Linked Helper Pricing 2026: Plans, Costs and What You Actually Pay

If you are weighing up a LinkedIn automation tool, Linked Helper pricing 2026 is refreshingly simple on the surface and a little more layered once you read the fine print. Linked Helper is a desktop app that automates connection requests, profile visits, endorsements and multi-step messaging on LinkedIn, and it bills per LinkedIn account rather than per company. That single detail changes the real cost more than the headline numbers do.
In this guide we break down every current plan, what each tier actually unlocks, how the term and bulk discounts stack, and the costs that do not show up on the pricing page. We will also be honest about who should run a tool like this themselves, and who is better served by a fully managed system that delivers qualified meetings without anyone touching the software.
What Linked Helper Is and Who It Suits
Linked Helper is one of the longest-running LinkedIn automation tools on the market. It runs as a standalone desktop application rather than a browser extension, which the company argues is safer because your automation activity is contained in a separate browser environment instead of injected directly into the LinkedIn site you are logged into.
The core job is straightforward. You build a list of target profiles, then Linked Helper works through that list to send connection requests, follow up with messages, visit profiles, endorse skills and pull contact data into a built-in mini CRM. It supports multi-step sequences, so a prospect who accepts a connection can automatically receive a follow-up a few days later.
It suits a specific kind of buyer. Solo founders, freelancers, recruiters and small sales teams who are comfortable with software, want granular control over their LinkedIn outreach and have the time to build, monitor and tune campaigns themselves. If that sounds like you, the price is genuinely reasonable. If it does not, keep reading, because the sticker price is only part of the story.
Linked Helper Pricing 2026: The Plans
Linked Helper keeps its tiers simple. There are two licenses, Standard and Pro, and the price per month drops the longer the license term you commit to. The figures below reflect monthly billing and the annual equivalent, which represents roughly a 45 percent saving.
| Plan | Monthly billing | Annual billing (per month) | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard | $15 / account | About $8.25 / account | Solo users running steady, lighter outreach |
| Pro | $45 / account | About $24.75 / account | Power users who want sequences and higher volume |
Both plans cover the core automation features: connection requests, messaging campaigns, profile visits, endorsements, the built-in CRM and CSV export. There is also a 14-day free trial with no card required, which is generous enough to actually test the workflow before you commit.
The pricing above is current as of mid-2026 and verified against Linked Helper's own materials, but tools in this category adjust prices regularly, so always confirm on the official site before you buy.
What Standard Includes
The Standard license is the entry point and it is more capable than most entry tiers in this space. You get full access to every campaign type, the built-in CRM, CSV import and export and the basic integrations. The trade-off is on limits and depth. Standard caps certain daily actions and gives you a smaller monthly allowance of email finder credits, and some of the more advanced messaging options to groups and events are restricted.
For a solo operator running a measured, steady outreach cadence to a clean target list, Standard is often enough. You are not buying volume, you are buying consistency.
What Pro Adds
The Pro license is where the tool stretches its legs. Pro lifts the daily action caps, expands your monthly email finder credit allowance substantially, and unlocks smart sequences with conditional branching, so your follow-up can change based on whether a prospect replied, accepted or ignored you. It also layers in deeper CRM functionality and priority support with fast response times.
If you are running real volume, managing multiple campaigns at once, or you want logic-driven sequences rather than simple linear follow-ups, Pro is the tier that makes sense. For most serious users, Standard becomes a bottleneck within a month or two.
Per-Account Versus Per-Seat: The Detail That Changes Everything
This is the single most important thing to understand about Linked Helper pricing 2026. A license runs one LinkedIn account. If you want to automate three LinkedIn profiles, you need three licenses. If your team runs ten accounts, that is ten licenses.
So the headline of "$15 a month" is accurate for one person. For a team or anyone managing client accounts, multiply accordingly. Ten Standard accounts on monthly billing is $150 per month. Ten Pro accounts is $450 per month. The math is linear and it adds up quickly.
The flip side is fairness. You are only paying for the accounts you actually run, and there is no per-feature upsell hiding behind a higher "team" tier. What you see is what every account gets.
Discounts for Longer Terms and Bulk Licenses
Linked Helper rewards commitment in two stacking ways, which is unusual and worth understanding.
First, the longer the license duration you buy, the lower the price per month. Licenses come in 1, 3, 6 and 12 month terms, and the annual term delivers the headline 45 percent saving versus paying month to month.
Second, there are bulk discounts when you buy 10 or more licenses of the same type and duration. According to Linked Helper's materials, per-seat costs step down as volume rises, dropping well below the standard annual rate at higher seat counts. Critically, the company states that the duration discount and the bulk discount stack, so a large annual purchase reaches the lowest possible per-account rate.
For an in-house team running many profiles, that combination makes the per-account cost genuinely low. For a single user, the annual term is the only discount that applies, but it is still a meaningful saving.
The Hidden Costs That Are Not on the Pricing Page
The license fee is the part everyone sees. The total cost of running Linked Helper well includes several things the pricing page does not put front and centre.
A LinkedIn subscription. Linked Helper works with a free LinkedIn account, but to reach meaningful volume and targeting you will almost certainly want LinkedIn Sales Navigator, which is a separate cost in the region of the high tens of dollars per month per seat. Verify the current Sales Navigator price directly with LinkedIn, since it sits outside Linked Helper entirely.
Email finder credits. If you want to pull verified email addresses to pair LinkedIn outreach with email, you are working within a monthly credit allowance that differs by tier. Heavy use can mean buying more.
Your time. This is the cost almost nobody prices in. Building target lists, writing and testing message copy, monitoring acceptance and reply rates, adjusting daily limits, handling replies and keeping the account safe is real ongoing work. For a busy founder, the few hundred dollars of software is often the cheapest line item. The expensive one is the hours.
The cost of a mistake. Run automation too aggressively and LinkedIn can restrict or ban the account. For a personal brand or a sales rep, a lost LinkedIn profile is a serious setback that no refund covers.
Value Framing: Is Linked Helper Worth It?
For the right operator, Linked Helper offers strong value. The feature depth is high, the desktop architecture is a sensible safety choice, and at $15 to $45 per account the software cost is a rounding error against even a single closed deal. If you book one qualified meeting a month from it that turns into business, the tool has paid for itself many times over.
The honest caveat is that the tool does not generate results on its own. It executes the actions you design. The outcomes depend entirely on your targeting, your copy, your sequencing logic and your discipline in managing the account day to day. Linked Helper is a precision instrument, and a precision instrument in untrained hands produces noise, not pipeline.
That is the real decision. Not "is the price fair," but "do I want to be the one operating the machine."
Where a Managed System Like LeadHaste Fits Instead
We take a different view of outbound. A single LinkedIn tool is one lever. Real, compounding pipeline comes from wiring many tools into one system and running it with accountability, and that is exactly what we do.
Instead of you buying a license, learning the software, building lists and babysitting daily limits, we build and run the entire outbound operation for you. That means data sourcing, sending infrastructure, AI-assisted sequencing across LinkedIn and email, CRM sync and reply handling, all orchestrated into one machine. You own everything we build, including the domains, mailboxes and sender reputation, so the asset compounds in your favour rather than ours.
The model is built around proof and accountability. We start with a free pilot so you see real buyer conversations before you commit, and our results carry a performance guarantee. If the system stops touching software and starts producing qualified meetings, that is the point. You can see what compounding outbound looks like in our case studies, where month two beats month one and month three beats month two.
The simple way to think about it: a tool like Linked Helper is for people who want to run the system. We are for people who want the results without running it.
Ready to Skip the Tool and Get the Pipeline?
If you are excited to roll up your sleeves and operate a LinkedIn automation tool yourself, Linked Helper is a solid, fairly priced choice and the free trial is the right next step.
If you would rather own a complete outbound system that delivers qualified meetings without you managing licenses, limits and copy, that is what we build. Let us prove it first, at no cost, with a pilot designed around your market.
Frequently Asked Questions
A modern outbound stack includes: data enrichment (Apollo, Clay, ZoomInfo), email infrastructure (Google Workspace, custom domains), sending tools (Smartlead, Instantly), warm-up services (Warmbox), LinkedIn automation (Expandi, Dripify), CRM integration (HubSpot, Salesforce), and analytics platforms. Most agencies use 15–30 tools orchestrated together.
Building your own stack costs $3K–5K/month in software alone, plus a dedicated person to manage it. With a managed service, you get all the tooling plus the expertise to orchestrate it — often at lower total cost. The key question: can you afford to spend 6–8 weeks setting up instead of generating pipeline?
There's no single 'best' tool — it depends on your volume, budget, and integration needs. Smartlead and Instantly are popular for high-volume sending. Apollo doubles as a data and sequencing platform. The real advantage comes from how tools are orchestrated together, not from any single tool choice.
Look for three things: (1) Do you own the infrastructure they build? (2) Do they guarantee results or just charge a retainer? (3) Can you see transparent metrics and real case studies with specific numbers? Avoid long contracts, vague reporting, and agencies that own your domains.
Data enrichment is the process of taking basic company or contact data and adding layers of detail — job titles, direct emails, phone numbers, technographics, intent signals, company size, funding stage, and more. Enrichment tools like Apollo, Clay, and ZoomInfo pull from multiple data sources to build a complete prospect profile before outreach begins.

Dimitar Petkov
Co-Founder of LeadHaste. Builds outbound systems that compound. 4x founder, Smartlead Certified Partner, Clay Solutions Partner.


