LinkedIn InMail now costs $21 per extra credit (up from $3). Full breakdown of InMail pricing per plan, credits included, cost per message.
If you've been using LinkedIn InMail as part of your recruiting workflow, you probably noticed the price shock at the end of 2025. LinkedIn quietly raised the cost of purchasing additional InMail credits from $3 to $21 per credit. That's not a typo. Seven times more expensive, overnight.
For solo recruiters and small agencies who relied on buying extra InMail credits to fuel their outreach, this was a gut punch. For larger teams already paying for Recruiter seats, it changed the math on how they think about candidate outreach entirely.
This guide covers everything you need to know about LinkedIn InMail pricing in 2026: what each plan includes, how credits work, the real cost per response, and practical alternatives that might save your budget.
InMail is LinkedIn's built-in messaging feature that lets you contact anyone on the platform, even people outside your network. Unlike connection requests (which have a 300-character note limit and require acceptance), InMails land directly in the recipient's LinkedIn inbox with a full subject line and message body.
There are three types of InMail:
For recruiters, we're mostly talking about the second type: the credits that come with your LinkedIn subscription, and what happens when you run out.
In mid-2025, LinkedIn announced that the cost of purchasing additional InMail credits would increase from $3 to $21 per credit, effective October 2025. The 700% increase sent shockwaves through recruiting communities on Reddit, LinkedIn itself, and every HR tech blog.
LinkedIn's reasoning? They want to reduce InMail spam and encourage higher-quality outreach. The idea is that if each InMail costs more, recruiters will think twice before sending generic "I came across your profile" messages to hundreds of candidates.
There's a business angle too. By making additional credits painfully expensive, LinkedIn is pushing users toward higher-tier subscriptions that include more bundled InMails. If you need 100 InMails a month, it's now far cheaper to upgrade to Recruiter than to buy credits individually on a Sales Navigator plan.
The credits that come bundled with your subscription didn't change in quantity. You still get the same number of InMails per month on each plan. What changed is the penalty for running out.
Here's what every LinkedIn plan costs and how many InMail credits you get in 2026:
| LinkedIn Plan | Monthly Price (approx.) | InMails / Month | Max Accumulation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Free | $0 | 0 | 0 |
| Premium Career | $30/mo | 5 | 15 |
| Premium Business | $60/mo | 15 | 45 |
| Sales Navigator Core | $100/mo | 50 | 150 |
| Sales Navigator Advanced | $150/mo | 50 | 150 |
| Recruiter Lite | $170/mo | 30 | 120 |
| Recruiter Professional | $835/mo | 100 | 400 |
| Recruiter Corporate | $1,080/mo | 150 | 600 |
A few things to note:
The credit system has rules that are easy to miss and can cost you if you're not paying attention.
Unused InMail credits roll over to the next month automatically. But LinkedIn caps accumulation at 3x your monthly allocation. Once you hit the cap, you stop receiving new credits that month.
For example, if you're on Recruiter Lite (30 credits/month), you can stockpile up to 120. If you already have 120 unused credits, your next 30 won't be added. This means hoarding credits past the cap is wasted subscription value.
Accumulated credits expire after 90 days of inactivity on your account. If you downgrade or cancel your subscription, all unused credits vanish immediately. No partial refund, no grace period.
If a recipient replies to your InMail within 90 days, LinkedIn refunds that credit. This is a big deal because it effectively makes successful InMails free. The better your targeting and messaging, the more credits you get back.
In practice, if you maintain a 25% response rate, you're getting a quarter of your credits returned each month. That turns 30 monthly credits into roughly 37-38 effective credits over time.
On the Recruiter Corporate plan, InMail credits can be shared across your team. A recruiter who burns through their allocation can draw from the team pool. This is useful for agencies with uneven sourcing workloads, but it only works on the most expensive tier.
The sticker price of an InMail credit doesn't tell the full story. What matters is how much each message actually costs you when you factor in your subscription.
If you're using the InMails that come with your subscription, the cost per message is your monthly fee divided by the number of credits:
| Plan | Monthly Cost | Credits | Cost per InMail |
|---|---|---|---|
| Premium Career | $30 | 5 | $6.00 |
| Premium Business | $60 | 15 | $4.00 |
| Sales Navigator Core | $100 | 50 | $2.00 |
| Recruiter Lite | $170 | 30 | $5.67 |
| Recruiter Professional | $835 | 100 | $8.35 |
| Recruiter Corporate | $1,080 | 150 | $7.20 |
This isn't entirely fair because you're paying for other features too (advanced search, filters, CRM tools, etc.), not just InMails. But it gives you a floor for the effective cost per message.
At the new $21/credit price, extra InMails are brutally expensive. Before October 2025, buying 50 extra credits cost $150. Now that same batch costs $1,050.
For a recruiter on Recruiter Lite who needs 50 extra credits a month, that's $1,050 on top of a $170 subscription. At that point, upgrading to Recruiter Professional at $835/month (which includes 100 credits) is the obvious move, which is exactly what LinkedIn wants.
InMail response rates average 18-25% according to LinkedIn's own data. Let's do the math on what a reply actually costs across different scenarios:
| Scenario | Cost per InMail | Response Rate | Cost per Reply |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sales Navigator (included) | $2.00 | 20% | $10.00 |
| Recruiter Lite (included) | $5.67 | 20% | $28.35 |
| Recruiter Pro (included) | $8.35 | 20% | $41.75 |
| Extra credits (purchased) | $21.00 | 20% | $105.00 |
$105 per reply on purchased credits. Let that sink in. If you need 10 candidate responses to fill one role, that's $1,050 just in InMail costs for outreach on extra credits alone.
Compare that to direct email outreach, where the cost per message is effectively zero (or pennies if you're using an email tool) and response rates for well-targeted recruiting emails run 5-15%. Even at a lower response rate, the cost per reply through email is dramatically cheaper.
The honest answer: it depends on how you use it.
For a broader framework on evaluating recruiting tool ROI, our recruitment tech ROI analysis walks through the math in detail.
With InMail costs climbing, smart recruiters are diversifying their outreach channels. Here are the most practical alternatives.
The most obvious alternative. If you can find a candidate's personal or professional email address, you can reach them directly without spending a single InMail credit. Email also has advantages over InMail: no character limits, you can include attachments, follow up on your own schedule, and track opens and clicks.
The challenge has always been finding verified email addresses at scale. That's where sourcing platforms with built-in contact data come in.
Taleva, for example, provides personal emails, professional emails, and phone numbers alongside candidate profiles sourced from 20+ data sources across Europe. Instead of paying $21 per InMail, you search for candidates and get their contact information included. For European recruiting teams, this changes the unit economics completely.
Our AI sourcing guide covers how to set up this kind of direct outreach workflow from scratch.
Free and often effective. The downside is the 300-character note limit and the fact that candidates have to accept before you can have a real conversation. But for warm outreach to people in adjacent networks, connection requests convert well.
The trick is writing a connection note that doesn't feel like spam. Mention something specific about the person's background and keep it casual. "Hi [Name], I noticed your work on [project] at [company]. We're building something similar and I'd love to connect" beats a recruiter pitch every time.
Old school but still effective, especially for senior roles and urgent hires. A direct phone call cuts through the noise in a way that no written message can. The obstacle is getting phone numbers, which most sourcing platforms (including Taleva) now provide alongside email data.
Phone works best as a second touch after an email or LinkedIn message that didn't get a response. "Hey, I sent you a message about [role] last week" gives you context and makes the call feel less cold.
The highest-performing recruiting outreach in 2026 isn't single-channel. It's a sequence that combines email, LinkedIn, and sometimes phone across multiple touchpoints. For example:
This approach typically delivers 30-45% response rates, well above single-channel InMail. And the cost per touchpoint is minimal when you have direct contact data. Check our guide on reducing time to hire for more on building efficient outreach sequences.
Often forgotten: LinkedIn members with Premium who enable "Open Profile" can be messaged for free by anyone, no InMail credit required. A significant number of senior professionals and executives have this turned on.
Before spending a credit, always check if the candidate has Open Profile enabled. In LinkedIn Recruiter, open profiles are flagged in search results. On regular LinkedIn, look for the "Message" button on profiles of people you're not connected with.
Whether or not you switch to alternative channels, these practices will stretch your current InMail allocation further.
Five words or fewer. LinkedIn's own data shows that shorter subject lines get higher open rates. "Quick question about [Company]" or "Senior role in Berlin" outperform anything that reads like a marketing email.
Open with something specific about their background. A recent project, a shared connection, a skill that caught your attention. Generic openers like "I came across your impressive profile" signal mass outreach and kill response rates.
Shorter InMails consistently outperform longer ones. State why you're reaching out, what's interesting about the opportunity, and one clear next step. That's it.
"Would this be worth a 10-minute conversation?" converts better than "Book a call at this link." Low-pressure asks respect the candidate's time and get more replies.
Response rates peak mid-week. Avoid Friday afternoons and weekends when people are mentally checked out of work mode.
Since replied InMails get their credit refunded, every percentage point of response rate improvement saves you money. Review your InMail analytics monthly. A/B test different approaches. Drop what doesn't work.
Let's put the full recruiting outreach cost into perspective. A single Recruiter Lite seat costs $170/month and gives you 30 InMails. If you need more outreach than that (and most recruiters do), you're looking at either upgrading to Recruiter Professional at $835/month or supplementing with expensive extra credits.
Meanwhile, a sourcing platform like Taleva starts at €450/month for Team Tier 1 with unlimited seats and includes direct contact data (personal email + phone), and searches across 20+ sources beyond LinkedIn. The cost per candidate contact is effectively zero after your subscription, no matter how many people you reach out to.
Here's a rough comparison for a recruiter sourcing 200 candidates per month:
| Approach | Monthly Cost | Outreach Capacity | Cost per Contact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Recruiter Lite + 170 extra InMails | $170 + $3,570 = $3,740 | 200 InMails | $18.70 |
| Recruiter Professional | $835 | 100 InMails + other channels | $8.35 (InMail only) |
| Taleva + email outreach | approx. $165 (€150) | Unlimited contacts | <$1 |
The numbers speak for themselves. InMail is a useful tool in your toolkit, but it shouldn't be your primary outreach channel when the math is this lopsided. For more alternatives to LinkedIn Recruiter specifically, see our comparison of LinkedIn Recruiter alternatives for European agencies.
InMails included in your subscription are bundled into your monthly fee. Additional credits purchased separately cost $21 each as of October 2025, up from the previous $3 per credit. The effective cost of a bundled InMail ranges from $2 (Sales Navigator) to $8.35 (Recruiter Professional) depending on your plan.
It depends on your plan. Premium Career: 5. Premium Business: 15. Sales Navigator Core/Advanced: 50. Recruiter Lite: 30. Recruiter Professional: 100. Recruiter Corporate: 150. Free LinkedIn accounts get zero InMail credits.
LinkedIn says the increase is meant to reduce spam and encourage higher-quality outreach. The higher price also incentivizes users to upgrade to plans with more bundled credits rather than buying add-on credits on cheaper plans.
Unused credits roll over monthly but cap at 3x your monthly allocation. They expire after 90 days of account inactivity. If you cancel or downgrade your subscription, all accumulated credits are lost immediately.
Yes, sort of. If the recipient replies within 90 days, LinkedIn automatically refunds that credit to your account. This makes well-targeted InMails effectively free when they get responses.
LinkedIn reports average response rates of 18-25% for InMail. However, rates vary dramatically based on message quality, targeting, and industry. Generic mass InMails often see rates below 10%, while highly personalized messages to well-matched candidates can exceed 35%.
LinkedIn InMail is more expensive than ever in 2026. The credits bundled with your subscription still offer reasonable value if you use them strategically on high-priority candidates you can't reach otherwise. But buying extra credits at $21 each is hard to justify for most recruiting teams.
The smartest approach is to treat InMail as one channel in a multi-channel outreach strategy, not your primary one. Use your bundled credits for candidates who are truly hard to reach. For everything else, direct email and phone outreach using contact data from sourcing platforms will deliver better results at a fraction of the cost.
The 700% price increase was LinkedIn's way of telling recruiters: stop depending on us for all your outreach. It might be time to listen.
Stop recruiting manually. Start hiring intelligently.