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LinkedIn Safety Guide

Understanding LinkedIn's risks for teenagers, including recruitment scams, fake job offers, and unsolicited adult contact.

Official age

16+

We recommend

16+

Developer

Microsoft (LinkedIn Corporation)

Risks

3

Direct messaging
In-app purchases
Live streaming

Overview

LinkedIn is a professional networking platform where people build a career profile, connect with others, and look for jobs. Its UK minimum age is 16. Because it presents itself as a serious, professional space, teenagers and parents can underestimate the risks — but LinkedIn is a common channel for recruitment scams, fake internships, and adults using a professional pretext to contact young people.

How children use it

Older teenagers use LinkedIn to look for part-time work, apprenticeships, internships, and their first jobs, to research universities and employers, and to build an early professional profile. Sixth-formers are often encouraged by schools to create accounts. The professional framing lowers young people's guard: a message from a stranger feels legitimate when it arrives with a company logo and a job title. Scammers exploit this by posing as recruiters, offering fake roles that harvest personal and banking details, request 'training fees', or funnel applicants into mule-account or task-based scams. Some adults also use professional-sounding approaches as a pretext to build one-to-one contact with a young person.

Main risks

Recommended privacy settings

Profile visibility

Location: Settings > Visibility > Profile viewing options

Set to: Limit public visibility

Reduces how much of a young person's profile strangers and search engines can see.

Who can message you

Location: Settings > Communications > Who can reach you

Set to: Connections only / restrict InMail

Cuts down unsolicited messages from recruiters and strangers.

Contact and personal info

Location: Edit profile > Contact info

Set to: Omit phone, address, personal email

Keeps directly identifying and contactable details off a public profile.

Parent actions

essential

Explain that unsolicited job or recruiter messages are a common scam channel

Time: 10 minutes

essential

Agree the rule: never pay a fee, send ID documents, or share bank details to 'get' a job

Time: 5 minutes

recommended

Review profile so it doesn't reveal school, home area, phone, or date of birth

Time: 10 minutes

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Last reviewed: 2026-07-03