We automate LinkedIn. We do it as carefully as it can be done.
Applying runs real LinkedIn actions for you: connection requests, messages, profile views, and applications. We are not going to pretend that is risk free. What we can do is run it the way a careful human would, inside strict limits, and stop the moment something looks wrong. Here is exactly how.
Read this before you turn it on.
Automating LinkedIn is against LinkedIn's User Agreement. LinkedIn looks for automation and can restrict or permanently ban accounts that use it. No tool, ours included, can guarantee your account stays safe. Our limits and pacing meaningfully lower the odds of a restriction; they do not remove them. You are accepting real risk to your own LinkedIn account in exchange for the time it saves. We think that trade is yours to make with full information, not ours to hide.
Five measures, on by default.
Each LinkedIn account runs through its own residential proxy, a real consumer connection rather than a datacenter IP. That is the single biggest tell automation gives off, so every account looks like one person on their own home network, not a server farm. Proxies are not shared between accounts.
Actions run inside limits set well below what triggers LinkedIn spam filters. Caps are visible, enforced server-side, and you are warned before raising any of them past a safe threshold.
Every action sits inside a believable session: randomized delays, working-hours windows in your timezone, a daily ramp-up for newer accounts, and idle gaps. Nothing fires in robotic bursts.
You decide which actions are queued and to whom. Every action, draft, and outcome writes an audit row you can read, export, and delete. Nothing happens off the record.
A captcha, a rate banner, an unexpected modal, or an acceptance rate dropping too low pauses your automation automatically instead of pushing through and digging a deeper hole.
You decide the volume, and you can see all of it.
Caps default low. You can raise them, and the product will warn you when you cross into territory that LinkedIn is more likely to flag. Every action your automation takes is logged with a timestamp and an outcome, so you are never guessing what ran on your account. If you want to slow down, pause, or stop entirely, that is one click, and replies always stop a sequence on their own.
Create a workspace, keep the caps low at first, and see exactly what runs on your account before you turn the volume up.
Create your workspaceFree to start. No card. Your data stays yours.