Facebook keeps bouncing me between: – personal profile settings – business portfolio settings – Meta Business Suite – classic Page UI
None of them give the actual option to delete the Page. It’s like the platform actively hides the feature.
And here’s the worst part: I AM the admin. I can publish on the Page. I can edit it. I can manage everything… except delete it.
I get that Meta wants to keep pages alive for engagement and ad data, but blocking users from removing something they own is straight-up abusive UX. No user should have to waste hours navigating four different interfaces to do something basic like “delete a page.”
If anyone has figured out the REAL way to delete a Page in 2025 with the new Facebook UI (which keeps changing), please share. Meta’s documentation is outdated, and their support is nonexistent.
This shouldn’t be this hard.
Someone stole my likeness to harm me or gullible innocent's, this is going to come back to burn me, and there's nothing I can do.
Cool dystopia!
You don't own the page. Facebook owns it. You _authored_ the page, and _gave_ it to Facebook, and now they can do anything they want with it.
I don’t know what they achieve by making their site so unusable. But then a Billion people still use it, maybe I am the idiot here?
Click 1: Open profile switcher
Click 2: See all profiles
Click 3: Choose page I want to delete
Click 4: Open profile switcher
Click 5: Settings & Privacy
Click 6: Settings
Click 7: Access and Control
Click 8: Change radio button from default "Deactivate Page" to "Delete Page"
Click 9: Continue
Click 10: Option to download data, continue.
Click 11: Password confirmation, continue.
Click 12: Confirm deletion, no take backs, do not pass go, do not collect $200.
Laws and regulations are created to help society over the interest of a few corporations or individuals. Without that we have no rights.
With Meta, obvious anti-human decisions are being made that explicitly hurt people.
Why? Because some sociopathic moron thought that was a good idea, instead of just letting users access a feature.
How toxic must their corporate culture be to get this bad?