LinkedIn Connection Request Limits in 2026: What's Actually Safe?

Chris — Founder, Reachy ·

The short answer: on a warmed-up account in 2026, 80–100 connection requests per week per 100 SSI points is the folk rule, but 15–20 per day with human-like pacing is what actually keeps accounts safe. The longer answer is that the number matters less than the pattern — and that’s what most tools get wrong.

What LinkedIn actually enforces

LinkedIn doesn’t publish limits, but observed enforcement in 2026 clusters around three signals:

  1. Weekly invitation caps — most accounts hit a soft cap around 100–200 invitations per week, lower for new or low-activity accounts.
  2. Acceptance rate — if fewer than ~30% of your invites are accepted, you’ll see the “we’ve noticed you’ve sent many invitations” warning long before any numeric cap.
  3. Behavioral fingerprint — datacenter IPs, impossible click speeds, and 24/7 activity windows are stronger flags than volume itself.

Safe daily volumes by account age

Account stateConnection requests / dayNotes
Brand new (< 3 months)5–10Warm-up mandatory; mix in normal browsing
Established, low activity10–15Ramp up over 2–3 weeks
Warmed-up, active20–30With personalized notes and good targeting
Sales Navigator + high SSI30–40Only with strong acceptance rates

These are the defaults Reachy ships with — up to 80 combined connection requests and messages per day on a fully warmed account, throttled with randomized human-like pacing.

Why acceptance rate beats volume

Every ignored invitation quietly costs you. Two campaigns that send the same 100 invites:

  • Title-only search, generic note → ~20% accept → 20 conversations, and a red flag on the account.
  • Signal-based list (people who commented on a relevant post), tailored note → ~50% accept → 50 conversations, and an account that looks healthy to LinkedIn.

That’s the case for signal-based prospecting: it isn’t just more effective, it’s safer, because acceptance rate is the metric LinkedIn watches most.

The warm-up schedule that works

For a new or dormant account, spread the ramp over three weeks:

  • Week 1: 5 invites/day, plus normal manual browsing (like posts, view profiles)
  • Week 2: 10–15 invites/day, start light messaging to accepted connections
  • Week 3: 20+ invites/day if acceptance stays above 35%

Reachy’s warm-up system automates exactly this ramp per account, so you don’t have to babysit a spreadsheet — and it runs from your own IP, on your own machine, which removes the datacenter-IP flag entirely.

Next step

If you want the limits, pacing and warm-up handled for you — locally, not from a cloud IP — download Reachy free and connect your account. The 14-day trial includes the full safety system, and monitoring stays free after.