The best time to post on LinkedIn in 2026 is between 3-8 PM on Tuesday through Thursday, with Wednesday at 4 PM showing the highest engagement. But the right time depends on your content format, audience, and whether you’re posting from a personal profile or company page. Here’s the full data from studies analyzing over 4.8 million posts.
Last updated: March 2026 · Reading time: 12 min
The best times to post on LinkedIn in 2026 are 3-8 PM on weekdays, with a significant shift toward late afternoon and evening hours compared to previous years. Buffer’s analysis of 4.8 million LinkedIn posts (published 2026) found that engagement peaks at 4 PM on Wednesday and 3-4 PM on Friday. This is a notable change from 2024-2025, when peak engagement was mostly confined to morning working hours (8-11 AM).
The best time to post on LinkedIn is the window when your specific professional audience is most likely to be actively scrolling and engaging, which varies by industry, seniority level, and geography.
| Day | Best Time (Peak) | Second-Best Window | Engagement Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monday | 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM | 5:00 PM – 6:00 PM | Medium |
| Tuesday | 10:00 AM – 11:00 AM | 4:00 PM – 6:00 PM | High |
| Wednesday | 4:00 PM – 5:00 PM | 10:00 AM – 11:00 AM | Highest |
| Thursday | 3:00 PM – 5:00 PM | 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM | High |
| Friday | 3:00 PM – 4:00 PM | 9:00 AM – 10:00 AM | Medium-High |
| Saturday | 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM | N/A | Low |
| Sunday | 6:00 PM – 8:00 PM | N/A | Low |
All times are in your audience’s local time zone. If you’re in Mumbai posting for a US audience, adjust to Eastern or Pacific time. Sprinklr’s 2026 data largely confirms these windows, with Tuesday-Thursday as the consistently strongest days.
The shift toward later hours is likely tied to how professionals use LinkedIn in 2026. With 72% of LinkedIn activity happening on mobile (Agorapulse, 2026), users are scrolling during their commute home or after work hours, not during their desk-bound morning.
Yes. Different content formats perform better at different times because they require different levels of attention. A document post takes 2-3 minutes to swipe through. A text post takes 15 seconds to read. The time investment shapes when people engage with each format.
| Content Format | Best Time to Post | Avg. Engagement Rate (2026) | Why This Window Works |
|---|---|---|---|
| Document/Carousel (PDF) | Tue-Thu, 10 AM – 12 PM | 6.60% | Requires focused attention; morning work hours when professionals are in learning mode |
| Native Video | Tue-Wed, 4 PM – 6 PM | 5.60% | Video gets watched during wind-down hours; evening commute on mobile |
| Text-Only Post | Tue-Thu, 7 AM – 9 AM | 2.90% | Quick to read; catches the first-scroll-of-the-day crowd |
| Image Post | Wed-Thu, 11 AM – 1 PM | 2.30% | Midday break browsing; stands out between text-heavy feed items |
| Newsletter | Tue-Wed, 8 AM – 10 AM | Varies by subscriber base | LinkedIn sends email notifications to subscribers; morning email-checking window |
The standout finding for 2026 is document posts. Dataslayer’s February 2026 analysis found that carousel/document posts hit 6.60% average engagement, making them the highest-performing content format on LinkedIn by a wide margin. That’s nearly 3x the engagement of text-only posts. Since LinkedIn removed native carousel uploads in late 2023, multi-page PDF uploads became the standard format, and the algorithm appears to reward the dwell time they generate.
External links continue to be penalized. Posts with links to external websites see roughly 60% less reach than identical posts without links (Agorapulse, 2026). If you need to share a link, put it in the first comment or use the link sticker in a document post.
LinkedIn’s algorithm evaluates your post’s performance during the first 60-90 minutes after publishing (Supergrow, 2026). If your content gets strong early engagement in that window, the algorithm pushes it to a wider audience over the next 48-72 hours. This means posting when your audience is most likely to engage immediately matters more than ever.
Three algorithm shifts in 2026 affect timing strategy:
1. Dwell time outweighs reactions. The algorithm now measures how long someone spends reading your post, not just whether they clicked the like button. A post that gets read for 30 seconds by 100 people outperforms one that gets 50 quick likes (Agorapulse, 2026). This favors document posts and long-form text that hold attention.
2. Comments drive reach more than likes. Comments, especially those that show thought, add context, or start a thread, push posts significantly further than like-only engagement (DesignACE, 2026). Time your posts for windows when your audience has time to write a comment, not just scroll and tap.
3. Mobile-first consumption. 72% of LinkedIn activity happens on mobile. Users spend 7 seconds scanning a post before deciding to engage. Your hook needs to land immediately, and your posting time needs to align with when people have their phone in hand and are ready to scroll through professional content.
LinkedIn also now limits visibility for posts that appear to generate automated engagement (Converse Digital, 2026). Comment pods, auto-liking tools, and engagement groups trigger suppression. Organic engagement from real followers in the first 90 minutes is the only signal that matters.
The optimal posting frequency is 2-5 times per week. Buffer’s analysis of 2 million+ LinkedIn posts (2026) found that accounts posting 2-5 times per week see the strongest engagement per post. Going from once a week to 3-4 times produces the biggest jump in results.
| Posting Frequency | Avg. Engagement per Post | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| 1x per week | Baseline | Minimum viable presence |
| 2-3x per week | 1.5-2x baseline | Most professionals and brands |
| 4-5x per week | 2-2.5x baseline | Thought leaders and active company pages |
| Daily (7x) | Varies; risk of quality drop | Only if you can maintain consistent quality |
| 11+ per week | Nearly 3x baseline | Accounts with dedicated content teams |
The key insight: consistency beats volume. Posting 3 valuable posts per week outperforms 5 mediocre ones. The algorithm rewards engagement depth and content quality, not output volume (Postiv AI, 2026).
Avoid posting on LinkedIn between 10 PM and 6 AM on any day. Weekend engagement drops 40-60% compared to weekday peaks (Birdeye, 2026). Specific windows to avoid:
One exception: Sunday evening (6-8 PM) can work well for thought leadership posts. Professionals planning their Monday often check LinkedIn on Sunday night. AuthoredUp’s 2026 data shows Sunday evening posts sometimes outperform Monday morning posts in terms of day-one engagement.
Every time recommendation in this guide is based on aggregated data across millions of posts. Your audience isn’t average. Your followers have specific work schedules, time zones, industries, and browsing habits that may not match the median.
Here’s how to find your own best times:
Use the general benchmarks in this guide as your starting point. Use your own data as your ending point. Within 8 weeks, you should be posting based on your audience’s actual behavior, not averages.
We manage LinkedIn content for B2B brands. Our approach starts with the general data and gets specific within 30 days. Here’s the process we follow:
Week 1-2: Post using the recommended windows from this guide (Tuesday-Thursday, 10 AM and 4 PM). Alternate between formats to establish baselines.
Week 3-4: Analyze the first 8-10 posts. Identify which day-time-format combinations outperformed. Adjust the schedule.
Month 2 onward: Lock in a posting cadence based on actual data. Re-evaluate quarterly. For most B2B clients, we find that the sweet spot stabilizes within 6 weeks.
“Timing accounts for maybe 15-20% of a LinkedIn post’s success. The other 80% is the hook, the format, and whether the content makes someone stop scrolling. We’ve seen mediocre posts at perfect times get 50 likes, and strong posts at 2 AM get 5,000 impressions because the algorithm pushed them over 48 hours. Optimize timing, but don’t obsess over it at the expense of content quality.”
Hardik Shah, Founder of ScaleGrowth.Digital
One non-obvious finding from our client work: company pages and personal profiles perform differently at the same time. Personal profiles tend to get more engagement in early morning (7-9 AM) when people are scrolling on their phone. Company pages do better at mid-morning (10 AM-12 PM) when professionals are at their desk in work mode. If you’re running both, stagger your posts by 2-3 hours.
This guide aggregates data from the following sources, all published in 2025-2026:
| Source | Sample Size | Date Published |
|---|---|---|
| Buffer | 4.8 million LinkedIn posts | 2026 |
| Sprinklr | Multiple data sets analyzed | 2026 |
| Agorapulse | Algorithm behavior analysis | 2026 |
| Dataslayer | Content format engagement data | February 2026 |
| Birdeye | Cross-platform posting data | 2026 |
| AuthoredUp | Day-by-day posting analysis | 2026 |
Where sources disagree, we’ve noted the range rather than picking one number. For example, the “best hour” varies by 1-2 hours across studies depending on sample composition (personal profiles vs. company pages, B2B vs. B2C, US-centric vs. global).
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Yes, but content quality matters more. Posting at peak times can improve initial engagement by 15-25%, which signals the algorithm to push your post to a wider audience. However, the algorithm distributes content over 48-72 hours, so a strong post at an off-peak time will still perform if it gets early engagement from your core audience. Timing is a multiplier on good content, not a fix for weak content.
Slightly. Company pages tend to perform better during standard business hours (10 AM – 12 PM), while personal profiles see strong engagement in early morning (7-9 AM) and late afternoon (4-6 PM). Personal profiles benefit from the morning scroll, while company content gets consumed during the workday when employees are in professional mode.
Document posts (PDF carousels) lead with a 6.60% average engagement rate, followed by native video at 5.60%, text-only posts at 2.90%, and image posts at 2.30%. Document posts work because they generate high dwell time as users swipe through multiple pages, which is a key algorithm signal in 2026.
Post 2-5 times per week for optimal results. Buffer’s 2026 data from 2 million+ posts shows the biggest engagement jump happens when going from once a week to 2-4 times. Posting 11+ times per week can triple engagements but requires a dedicated content team. Quality and consistency matter more than raw frequency.
Generally no. Weekend engagement drops 40-60% compared to weekday peaks. The one exception is Sunday evening (6-8 PM), which can work well for thought leadership content because professionals often plan their week on Sunday nights. If your audience includes freelancers, recruiters, or content creators, they may be more active on weekends than the average professional.
We build LinkedIn content programs for B2B brands: strategy, content creation, posting schedule optimization, and performance tracking.