
Finding posts you've liked on LinkedIn is more frustrating than it should be. A recurring pattern among LinkedIn users trying to revisit their liked posts is that they look in entirely the wrong place — checking their Home feed or Notifications rather than the Profile Activity section. The actual path is: go to your LinkedIn profile → click "View all activity" → select the "Reactions" filter tab. That's where your liked posts live, on both desktop and mobile. LinkedIn doesn't offer a dedicated "Liked Posts" library, and that missing feature is the source of nearly every complaint on this topic.

LinkedIn does not have a dedicated "Liked Posts" tab — it buries your reaction history inside the Activity section of your profile, which is not where most users instinctively look. When you like or react to a post, LinkedIn logs that interaction as part of your post engagement history — a record of every like, celebrate, insightful, and other reaction you've made. The problem is that accessing that record requires navigating through your public profile, not through any menu or settings shortcut.

Post engagement history is LinkedIn's internal record of every interaction you've made with content — likes, reactions, comments, shares, and article reads. LinkedIn stores this data and makes a portion of it visible through your profile's Activity section. The catch: LinkedIn only displays a rolling window of recent activity in that view, and there is no search, filter by date, or filter by keyword. What consistently frustrates users is that the interface gives no indication this limitation exists — you scroll down and the feed simply stops, with no warning that older likes are no longer shown.
Understanding where this data physically lives — inside your Activity section, and more completely inside a downloadable data export — is the foundation for every method covered below.
On desktop, your liked posts are reachable in under 60 seconds once you know the path. Here's the exact sequence:

This is the most direct path to find posts you liked on LinkedIn without any third-party tools or data export. The Activity section is your personal engagement log — it's public by default, meaning your connections can also see your recent reactions. If privacy is a concern, you can adjust this under Settings & Privacy → Visibility → Visibility of your LinkedIn activity. But this setting controls what others see — it does not affect your own ability to view your liked posts history.
Now that you know the desktop path, here's how the mobile experience compares — and where it differs.
On the LinkedIn app, the path to your liked posts mirrors desktop but requires a couple of extra taps. Open the app and follow these steps:
The mobile experience for viewing liked posts on LinkedIn works identically to desktop — same data, same filter logic, same rolling display window. The most common failure mode on mobile is tapping "Posts" instead of "Reactions," which shows only content you've published, not content you've reacted to. Reactions and Posts are different tabs. One tap makes the difference between seeing nothing relevant and seeing exactly what you're looking for.
For anyone who needs a complete history — not just recent reactions — the data export method is the most thorough option available.
LinkedIn's data export is the only way to access your complete LinkedIn liked posts history — including reactions that are too old to appear in the activity feed. This is also the method recommended for a personal branding audit on LinkedIn, since it gives you a structured record of every post you've ever engaged with.
Here's how to request it:

The Reactions CSV file from LinkedIn's LinkedIn data privacy export includes a timestamped row for every reaction you've ever made — the post URL, the date and time, and the reaction type (Like, Celebrate, Insightful, etc.). This is far more useful than the activity feed view because it's searchable, sortable, and complete. Open it in any spreadsheet tool and you can filter by date range, search for keywords in URLs, or identify patterns in the type of content you engage with most. For anyone doing a serious personal branding audit, this file is the starting point.
The data export is the only place on LinkedIn where your full reactions history actually lives — the activity feed is just a preview of recent interactions, not the archive itself.
But even with this knowledge, there are real limitations to how LinkedIn handles your liked posts that are worth understanding before you rely on any one method.
Yes — you can see your likes on LinkedIn, but with meaningful restrictions that LinkedIn has never publicly documented. The activity feed shows only a rolling window of recent reactions; based on observed patterns across active accounts, this window typically covers the last 90–180 days of reactions before older entries stop appearing. LinkedIn offers no pagination, no date filter, and no way to jump to a specific older like within the feed view.
Teams that monitor their LinkedIn activity dashboards closely consistently see the same issue: reactions from more than six months ago simply don't appear in the feed, even though they exist in the data export. This is not a bug — it's LinkedIn's intentional display limit. There are three other reasons likes may not show in your activity:
Unlike platforms such as Instagram or Twitter/X, LinkedIn has never built a dedicated saved or liked-posts library — a gap that frustrates users consistently, and one LinkedIn has not addressed despite years of feedback.
Knowing the limitations leads directly to the most common mistakes — the ones that send users in circles when they try to find their liked posts.
The most common failure mode here is navigating to the wrong section entirely. After observing how users describe their experience in community forums and Reddit threads, four mistakes account for nearly all the confusion:
If you liked a post recently (within the past few months), go to Profile → View all activity → Reactions and scroll. If you liked it more than six months ago, the activity feed may not show it — request a data export and search the Reactions CSV for keywords from the post URL or the approximate date. If you remember the author, visit their profile and scroll their posts — if they haven't deleted it, it will still be there. This is the fastest manual workaround when the activity feed comes up empty.
Finding old liked posts gets much easier when you build a few habits going forward — habits that take less than a minute per post but save hours of searching later.
The single most effective habit is using LinkedIn's native Save feature in addition to liking. Saved posts are stored indefinitely in My Items — accessible any time via the Resources menu in the left sidebar — with no rolling display limit. Unlike the Reactions feed, saved posts don't disappear after a few months.
Think of LinkedIn's Save feature as a personal reading list — it's permanent, searchable by scrolling, and always accessible from the sidebar, while your likes feed is more like a browser history that clears itself automatically. The Save feature is what LinkedIn built for content you actually want to return to; the Like/Reaction is a signal for the algorithm and for the post author, not a filing system.
For users who want a robust system, here's what works consistently across active LinkedIn profiles:
What separates users who never lose track of valuable LinkedIn content from those who spend 20 minutes trying to find a post they vaguely remember is not any special tool — it's the two-second habit of saving alongside liking. Now, here's why the engagement you give and receive on LinkedIn matters beyond just personal record-keeping.
When you like and react to posts on LinkedIn, you're doing two things simultaneously: signalling topical relevance to the algorithm, and building social capital with the post's author. LinkedIn's content distribution model rewards LinkedIn content interactions — the more engagement a post receives in its first 60–90 minutes, the further LinkedIn distributes it beyond the author's immediate network. This means your likes genuinely matter to other creators' reach. In practice, strategic liking of content in your niche increases the likelihood that those creators reciprocate engagement on your posts.
Based on how LinkedIn's distribution model behaves, a post that receives 15–20 meaningful reactions within the first hour is treated differently than one that receives the same number spread over three days. Early engagement velocity — the speed at which a post accumulates reactions and comments after publishing — is the primary signal LinkedIn uses to decide whether to push content to a wider audience. Engagement velocity is the rate at which a post receives likes and comments immediately after being published.
Getting your own posts liked isn't vanity — it's the mechanism LinkedIn uses to decide whether your content deserves a broader audience. Early reactions are the trigger, not the reward.
This is where tools like HyperClapper add practical value. Rather than passively hoping your network engages, HyperClapper connects your posts with real community engagement channels — groups of professionals who react and comment on each other's content. The result is faster early engagement velocity, which pushes posts further in LinkedIn's algorithm without relying on bots or fake activity. HyperClapper's Content Guard system also screens posts to avoid flagging by LinkedIn's moderation filters — unlike aggressive automation tools that can put accounts at risk.

For creators who already spend time liking and learning from content across LinkedIn, pairing that active engagement with a post-boosting strategy creates a two-way visibility loop: you support others' reach, and tools like HyperClapper help ensure your own posts get the early engagement signal they need to reach a wider audience. You can explore how this works at HyperClapper's LinkedIn activity guide.
Get Your LinkedIn Posts Seen by More People
HyperClapper connects your posts with real engagement from relevant professionals — real likes, reactions, and AI-powered comments that trigger LinkedIn's algorithm.
Try HyperClapper FreeYour liked posts live in your Profile Activity section. Go to your LinkedIn profile → click "View all activity" → select the "Reactions" filter tab. This works on both desktop and mobile. The Reactions tab isolates only your likes and reactions, separated from posts, comments, and articles you've created.
Go to your LinkedIn profile, scroll to the Activity section, and click "View all activity." Then select the "Reactions" tab — this shows every post you've liked, celebrated, or reacted to. On mobile, the same path applies: profile photo → View Profile → See all activity → Reactions filter.
Your full activity history is available in two places: the Activity section on your profile (recent interactions only) and LinkedIn's data export. For a complete history, go to Settings & Privacy → Data Privacy → Get a copy of your data → select Reactions. LinkedIn emails you a downloadable CSV within 24 hours containing your full record.
Open the post and look at the reaction count below it — click that number to see the full list of reactors. If your name and photo appear, you liked it. Alternatively, search your Profile Activity → Reactions feed for the approximate time you believe you liked it. The data export is the most reliable check for older posts.
Yes — through LinkedIn's data export. The activity feed only shows recent reactions (roughly the last 90–180 days). For a complete history, request your data archive via Settings → Data Privacy → Get a copy of your data → Reactions. The resulting CSV contains every reaction you have ever made, with timestamps and post URLs.
Yes, but only through the data export — not through the activity feed. The Reactions CSV from LinkedIn's data archive includes historically dated entries going back to when you joined LinkedIn. The activity feed view truncates after a few months. Download your data archive and open the Reactions file in any spreadsheet tool to search and filter by date.