Why Proxies Matter
LinkedIn monitors login patterns closely. When an account suddenly starts logging in from a data-center IP address, or switches between multiple IP addresses in a short window, LinkedIn’s security systems flag it as suspicious. That can mean a checkpoint, a temporary restriction, or — in repeated cases — a permanent account ban. A residential proxy routes your account’s activity through a real home or office internet connection belonging to an actual ISP. From LinkedIn’s perspective, your account is simply a person working from their house or office — not a server running automation software.Consistent Identity
Your account always connects from the same IP address, building a stable login history that LinkedIn trusts over time.
Residential ISP
The IP belongs to a real residential ISP, not a cloud provider or data center. LinkedIn does not flag residential IPs the same way it flags server IPs.
Geographic Matching
Proxies are available in US, UK, EU, CA, and other regions so your account’s apparent location can match your target audience’s geography.
Dedicated, Not Shared
Each account gets its own unique proxy. Your account is never grouped with other users on a shared IP, which eliminates guilt-by-association risk.
How Proxy Assignment Works
Proxy assignment is fully automatic. The moment you successfully authenticate a LinkedIn account in LinkInList, the system selects and reserves a dedicated residential IP for that account. You do not need to source, configure, or rotate proxies yourself. To view the proxy details for any account:- Go to Accounts in the left nav.
- Click the account name to open its detail page.
- Scroll to the Proxy section. You will see the assigned IP region, proxy type (residential), and current connection status.
Bring Your Own Proxy
Advanced users who already have a preferred proxy provider can supply their own proxy instead of using LinkInList’s default assignment.The bring-your-own-proxy (BYOP) option is available on all paid plans. LinkInList supports HTTP/HTTPS and SOCKS5 proxy protocols. To use BYOP, go to Account Settings → Proxy → Use Custom Proxy and enter your proxy host, port, and credentials.
- Use a residential or mobile proxy — data-center IPs carry significantly higher detection risk with LinkedIn.
- Use a dedicated (not rotating) IP for each account. Rotating IPs change the apparent location of the account with every request, which LinkedIn treats as suspicious.
- Make sure the proxy allows outbound connections to
linkedin.comon ports 443 and 80. - If your proxy provider rotates IPs on a session basis, configure a “sticky session” setting to lock the IP for the duration of each LinkInList session.
What Account Warm-up Is
Even with a clean residential proxy, jumping from zero activity to 50 connection requests a day is a red flag. LinkedIn’s algorithms learn what “normal” looks like for each account. A brand-new or recently reconnected account with no activity history that suddenly sends dozens of messages a day looks automated — because most humans do not behave that way. Warm-up is the process of gradually increasing your account’s daily activity over two to three weeks. LinkInList handles this automatically. It starts with a small number of profile views, connection requests, and light engagement actions each day, then incrementally raises those limits on a schedule that mirrors natural human ramp-up behavior. By the end of warm-up, LinkedIn’s systems have observed weeks of consistent, human-like activity — and your account has earned the trust to run full-volume campaigns safely.Warm-up Schedule Overview
The following table shows LinkInList’s default warm-up activity limits. These are illustrative defaults — your actual schedule may be adjusted slightly based on your account’s age, existing connections, and prior activity history on LinkedIn.| Week | Connection Requests / Day | Profile Views / Day | Messages / Day |
|---|---|---|---|
| Week 1 | 5 – 10 | 15 – 25 | 5 – 8 |
| Week 2 | 10 – 20 | 25 – 40 | 8 – 15 |
| Week 3 | 20 – 30 | 40 – 60 | 15 – 25 |
| Post warm-up (Active) | Up to 40 | Up to 80 | Up to 40 |
Monitoring Warm-up Progress
You can track exactly where your account sits in the warm-up schedule at any time.Open the Account detail page
Go to Accounts in the left nav and click the account name you want to check.
Find the Warm-up Progress section
On the account detail page, scroll to Warm-up Progress. You will see a timeline bar showing completed days, the current day, and estimated completion date.
Review daily activity logs
Click View Activity Log to see a day-by-day breakdown of actions taken, limits applied, and whether the previous day hit, missed, or exceeded its targets.
Best Practices During Warm-up
Following these guidelines during the warm-up period gives your account the best possible foundation for long-term, high-volume outreach. Avoid manual logins from other devices. Every login from a different IP is a signal to LinkedIn that something unusual is happening. Keep all activity routed through LinkInList’s proxy during warm-up. If you need to check LinkedIn manually, do it from the same browser session where possible — or wait until warm-up completes. Do not import large lead lists yet. You can import contacts and set up campaigns during warm-up, but do not activate campaigns until your account status reaches Active. Queueing up work in advance is fine; firing it all at once before warm-up is complete is not. Keep your LinkedIn profile complete and realistic. A polished profile — photo, headline, about section, work history — reduces the chance LinkedIn flags your account during the initial ramp-up. Accounts that look incomplete are more likely to face checkpoints. Do not pause and restart warm-up unnecessarily. Pausing your account during warm-up stops the daily activity counter. If the pause lasts more than a few days, LinkInList may reset the warm-up schedule to a slightly earlier point to reestablish the trust signal before advancing again. Let the system run at its own pace. The warm-up schedule is calibrated based on patterns that have protected thousands of accounts. Resist the urge to manually increase limits or skip ahead — the couple of weeks you invest in warm-up pay off with a long-lived, healthy account that can sustain months of outreach at scale.Accounts that were previously active on LinkedIn (with an established connection history and regular prior usage) often complete warm-up faster than brand-new accounts. LinkInList evaluates your account’s existing activity history at connection time and may compress the warm-up timeline accordingly.