Half of LinkedIn's useful features are buried three menus deep, and the other half aren't linked from anywhere obvious. If you've ever gone looking for "the page that shows every post I ever liked" and given up, this is for you.
Below is a cheatsheet of direct LinkedIn links. Each one drops you straight onto a page that's normally a pain to find. Bookmark this so you're not digging through settings every time.
Every link here opens the real LinkedIn page. If you're logged out, LinkedIn will ask you to sign in first, then take you where you were going.
Account settings
LinkedIn settings hide a hundred little knobs that make your experience better, safer, and more private. These are the ones worth knowing.
| Link | What it does |
|---|---|
| Dark mode | Turn on LinkedIn dark mode and save your eyes. |
| Hide everyone's photo | Yes, you can hide every profile picture in your feed. |
| Change your email | Add, remove, or switch the email tied to your account. |
| Reset your password | Change your password without hunting for the option. |
| Merge two accounts | Accidentally made a second account? Here's how to merge or close the duplicate. |
| Hibernate your account | Go fully invisible without deleting your history. |
| Delete your account | The point of no return. Close it for good. |
Privacy and data
Privacy laws gave LinkedIn users real controls. Most people never find them.
| Link | What it does |
|---|---|
| Everyone you've blocked | The full list of people you've blocked. Review or unblock. |
| Who can see your email | By default, your connections can see your email. Change that. |
| Data used for ad targeting | Control which of your data LinkedIn's ads can use. |
| Restrict who can send requests | Getting too many connection requests? Tighten who can reach you. |
Notifications
Clear the noise and keep only the alerts that matter.
| Link | What it does |
|---|---|
| Manage all notifications | Pick exactly which emails and push alerts LinkedIn sends you. |
Your profile
Your profile is seen by everyone you've worked with, work with now, or will work with later. These links control how it looks and who sees what.
| Link | What it does |
|---|---|
| Profile viewing options | Decide whether people see your name when you visit their profile. |
| See your public profile | View your profile the way strangers and search engines see it. |
| Change your profile URL | Customize the link people copy and share. |
If you want to browse without leaving a trace, there's a full walkthrough here: LinkedIn private mode.
Your posts and activity
Time flies, and LinkedIn remembers everything you posted, liked, and saved. These pages let you look back and clean up what no longer fits.
| Link | What it does |
|---|---|
| Every post you've published | The full list of posts you've shared. |
| Everything you've liked and commented on | Every post you reacted to or commented on. |
| Your saved posts | The posts you bookmarked and forgot about. Today's the day. |
| Everyone you've unfollowed | The people you muted from your feed but stayed connected to. |
Analytics
If you post content, these two pages tell you whether anyone's actually seeing it.
| Link | What it does |
|---|---|
| Content analytics | How many people have seen your posts. |
| Audience analytics | How your follower count is growing over time. |
Jobs
| Link | What it does |
|---|---|
| Jobs you've saved | Every job you bookmarked to apply to later. |
| Jobs you've posted | Job listings you've published for a company. |
Groups
| Link | What it does |
|---|---|
| Your groups | Every group you're currently a member of. |
| Pending group requests | Groups you asked to join but haven't been let into yet. |
Connections
Your connections are the most valuable thing you build on LinkedIn. These links help you see and manage them, which LinkedIn makes surprisingly hard.
| Link | What it does |
|---|---|
| All your connections | The basic list of everyone you're connected to. |
| Invitations to accept | Requests waiting for you to accept or ignore. |
| Requests you've sent | Requests you sent that haven't been accepted. Time to clean a few up? |
| Export your connections | Download your connections to a file. Don't expect emails or phone numbers, though. |
Here's the thing LinkedIn won't help you with: the list at that first link shows 10 people at a time, gives you no filters worth using, and no way to remove more than one person without clicking through four screens each time. If you've collected thousands of connections over the years and most of them no longer fit what you're working on, that page is where cleanup goes to die.
That's the gap Network Cleaner fills. You review your connections, select the ones who no longer fit, and it removes them in the background with safe delays that keep your account out of trouble. More on when to remove connections and how to bulk remove them if you want the full picture.
LinkedIn Premium
LinkedIn's pricing pages are a maze. These are the ones you actually need.
| Link | What it does |
|---|---|
| Compare Premium plans | See every Premium tier and what each one costs. |
| Manage your Premium plan | Cancel, pause, or change the plan you're paying for. |
| Contact LinkedIn support | When you've searched everywhere and still need a human. |
Keep this handy
LinkedIn buries its best features on purpose. There's no reason to memorize the paths when you can bookmark this page and come back whenever you need a shortcut.
And if the one link that sends you here is the connections list, you already know it's the weakest page on the site. LinkedIn caps every account at 30,000 connections and gives you no real way to clean house. Install Network Cleaner, review your network, and remove the connections that no longer serve your goals. It keeps a record of everyone you remove, so if you ever change your mind, you can find them and reconnect.