Skip to main content

LinkedHelper Pricing in 2026: Full Cost Breakdown

Last updated: March 30, 2026

TLDR

LinkedHelper costs $15/month (Standard) or $45/month (Pro). It runs as a desktop application with its own built-in browser, avoiding Chrome extension risks. The pricing is genuinely low, but there is no dynamic rate limiting or behavioral mimicry. Proxy is not included. The interface feels dated compared to newer tools. First-year cost: $180-$540 depending on tier.

LinkedHelper

$15-$45/mo

per month

vs

ReachAlly

from $29/month

per month, Activity DNA included

LinkedHelper Pricing Tiers

LinkedHelper Pricing Tiers
TierPriceKey FeaturesKey Limitation
Standard$15/moAuto-connect, messaging, profile visitsNo sequences, no CRM, no InMail
Pro$45/moSequences, CRM, InMail, Sales NavNo dynamic rate limiting, no proxy
Proxy (third-party)$10-$30/moN/ARecommended but not included

Hidden Costs You Won't See on the Pricing Page

  • Proxy not included: LinkedHelper recommends using a proxy for additional safety, but does not bundle one. Third-party proxies run $10-$30/month
  • No dynamic rate limiting: LinkedHelper provides configurable delays, but no AI-driven behavioral analysis to adjust activity based on account health
  • Built-in browser requires separate LinkedIn session: you log into LinkedIn inside LinkedHelper's browser, separate from your regular Chrome session
  • Dated interface increases learning curve: the UI has not been significantly modernized, requiring more time to configure campaigns correctly
  • License tied to single machine: each license covers one computer, requiring additional licenses for team members or backup machines

What LinkedHelper Actually Costs

LinkedHelper occupies the budget end of the LinkedIn automation market. At $15-$45/month, it is one of the cheapest options with desktop-level execution. The question is what you give up at that price point.

The Desktop Advantage (and Its Limits)

LinkedHelper runs as a standalone desktop application with its own built-in Chromium browser. This matters for two reasons:

First, it avoids the Chrome extension problems that affect Dux-Soup. No Manifest V3 risk, no extension fingerprinting, no dependency on Chrome’s extension platform.

Second, it runs on your local machine using your residential IP address by default. Cloud tools like PhantomBuster and Waalaxy route actions through data-center IPs that LinkedIn can flag more easily.

But LinkedHelper’s desktop execution stops short of behavioral mimicry. It sends actions at configurable intervals (you set delays between actions), but it does not simulate human input patterns. Mouse movements, scroll behavior, typing cadence, dwell time on profiles: these behavioral signals are not part of LinkedHelper’s approach. You configure static delays and hope the timing looks natural enough.

Standard vs. Pro: What the Price Gap Buys

Standard at $15/month covers the basics: auto-connect, auto-message, profile visiting, endorsing, and CSV export. These are individual actions without sequencing logic.

Pro at $45/month adds the features that make outreach campaigns possible: message sequences with conditional logic (if reply received, stop sequence; if no reply after 5 days, send follow-up), CRM integration, InMail automation, and Sales Navigator data collection.

The jump from $15 to $45 is a 3x increase, but the capability gap is significant. Standard is a lead generation tool. Pro is an outreach campaign tool. Most users doing systematic LinkedIn outreach need the Pro tier.

The Interface Factor

LinkedHelper’s interface has not kept pace with newer tools. Campaign configuration requires more clicks and more screen navigation than competitors built in the last 2-3 years. This is not a dealbreaker, but it affects the time cost of managing campaigns, especially for users running multiple concurrent sequences.

First-Year Total Cost Comparison

SetupLinkedHelper (Year 1)ReachAlly (Year 1)
Basic (Standard)$180$348 (Starter, $29/mo)
Campaign outreach (Pro)$540$708 (Pro, $59/mo)
With proxy (Pro + proxy)$660-$900$708 (Pro, $59/mo)

LinkedHelper is consistently $168/year cheaper than ReachAlly at comparable tiers. If you add a proxy to LinkedHelper’s Pro plan, the gap narrows to roughly $0-$50/year depending on proxy service.

LinkedHelper makes sense if your primary criteria are low cost and desktop execution, and you are comfortable configuring rate limits manually without dynamic safety intelligence. ReachAlly’s premium covers Activity DNA governance and human-mimic behavioral patterns that LinkedHelper does not attempt.

Q&A

How much does LinkedHelper cost per month for LinkedIn automation?

LinkedHelper's Standard plan costs $15/month for basic auto-connect, messaging, and profile visiting. The Pro plan costs $45/month and adds message sequences, CRM integration, InMail automation, and Sales Navigator support. Proxy costs are separate if needed. First-year cost: $180 (Standard) or $540 (Pro).

Q&A

Is LinkedHelper a browser extension or a desktop application?

LinkedHelper is a desktop application with its own built-in browser. Unlike Dux-Soup, it does not run as a Chrome extension. This avoids Chrome Manifest V3 migration risks and extension fingerprinting concerns. However, the built-in browser creates a separate LinkedIn session from your regular browser.

Q&A

Does LinkedHelper include rate limiting for LinkedIn safety?

LinkedHelper provides configurable delays between actions (you set minimum and maximum wait times). It does not provide dynamic rate limiting that adapts to your account's health, usage patterns, or LinkedIn's real-time signals. The difference matters: static delays are better than no delays, but they do not respond to LinkedIn's behavioral detection systems the way Activity DNA governance does.

Tired of complex pricing?

ReachAlly starts at $29/month. Activity DNA and human-mimic input included on every plan.

LinkedHelper ReachAlly
Monthly cost $15-$45/mo from $29/month
Residential proxy included No (extra cost) Yes (Pro plan)
Contract Varies Month-to-month
Is LinkedHelper's Standard plan enough for LinkedIn outreach?
Standard at $15/month covers single-action automation: send connection requests, send messages, visit profiles. It lacks message sequences, so you cannot build multi-step follow-up campaigns. For simple connection building, Standard works. For outreach campaigns with follow-up logic, you need Pro at $45/month.
How does LinkedHelper's desktop architecture compare to browser extensions?
LinkedHelper's built-in browser approach is more resilient than Chrome extensions because it does not depend on Chrome's extension policies or MV3 migration. It also creates a more isolated automation environment. The trade-off is a dated user interface and a separate LinkedIn session that you manage alongside your regular browser. ReachAlly also uses a desktop architecture but adds human-mimic input (Bezier curves, Gaussian delays) and Activity DNA governance that LinkedHelper does not include.
Does LinkedHelper require a proxy?
LinkedHelper recommends but does not require a proxy. Since it runs locally on your machine, it uses your residential IP by default, which is safer than cloud tools using data-center IPs. However, LinkedHelper does not include behavioral mimicry, so adding a proxy provides an extra safety layer. Budget $10-$30/month if you add one.
How does LinkedHelper's pricing compare to ReachAlly?
LinkedHelper's Standard at $15/month is $14/month less than ReachAlly's Starter at $29/month. LinkedHelper's Pro at $45/month is $14/month less than ReachAlly's Pro at $59/month. The pricing gap is consistent across tiers. ReachAlly's premium includes Activity DNA governance, neuromorphic input patterns, and DMA compliance features that LinkedHelper does not offer. The decision comes down to whether advanced safety features are worth $14/month more.

Ready to stop overpaying?

Keep reading