Can Twitch Mods See a List of Who’s Been Banned? The Real Answer in 2026
Running a Twitch channel means dealing with chat drama from time to time. Whether it is spam, toxicity, or outright rule breaking, bans are part of keeping things fun and safe. But here is a question I hear from streamers and their teams all the time: can your moderators actually see who has been banned? The short answer is yes, but with some important details that make all the difference in how you manage your community.
Let me walk you through exactly how it works today, so you and your mods stay on the same page without any guesswork.
How Mods Access Recent Bans in Mod View
Moderators do not get a full historical archive like the streamer does, but they can easily view recent mod actions including bans right inside the handy Mod View tool. It is designed specifically for daily moderation, and it is surprisingly straightforward to use.
If you are a mod and wondering where to look, just click the little sword icon at the bottom of the chat window. That is your gateway to Mod View, and it works on any channel you moderate.
Once inside Mod View, scroll down to the panel labeled "Mod Actions." This widget keeps a running log of everything that has happened lately: bans, timeouts, deleted messages, chat mode changes, and even raids. Any recent ban will show up right here, complete with the username and who issued the action.
It is not an exhaustive list of every ban your channel has ever issued, but it gives mods the real time context they need to stay consistent and catch patterns quickly.
Why This Matters for Your Team (and What Streamers See Differently)
Knowing recent bans helps mods enforce rules fairly and spot repeat offenders fast. For example, if someone just got timed out and comes back with the same nonsense, your team can act immediately without digging through old notes.
Streamers, on the other hand, have access to the complete picture. Head to your Creator Dashboard, click into Settings or Community (depending on the latest layout), and look for the "Banned Chatters" or "Moderation" section. There you will find every banned user, who issued the ban, and easy options to unban. This full list is streamer only in most cases. Regular mods will not see it unless you have granted them editor level permissions.
Pro tip: Enable the "Moderator tools in chat" option in your settings so your mods can also pull up a user’s chat and ban history on the spot by clicking their name. It is a game changer for quick decisions during live streams.
Extra Tools That Make Moderation Even Smarter in 2026
Twitch keeps adding helpful features, so here are a couple more worth knowing:
- Mod Actions Widget in Stream Manager Perfect for after stream reviews. It summarizes everything your team did, including total bans and timeouts.
- Suspicious User Controls and Shared Ban Info These flag potential people who evade bans and share ban data across channels. Mods can see these alerts right in Mod View.
- Batch Reporting From the recent actions list, you and your mods can quickly report multiple users to Twitch at once.
These tools turn reactive moderation into proactive community protection.
Best Practices for Streamers and Mods
Communication is everything. When a mod issues a ban, a quick note in your team Discord or the Mod Actions comments goes a long way. Streamers should review the full banned list regularly and share any patterns with the team.
Train your mods to use the /user command or right click options for instant history. And remember, clear chat rules posted in your channel description prevent a lot of headaches before they start.
Whether you are a small streamer building your first mod team or a veteran with a large crew, understanding these tools keeps your chat welcoming and drama free. Got questions about setting up your moderation workflow? Drop them in the comments. I am happy to help.
Stay safe, keep streaming, and build that community you love.


