How to See Liked Posts on LinkedIn — Quick Guide 2026

How to See Liked Posts on LinkedIn — Quick Guide 2026

How to see liked posts on LinkedIn (step-by-step)

Want to quickly find the posts you've liked on LinkedIn so you can re-engage, reshare, or use them as content inspiration? In this practical guide you’ll learn every reliable way to view and manage your LinkedIn likes on desktop and mobile, what LinkedIn shows (and what it doesn’t), plus time-saving workflows for personal branding and automation with Linkesy.

Primary goal: be able to find any post you reacted to within 60 seconds and turn your saved likes into consistent content without wasting time.

How to see liked posts on LinkedIn

Why seeing your liked posts matters for professionals

Liked posts are a goldmine for personal brands and busy professionals. They show content you found valuable, conversation threads you’re part of, and ideas you can repurpose into posts, comments, or curated roundups. With LinkedIn having over 930 million members globally (see LinkedIn About), keeping track of your interactions helps you:

  • Reshare high-value content with your perspective to increase visibility.
  • Follow up in conversations where you previously engaged.
  • Build content buckets from posts you’ve already approved with a reaction.
  • Audit your engagement to keep your feed aligned with your personal brand.

Quick answer: where to find liked posts on LinkedIn

Short version: open your profile > Activity > See all activity, then filter to find reactions/likes. The exact tab label can vary between "All activity", "Posts", "Articles" or "Reactions" depending on LinkedIn’s UI version and regional rollouts. If you use mobile, open your profile > View activity > Reactions (or check the activity list).

Step-by-step: View liked posts on desktop (most reliable)

  1. Open LinkedIn and click your profile picture (top bar) or go to your profile page.
  2. Under your headline, click Activity. You’ll see a snippet of recent interactions.
  3. Click See all activity (this loads the full activity page).
  4. Look for tabs near the top: All activity, Articles, Posts, Documents. In some accounts there’s a Reactions or Likes tab — click that.
  5. If there’s no explicit Reactions/Likes tab, scan the All activity feed; reactions appear inline and you can use Ctrl+F (or Cmd+F) to search for keywords or the person’s name.

Tip: Use the browser search to find "liked" or "reacted" if LinkedIn labels reactions differently in your area.

Step-by-step: View liked posts on LinkedIn mobile app

  1. Open the LinkedIn app and tap your profile picture (top-left or top-right depending on app version).
  2. Tap View activity (this might be under your profile or a dedicated activity button).
  3. Tap the tabs or scroll the activity feed to find your reactions. Look for a "Reactions" or "Likes" filter if present.

Alternate shortcut URLs and why they may not always work

Some users can access a quick page like linkedin.com/feed/likes or linkedin.com/feed/recent_activity to see liked posts. These shortcuts sometimes work, but LinkedIn updates its routing regularly and regional/feature flags can change availability. Always validate with the profile > Activity method if a shortcut fails.

What LinkedIn shows — and what it doesn’t

  • Shown: posts and comments you reacted to (likes, claps, applause, celebrations, etc.) are usually visible in your Activity or Reactions list.
  • Not guaranteed: Older reactions may be harder to find if LinkedIn prunes activity summaries or if the post author deletes the post.
  • Private reactions: Reactions on private/community posts or posts from closed groups may be restricted by the original post’s privacy settings.

How to manage and use liked posts for personal branding

Finding liked posts is step one — real value comes from managing and repurposing them. Use this mini-workflow:

  1. Scan weekly: review your last 7–14 liked posts and pick 3 that align with your content pillars.
  2. Save or screenshot posts you want to reference later (LinkedIn "save" adds them to "My items").
  3. Turn a liked post into a micro-post: share the original with a 1–2 sentence insight or a critical question to spark comments.
  4. Repurpose threads: if a liked post has a great thread, summarize the top 3 takeaways as a carousel or short thread from your account.

Example templates: turn a liked post into original content

  • Reshare + Add POV: "Shared this because [reason]. Quick take: [your insight]. What would you add?"
  • Thread starter: "I liked [@author]’s post because [observation]. Here are 3 actions to try..."
  • Curated roundup: "3 posts I liked this week and why they matter for [topic]."

Using Linkesy to automate content from liked posts (save 5–10+ hours/week)

If you want to convert your liked posts into a consistent posting schedule without manual copying and pasting, Linkesy automates the process. Linkesy can:

  • Generate post drafts inspired by saved or liked posts while matching your voice.
  • Create AI images that pair with the repurposed content so you don’t need a designer.
  • Auto-schedule a 30-day content calendar that includes curated posts, follow-ups, and original insights.

Try Linkesy free to turn likes into a month of content in minutes: See our plans / Get started.

Common problems and quick fixes

I can’t find older likes — what happened?

Possible reasons: the author removed the post, LinkedIn’s activity view is limited, or the post is inside a private group. If you need a long-term archive, save important posts to "My items" or use a third-party automation to snapshot content when you like it.

Why do I see different activity tabs than colleagues?

LinkedIn rolls out UI and feature updates gradually. Tabs and labels ("Reactions" vs "Likes") can vary by account, browser, or region. Use the profile > Activity > See all method — it’s the most consistent.

Is it okay to reshare someone else’s post?

Yes — reshares with proper attribution and added insight are good practice. Never claim another person’s content as your own; add a clear perspective or a short summary to add value.

Quick checklist: Find, save, repurpose

  • Open profile > Activity > See all activity
  • Filter to Reactions/Likes or use All activity
  • Save posts to My items or take a screenshot
  • Tag posts by theme (use a simple notes doc)
  • Use Linkesy to generate drafts and schedule automatically

Comparison: Manual vs. Linkesy-automated workflow

Task Manual Linkesy (Automated)
Find liked post Profile > Activity (2–5 min) Same, integrated into content pipeline
Save + categorize Screenshot or Save (5–10 min) Auto-saved & categorized (seconds)
Create post draft Write from scratch (15–30 min) AI draft in your voice (under 60s)
Visuals Create in Canva (10–20 min) AI image generation included
Pro tip: If a liked post sparked an idea, capture the idea immediately (voice note or quick doc). Liked content decays fast — turn it into action the same day.

Further reading and internal resources

External references

FAQ

Below are concise answers optimized for quick search results and featured snippets.

How do I see the posts I liked on LinkedIn?

Go to your profile > Activity > See all activity. Look for a Reactions or Likes tab, or scan the All activity feed where reactions appear inline.

Can I see likes I made years ago?

Possibly, but older likes may be harder to find if the post was deleted or if LinkedIn truncates activity history. For long-term records, save important posts when you like them.

Is there a way to download my liked posts?

LinkedIn’s data export includes account activity but may not provide a neat exported list of liked posts. Use manual saving or an automation tool to archive likes in a separate doc or CRM.

Why don’t I see a Likes or Reactions tab?

LinkedIn tests different UI versions. If you don’t see a dedicated tab, use the All activity view or mobile View activity and search within the feed.

How can I repurpose liked posts without copying?

Add original context: summarize the original post, share your learning, list actions, and attribute the author. Turn threads into short educational posts or carousels with your insights.

Conclusion: turn a simple action into consistent content

Knowing how to see liked posts on LinkedIn gives you fast access to a stream of content ideas and conversations that already match your interests. Use the profile > Activity workflow as your default method, save high-value posts, and convert them into original content using templates or automation.

Ready to turn your likes into a 30-day content calendar without spending hours each week? Try Linkesy free or See our plans / Get started to automate post generation, images, and scheduling — all in your voice.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I see the posts I liked on LinkedIn?

Open your profile → Activity → See all activity. Click the Reactions/Likes tab if available or scan the All activity feed to locate posts you reacted to.

Can I view likes from years ago?

Possibly, but older likes may disappear if the author deleted the post or LinkedIn prunes activity. Save important posts to My items for long-term access.

Is there a direct URL to view my liked posts?

Some shortcut URLs like linkedin.com/feed/likes may work for some accounts, but LinkedIn frequently changes routing, so use your profile → Activity for the most reliable access.

Can I export a list of posts I liked?

LinkedIn’s data export may not list liked posts cleanly. Use manual saving or an automation tool to archive likes if you need a structured export.

How can I repurpose liked posts without copying?

Reshare with attribution + add your unique insight, convert threads into a summary post, or create a roundup. Always add perspective to make content original.
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