual date and time of creation can be obtained.
– Nimesh Neema
Dec 18 at 17:21
add a comment |
An indirect way is to search your email archive for messages from appleid@id.apple.com asking for verification of the email address you gave when creating the id.
Thanks. I recall using the Apple ID since 2011. I have purged older emails and no longer have access to the said email.
– Nimesh Neema
Dec 12 at 12:49
add a comment |
An indirect way is to search your email archive for messages from appleid@id.apple.com asking for verification of the email address you gave when creating the id.
Thanks. I recall using the Apple ID since 2011. I have purged older emails and no longer have access to the said email.
– Nimesh Neema
Dec 12 at 12:49
add a comment |
An indirect way is to search your email archive for messages from appleid@id.apple.com asking for verification of the email address you gave when creating the id.
An indirect way is to search your email archive for messages from appleid@id.apple.com asking for verification of the email address you gave when creating the id.
answered Dec 12 at 12:44
lhf
3,53442227
3,53442227
Thanks. I recall using the Apple ID since 2011. I have purged older emails and no longer have access to the said email.
– Nimesh Neema
Dec 12 at 12:49
add a comment |
Thanks. I recall using the Apple ID since 2011. I have purged older emails and no longer have access to the said email.
– Nimesh Neema
Dec 12 at 12:49
Thanks. I recall using the Apple ID since 2011. I have purged older emails and no longer have access to the said email.
– Nimesh Neema
Dec 12 at 12:49
Thanks. I recall using the Apple ID since 2011. I have purged older emails and no longer have access to the said email.
– Nimesh Neema
Dec 12 at 12:49
add a comment |
There is no way of knowing the exact data when the Apple ID was created:
As far as I know you can't. You can log into your account via the
Store > View Account menu option and see what the earliest purchase
that shows on the account is, that should give you a rough idea of the
date, but I don't that there is anywhere that you can see the actual
date.
Reference: https://discussions.apple.com/thread/6825980
If you are looking for an official answer this discussion is better:
https://discussions.apple.com/thread/7550913
Apple recommended this answer:
I don't think there is a way to find that out. However, you can find
the date of the first purchase you made with the ID: Store > View
Account, and look at the end of your Purchase History to find the
oldest item.
Thanks. I have already gone through the discussion. As it's just a thread on forum and not an official document, I am still looking for any relevant resource.
– Nimesh Neema
Dec 12 at 12:48
@NimeshNeema I found another discussion with the same answer and apple recommended it. I edited my post.
– Daniil Manokhin
Dec 12 at 12:50
I'm +1 this - there's lots of ways and this sheds some light on it's not a simple query or API call that's documented.
– bmike♦
Dec 17 at 0:10
add a comment |
There is no way of knowing the exact data when the Apple ID was created:
As far as I know you can't. You can log into your account via the
Store > View Account menu option and see what the earliest purchase
that shows on the account is, that should give you a rough idea of the
date, but I don't that there is anywhere that you can see the actual
date.
Reference: https://discussions.apple.com/thread/6825980
If you are looking for an official answer this discussion is better:
https://discussions.apple.com/thread/7550913
Apple recommended this answer:
I don't think there is a way to find that out. However, you can find
the date of the first purchase you made with the ID: Store > View
Account, and look at the end of your Purchase History to find the
oldest item.
Thanks. I have already gone through the discussion. As it's just a thread on forum and not an official document, I am still looking for any relevant resource.
– Nimesh Neema
Dec 12 at 12:48
@NimeshNeema I found another discussion with the same answer and apple recommended it. I edited my post.
– Daniil Manokhin
Dec 12 at 12:50
I'm +1 this - there's lots of ways and this sheds some light on it's not a simple query or API call that's documented.
– bmike♦
Dec 17 at 0:10
add a comment |
There is no way of knowing the exact data when the Apple ID was created:
As far as I know you can't. You can log into your account via the
Store > View Account menu option and see what the earliest purchase
that shows on the account is, that should give you a rough idea of the
date, but I don't that there is anywhere that you can see the actual
date.
Reference: https://discussions.apple.com/thread/6825980
If you are looking for an official answer this discussion is better:
https://discussions.apple.com/thread/7550913
Apple recommended this answer:
I don't think there is a way to find that out. However, you can find
the date of the first purchase you made with the ID: Store > View
Account, and look at the end of your Purchase History to find the
oldest item.
There is no way of knowing the exact data when the Apple ID was created:
As far as I know you can't. You can log into your account via the
Store > View Account menu option and see what the earliest purchase
that shows on the account is, that should give you a rough idea of the
date, but I don't that there is anywhere that you can see the actual
date.
Reference: https://discussions.apple.com/thread/6825980
If you are looking for an official answer this discussion is better:
https://discussions.apple.com/thread/7550913
Apple recommended this answer:
I don't think there is a way to find that out. However, you can find
the date of the first purchase you made with the ID: Store > View
Account, and look at the end of your Purchase History to find the
oldest item.
edited Dec 12 at 12:50
answered Dec 12 at 12:04
Daniil Manokhin
1,450324
1,450324
Thanks. I have already gone through the discussion. As it's just a thread on forum and not an official document, I am still looking for any relevant resource.
– Nimesh Neema
Dec 12 at 12:48
@NimeshNeema I found another discussion with the same answer and apple recommended it. I edited my post.
– Daniil Manokhin
Dec 12 at 12:50
I'm +1 this - there's lots of ways and this sheds some light on it's not a simple query or API call that's documented.
– bmike♦
Dec 17 at 0:10
add a comment |
Thanks. I have already gone through the discussion. As it's just a thread on forum and not an official document, I am still looking for any relevant resource.
– Nimesh Neema
Dec 12 at 12:48
@NimeshNeema I found another discussion with the same answer and apple recommended it. I edited my post.
– Daniil Manokhin
Dec 12 at 12:50
I'm +1 this - there's lots of ways and this sheds some light on it's not a simple query or API call that's documented.
– bmike♦
Dec 17 at 0:10
Thanks. I have already gone through the discussion. As it's just a thread on forum and not an official document, I am still looking for any relevant resource.
– Nimesh Neema
Dec 12 at 12:48
Thanks. I have already gone through the discussion. As it's just a thread on forum and not an official document, I am still looking for any relevant resource.
– Nimesh Neema
Dec 12 at 12:48
@NimeshNeema I found another discussion with the same answer and apple recommended it. I edited my post.
– Daniil Manokhin
Dec 12 at 12:50
@NimeshNeema I found another discussion with the same answer and apple recommended it. I edited my post.
– Daniil Manokhin
Dec 12 at 12:50
I'm +1 this - there's lots of ways and this sheds some light on it's not a simple query or API call that's documented.
– bmike♦
Dec 17 at 0:10
I'm +1 this - there's lots of ways and this sheds some light on it's not a simple query or API call that's documented.
– bmike♦
Dec 17 at 0:10
add a comment |
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