After digging into millions of posts sent through Buffer, we’ve pinpointed the best time to post on all major social platforms for maximum engagement — LinkedIn included.
And our latest data is a testament to LinkedIn’s ongoing evolution from job search tool to social network.
In 2025, peak time slots were confined almost exclusively to working hours, dropping off pretty sharply at 5 p.m. In 2026, we’ve seen those peak times shifted later in the day, mimicking what we’re seeing on other social platforms like Instagram and TikTok.
Late afternoon and evening hours are now the sweet spot for LinkedIn engagement.
While LinkedIn is still the go-to network for professionals, many users are now engaging with content outside traditional work hours, perhaps as they wind down their day or catch up on industry news in the evening.
But I’m getting ahead of myself here! Let’s take a stroll through some stats.
Key Takeaways
- Peak hours: Late afternoon and evening hours (3 p.m.–8 p.m.) now drive the highest engagement on LinkedIn
- Top slots: Wednesday at 4 p.m., Friday at 3 p.m., and Friday at 4 p.m. are the highest-performing times
- Best day: Wednesday is the optimal day to post, closely followed by Thursday and Friday
- Early-week dip: Monday and Tuesday see the lowest engagement; save your best content for mid-to-late week
Is there a best time to post on LinkedIn?
After analyzing more than 4.8 million LinkedIn posts sent through Buffer, we were able to pinpoint some clear posting times when content tended to get higher engagement than others.
So, your LinkedIn content is more likely to get engagement in these windows, whether you’re looking to grow a LinkedIn Page for a brand or your own personal brand with a LinkedIn profile.
Engagement is a particularly useful benchmark when it comes to identifying the best time to post on LinkedIn. The platform’s algorithm uses interactions — reactions, comments, and reposts — as signals to help it decide which posts are valuable and should be shown to more people.
In other words: The more engagement your post receives, the more people will see your post. It’s a simplistic way of putting things since there are loads of factors that determine how posts are ranked in feeds, but it’s a solid rule of thumb.
This is why we consider time slots in which posts got the highest engagement to be the best time to post on LinkedIn.
But — and here’s the rub — every target audience is different.
As I always do in these articles on the best time to post on social media, I advise experimenting with your schedule as part of your LinkedIn marketing strategy, then digging into your social media analytics to uncover your unique best time to post and make the most of the LinkedIn algorithm.
We’ll get into how to do that below.
First, here’s a deep dive into Buffer’s data on the best time to post on LinkedIn in 2026.
The best time to post on LinkedIn for engagement
The best time to post on LinkedIn for high engagement is generally during late afternoon and evening hours, between 3 p.m. and 8 p.m. on weekdays. Posts shared at 4 p.m. on Wednesday, and at 3 p.m. and 4 p.m. on Friday tend to get the most engagement overall.

You can see it all pretty clearly in the graph above. It breaks down the week into hourly chunks, where the darkest blocks are the time slots with the highest engagement (and the best time to post on LinkedIn), and the light to white blocks are the time slots with the lowest engagement.
The shift toward evening engagement on LinkedIn is a little different to what we saw in 2025, when the best posting times were exclusively within working hours.
While the platform is still primarily used by professionals, we’re seeing that many users are now engaging with content after traditional work hours — perhaps during their commute home, while relaxing in the evening, or catching up on industry news before bed.
As you’ll see from the graph above, engagement picks up in the afternoon and remains strong through the evening hours. Unlike other social platforms where evening slots have always performed well, this represents a notable shift in LinkedIn behavior.
Posts shared during traditional morning hours (6 a.m.–11 a.m.) now tend to see lower engagement compared to afternoon and evening slots.
The best times to post on LinkedIn for each day of the week
- Monday: 10 p.m., 5 p.m., 9 p.m.
- Tuesday: 4 p.m., 5 p.m., 10 p.m.
- Wednesday: 4 p.m., 3 p.m., 5 p.m.
- Thursday: 5 p.m., 7 p.m., 9 p.m.
- Friday: 3 p.m., 4 p.m., 5 p.m.
- Saturday: 9 a.m., 6 p.m., 10 p.m.
- Sunday: 10 p.m., 9 p.m., 6 a.m.
🌍 Wait, what time zone? To make this data easier to understand, our data scientist Bufferoo has done some mathematical magic to make the recommended time zones universally applicable. In other words, no need to convert. Whether you’re in EST (Eastern Standard Time), PST (Pacific Standard Time), or IST (Indian Standard Time), the times apply to you.
The best time to post on LinkedIn on Monday
The best time to post on LinkedIn on Monday is 10 p.m., as professionals catch up on content after their workday. If you’re looking for more Monday slots to add to your posting schedule, LinkedIn posts shared at 5 p.m. and 9 p.m. also saw higher engagement than the rest of the day.
That said, Monday overall tends to see lower engagement compared to mid-week, so consider saving your highest-priority content for Wednesday through Friday.
The best time to post on LinkedIn on Tuesday
The best time to post on LinkedIn on Tuesday is at 4 p.m., as users begin wrapping up their workday and checking their feeds. If you need more optimal posting times to choose from, 5 p.m. is not far off in terms of engagement, as is 10 p.m.
Like Monday, Tuesday sees slightly lower overall engagement, so it’s worth testing these times with your audience before committing to a regular Tuesday schedule.
The best time to post on LinkedIn on Wednesday
The best time to post on LinkedIn on Wednesday is 4 p.m. — this is actually one of the highest-engagement time slots of the entire week. Other optimal posting times for Wednesday are 3 p.m. and 5 p.m., giving you a solid afternoon-to-early-evening window.
Wednesday is your best day overall for LinkedIn engagement, so this is a great day to share your most important content.
The best time to post on LinkedIn on Thursday
The best time to post on LinkedIn on Thursday is 5 p.m. Posts shared during the late afternoon and evening hours tend to perform well, so this time is definitely worth adding to your content calendar. If you need more times on Thursday, 7 p.m. is also strong, and 9 p.m. is worth considering for reaching users who engage later in the evening.
The best time to post on LinkedIn on Friday
The best time to post on LinkedIn on Friday is 3 p.m. — right as professionals are starting to wind down their week. Other strong contenders for your posting schedule are 4 p.m. and 5 p.m., respectively.
Friday is one of your best days for engagement, so don’t skip it just because it’s the end of the work week!
The best time to post on LinkedIn on Saturday
The best time to post on LinkedIn on Saturday is 9 a.m. That said, posts shared on Saturday tend to see less engagement on the platform, so consider scheduling your content for a weekday instead. If you must post on Saturday, our data showed that 9 a.m. tends to get the highest engagement, followed by 6 p.m. and 10 p.m.
The best time to post on LinkedIn on Sunday
The best time to post on LinkedIn on Sunday is at 10 p.m. Still, content shared on Sundays sees lower engagement compared to weekdays, and this slot is definitely not your best option if you’re hoping to boost post interactions. If posting on Sunday is unavoidable, late evening is your best bet. Other times to consider are 9 p.m. and 6 a.m.
⚡ Cross-platform timing: Just as there’s no one-size-fits-all best time to post, there’s no single best time to post across all social platforms. Here’s the best time to post on Instagram, the best time to post on Facebook, and the best time to post on TikTok.
The best day to post on LinkedIn
The best day of the week to post on LinkedIn is Wednesday. We found that posts shared on Wednesday tended to get the most engagement, closely followed by Thursday, then Friday.

This mid-to-late week pattern makes sense — by Wednesday, professionals are fully engaged with their work week and actively seeking valuable content, but they’re not yet in weekend mode.
Monday and Tuesday, on the other hand, are the worst days to post on LinkedIn. Our data found that Monday sees the lowest engagement of the week, with Tuesday not far behind.
This represents a shift from what we’ve seen in previous years, and it suggests that professionals may be using the early part of their week to focus on heads-down work rather than social media engagement.
Get the best times to post on LinkedIn right in Buffer
One of my favorite new Buffer features is the ability to get this data right in Buffer. And, the best part — you can have your posting schedule automatically set to these times.
That goes for all the other channels that Buffer supports too. They’ll appear as posting slots in your queue and calendar, making it super easy for you to schedule posts at the best times.
It’ll take you less than a minute to set up:
- Select LinkedIn on your channels list on the left.
- Click on the settings (gear) icon above the calendar.
- Scroll to Posting Schedule and under Posting Times, click the Generate New Posting Times button.
- Then Use Recommended Posting Times.



The schedule will automatically update to include the best posting times for the week, based on our latest analysis of millions of LinkedIn posts.
The next time you schedule a post, you can click one of these high-engagement slots in your calendar or list view, or just hit ‘Next available’ to add it to the next available slot.
How to find the best time to post on LinkedIn for your audience
The optimal timings above can form a helpful guide if you’re just building your LinkedIn social media marketing strategy. Still, they’re no substitute for figuring out your own best time to post.
The native LinkedIn Analytics will surface your top-performing posts over a specific time for both pages and profiles, which might allow you to pinpoint some patterns and figure out your personal best time to post on LinkedIn.
However, you’ll need a record of exactly when you posted a specific piece of content — like a social media management tool or social media content calendar — to refer back to.
LinkedIn Analytics won’t show you detailed timings on published content after the fact. The best the LinkedIn timestamp will tell you is “3h” or “2d” (to indicate you posted the content three hours or two days ago, etc.)

Luckily, if you have a LinkedIn Page connected to Buffer, there’s a much simpler way to figure out your best time to post content.
In fact, with enough data, Buffer will tell you.
Through Buffer’s Analytics, you can see an overview of what day, type of post, and frequency is best for each of your connected channels. Here’s how to find yours in Buffer:
- Sign in to Buffer on your desktop and click Analytics on the left menu.
- Click LinkedIn under the Channels in the left-side menu.
- Click Answers.
For example, we know the Buffer LinkedIn page’s best day to post is Monday, with video and one daily post working really well for us now.


Best time to post on LinkedIn FAQs
Here are some of the most commonly asked questions about when to post on LinkedIn.
Does the time you post on LinkedIn actually matter?
Our data — based on over 4.8 million LinkedIn posts — shows that yes, timing does make a difference. Posts shared during high-engagement windows (particularly late afternoon and evening hours on weekdays) consistently outperformed those posted at off-peak times.
That said, timing isn’t a magic fix. Posting at 4 p.m. on a Wednesday won’t rescue a post that isn’t relevant or valuable to your audience. Think of optimal posting times as a helpful boost on top of a solid content strategy, not a substitute for one.
When is the worst time to post on LinkedIn?
Based on our data, the worst times to post on LinkedIn are overnight (roughly midnight to 5 a.m.) and during the early morning hours on Mondays and Tuesdays. The start of the work week tends to see the lowest overall engagement — professionals appear to be focused on heads-down work rather than scrolling their feeds.
If you want to maximize your chances of being seen, save your best content for Wednesday through Friday afternoons.
Is LinkedIn engagement higher in the morning or evening?
Our latest data shows that evening hours now outperform mornings on LinkedIn. Posts shared between 3 p.m. and 8 p.m. on weekdays consistently see higher engagement than those shared in the morning — a notable shift from what we saw in previous years, when traditional work hours dominated.
The theory? Professionals are increasingly catching up on LinkedIn content after work, during their commute home, or while unwinding in the evening.
What’s the best time to post on LinkedIn on weekends?
If you need to post on a weekend, Saturday at 9 a.m. is your best bet. Sunday late evening (around 10 p.m.) also shows some activity. That said, both days see significantly lower engagement than weekdays — so if you have flexibility, it’s worth holding your content until Monday at the earliest (and ideally Wednesday).
Do these posting times apply to my time zone?
Yes — our data scientist has crunched the numbers so that the recommended times are universally applicable. You don’t need to convert anything. Whether you’re posting from New York, London, or Mumbai, 4 p.m. means 4 p.m. in your local time zone.
How often should I post on LinkedIn?
Posting frequency is a separate (and equally important) question from timing — and we have data on that too. Buffer analyzed over 2 million LinkedIn posts to figure out the sweet spot, and the findings are pretty clear.
Posting 2 to 5 times per week is where most creators and brands should start. That cadence alone delivers around 1,182 more impressions per post and a 0.23 percentage point lift in engagement rate compared to posting just once a week — which is the point where LinkedIn’s algorithm seems to recognize you as active and starts distributing your content more widely.
If you can sustain it, posting 6 to 10 times per week pushes those gains further (+5,001 impressions per post), and at 11+ posts per week the lift is dramatic — nearly 17,000 more impressions per post and 3x more engagements. The good news is that these results hold regardless of your audience size, whether you have 500 followers or 50,000.
What type of content performs best on LinkedIn?
According to our data, carousel (Document) posts generate up to 596% more engagement than text-only posts — making them the standout format on the platform right now. Beyond format, content that offers genuine insight, professional value, or a unique perspective tends to do well on LinkedIn. For a deeper look at what’s working, check out our guide to the LinkedIn algorithm.
















