RSS to Telegram
RSS to Telegram helps you connect Telegram, RSS and website sources, apply rules, review the publishing queue and keep control over what goes to the channel.
RSS to Telegram helps you connect Telegram, RSS and website sources, apply rules, review the publishing queue and keep control over what goes to the channel.
- 1 Connect sources
- 2 Set rules
- 3 relevant in TGCloner.
RSS to Telegram | TGCloner
RSS to Telegram helps you connect Telegram, RSS and website sources, apply rules, review the publishing queue and keep control over what goes to the channel.
RSS to Telegram helps you connect Telegram, RSS and website sources, apply rules, review the publishing queue and keep control over what goes to the channel.
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1RSS to TelegramRSS to Telegram helps you connect Telegram, RSS and website sources, apply rules, review the publishing queue and keep control over what goes to the channel.
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2RSS to TelegramRSS to Telegram helps you connect Telegram, RSS and website sources, apply rules, review the publishing queue and keep control over what goes to the channel.
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3RSS to TelegramFilters, stop words, signatures and publishing mode help control.
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4RSS to TelegramRSS to Telegram helps you connect Telegram, RSS and website sources, apply rules, review the publishing queue and keep control over what goes to the channel.
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5RSS to TelegramRSS to Telegram helps you connect Telegram, RSS and website sources, apply rules, review the publishing queue and keep control over what goes to the channel.
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6RSS to TelegramRSS to Telegram helps you connect Telegram, RSS and website sources, apply rules, review the publishing queue and keep control over what goes to the channel.
A source map instead of a long theory
Users searching for this topic need a fast, practical answer: where to find sources, which type to pick, and what to do after connecting.
Which sources can you use for a Telegram channel
Different sources cover different needs. In TGCloner they are all managed in one dashboard through the same pipeline: sources → rules → queue → publishing.
Public Telegram channels
Best when the content you need is already being published inside Telegram and you need to track your niche in near real time.
Private Telegram sources
Best when you have access to a closed source via invite link and it plays a role in your channel's editorial flow.
RSS catalog
Helps you get started quickly when you do not yet have a source list and need to build a topical feed from websites, blogs, and media.
Your own RSS link
Best when you already know a specific site, blog, media outlet, jobs section, or corporate source that publishes an RSS feed.
Website / custom scenario
Needed when an important site does not publish RSS, the RSS is too short, or the standard feed does not deliver the right content format.
Which source type fits your situation
The fastest way to decide is by situation, not by technology. Below are the main scenarios people start from when setting up a channel.
Your niche lives inside Telegram
Choose a public Telegram source when your topic is active inside Telegram and speed of tracking matters.
- works well for topical and news niches;
- can be combined with RSS;
- check quality through the queue and processing rules.
You have invite access
Choose a private Telegram source when key content is in a closed channel and using it is appropriate for your scenario.
- works well for closed topical feeds;
- account for source availability;
- best paired with manual review for first posts.
Start with the RSS catalog
The catalog helps you find sources by topic when you have not yet built your own list of sites and feeds.
- works well for a fast start;
- convenient for niche, news, and editorial channels;
- review the first sources for content quality.
Connect your RSS link directly
If you already know the site or blog you want, adding it directly and configuring rules is the fastest path.
- works well for trusted sites and media;
- good for sources with regular publishing cadence;
- if the feed is too broad, use stop words and filters.
Consider a website / custom scenario
If the source matters but has no RSS or the RSS does not work for your needs, the website can be considered as a separate connection scenario.
- works well for important sites without usable RSS;
- requires separate structure evaluation;
- best for sources with consistent long-term value.
RSS to Telegram
RSS to Telegram helps you connect Telegram, RSS and website sources, apply rules, review the publishing queue and keep control over what goes to the channel.
When RSS works — and when it does not
RSS works well when a site regularly publishes structured updates. But RSS does not always solve the full problem.
- RSS suits websites, blogs, media outlets, job boards, corporate news, industry publications, and local feeds.
- The RSS catalog is useful when you need to build a source list by topic quickly.
- Your own RSS link is the right choice when you already know a specific source and its quality.
- RSS is not suitable when the feed is truncated, irregular, too noisy, or the site does not publish RSS at all.
When a Telegram source beats RSS
A Telegram source is stronger than RSS when the content agenda you need lives inside Telegram channels, not on websites.
- When your niche is active in Telegram and fast updates matter.
- When the channels you follow have no website, blog, or RSS feed.
- When you need to monitor several topical Telegram channels in one dashboard.
- When you want to combine a Telegram source with RSS to broaden the content stream.
When you need neither RSS nor Telegram — but a website
A website needs its own connection scenario when the source matters for your channel but cannot be connected the standard way.
- The site has no RSS or Atom feed.
- The RSS only delivers headlines, truncated content, or an unsuitable format.
- The content you need is in a specific section of the site that the standard feed does not cover.
- The source has consistent value for the channel and justifies a custom setup.
What happens after you connect a source
Once you choose and connect a source, it stops being just a link. It becomes the entry point of a controlled publishing pipeline.
- 1 The source delivers new content.
- 2 TGCloner links the content to your Telegram channel.
- 3 Content passes through your rules: stop words, filters, signatures, media settings, and publishing mode.
- 4 Matching posts enter the publishing queue.
- 5 The channel owner reviews the stream if manual control is enabled.
- 6 Posts go live in Telegram immediately, on a delay, or after moderation.
Where this is configured in the product
The screenshots show that choosing a source is a guided, manageable scenario inside TGCloner: adding a source, the RSS catalog, and channel settings with multiple source types.
FAQ
What should I do if I have no source list yet?
Start with the RSS catalog — it helps you find sources by topic quickly. After the first posts come in, review quality and keep only the sources that fit your channel.
What if the site I need has no RSS?
If the site matters for your channel but has no RSS, or the feed is incomplete, it can be connected as a website / custom scenario. Best for sources with consistent long-term value.
When is a Telegram source better than RSS?
A Telegram source is stronger when the content you need is published inside Telegram first — not on websites or blogs. RSS works better for regular site and media feeds.
Can I combine multiple source types?
Yes. TGCloner lets you mix Telegram sources, private sources, the RSS catalog, your own RSS links, and websites. The key is to set up rules and a queue so the pipeline stays manageable.
Next steps
Connect a source and build your publishing pipeline
Choose Telegram, RSS, or a website as your source, set your rules, and review the first posts in the queue before they go live.
Next step: add your channel, connect the first source, and see how posts move through the rules and queue.