Open LinkedIn Messaging, search the person’s name or a word from the chat, and your sent notes will appear inside that conversation.
LinkedIn trips people up in one simple way: it doesn’t give you a separate Sent folder like email does. You send a note, leave the inbox, come back later, and the thread feels gone. In most cases, it isn’t gone at all. It’s still sitting inside the conversation you started, replied to, archived, or filtered out of view.
Once you know that rule, finding an old message gets much easier. You’re not trying to open a hidden tab. You’re trying to pull up the right thread. On desktop, your sent text sits on the right side of the conversation. On mobile, the same thread history is there, just packed into a smaller view.
How to See Sent Messages on LinkedIn On Desktop And Mobile
If you want the fastest path, do this:
- Open LinkedIn and click or tap Messaging.
- Type the person’s name into the message search bar.
- Open the conversation thread that matches.
- Scroll through the chat to find the note you sent.
If the person’s name doesn’t pull it up right away, search a word or phrase from the message itself. That works well when you’ve had several chats with the same person and can’t spot the right one from the inbox list alone.
Desktop steps that save clicks
On desktop, click the Messaging icon at the top of LinkedIn. Your conversations will appear in the left rail. Use the search box near the top of that list. Type the recipient’s name first. If the list is still crowded, search a word you used in the message, such as a job title, company name, or meeting date.
Open the thread and look to the right side of the chat. That’s where your sent messages show up. Incoming replies sit on the left. If you’re scanning a long exchange, this right-side layout makes it easier to spot your own wording fast.
Mobile steps when you’re not at your desk
In the LinkedIn app, tap Messaging in the upper area of the screen. Use the search field at the top of the inbox. Then open the conversation and scroll upward through the chat history. The message is still part of the same thread, even if you sent it days or months ago.
Mobile can feel messier because fewer conversations show on screen at once. That’s why the search field matters more on a phone. It cuts out the endless thumb-scrolling.
Where Sent LinkedIn Messages Usually Live
Here’s the bit most people miss: sent messages are tied to conversation status. If the thread was archived, filtered into a different inbox view, or sent as InMail, it may not show where you first looked. That can make a normal message feel missing when it’s just sitting in another bucket.
Use this table to narrow things down before you start tapping around at random.
| Message type | Where to find it | What you’ll see |
|---|---|---|
| Regular message to a connection | Main inbox or search results | Your sent text inside the thread |
| Archived conversation | Archived filter | The full chat history is still there |
| Unread thread | Unread filter | Only threads you haven’t opened yet |
| Message from a direct connection | My Connections filter | Inbox narrowed to first-degree contacts |
| InMail | InMail filter | Threads with people outside your network |
| Message request | Message Requests area | Conversation may stay outside the main inbox until accepted |
| Edited message | Original thread | An “Edited” label next to the message |
| Deleted message | Original thread | A deletion note instead of the original text |
LinkedIn states in its message search article that there is no sent folder, and that sent notes are found inside the existing conversation thread. Its inbox filters page lists the filters that can narrow the search, including Archived, Spam, My Connections, Unread, and InMail.
If you spot a typo right after sending, there’s a narrow window to fix it. LinkedIn’s edit and delete rules say text messages can be edited or deleted within 60 minutes. If you delete one, the original text won’t come back, and the thread will show a deletion note instead.
Why A Sent Message Seems Missing
Most “missing message” cases come down to one of five things: the thread was archived, the inbox is filtered, the note was an InMail, the message was deleted, or you’re checking the wrong account. LinkedIn often feels simple until one of those gets in the way.
When filters hide the thread
LinkedIn lets you narrow your inbox by category and filter. That’s handy when your inbox is packed, but it can hide a thread from plain sight. If you’ve clicked into Archived, Spam, or InMail and forgotten about it later, the normal inbox view won’t show everything you expect.
Start broad. Search the recipient’s name with no filter active. If that still fails, switch between Archived, My Connections, and InMail. On mobile, swipe through the available filters until the thread appears.
When the note was sent as InMail
InMail is separate from a standard message to a first-degree connection. If you messaged someone outside your network with LinkedIn Premium, that thread may make more sense under the InMail filter than in your regular inbox view. The message is still there. It just lives under a different label.
When it started as a message request
If the other person wasn’t already connected to you and the note went out as a message request, the chat can sit outside the main inbox flow until it’s accepted. That catches plenty of people, especially when they sent a note in a group, to a coworker, or through a shared LinkedIn space.
That’s why a sent message can feel half-visible: you know you typed it, but you don’t see a clean ongoing thread yet. Check requests and related inbox areas before assuming it vanished.
When you deleted your own message
If you removed a sent message, LinkedIn won’t restore the original text. You’ll usually see a note in the conversation showing that something was deleted. So if you’re hunting for the exact wording you used, and all you see is a deletion marker, that’s the end of that trail.
Edited messages are different. The thread stays intact, and the message shows an edited label. That still lets you confirm that you sent something, even if the wording changed after the first send.
What To Check If You Still Can’t Find It
Run through this checklist before you give up on the thread.
| What you see | Most likely reason | What to do next |
|---|---|---|
| No thread in the main inbox | The conversation was archived | Open Archived or search the person’s name |
| No result from the person’s name | You’re in the wrong account or used the wrong spelling | Check your login and search a keyword from the chat |
| Only some conversations show up | An inbox filter is active | Clear filters, then search again |
| The thread is missing from regular messages | It was sent as InMail | Open the InMail filter |
| You see a note but not the original text | The message was deleted | Look for the deletion marker in the thread |
| The chat never became a normal thread | It started as a message request | Check request-related inbox areas |
A Smarter Way To Keep Track Of Old Conversations
If you send a lot of LinkedIn messages, a few small habits make life easier. Search by a phrase you’d actually reuse later. Put dates, job titles, or meeting names in the body when they fit. Those words turn into search hooks when the inbox gets crowded.
- Use clear wording in the first line of a message.
- Archive threads only after you know where archived chats live.
- Check whether the person was a connection, an InMail contact, or a message request.
- Look for your sent text on the right side of the thread on desktop.
- Leave yourself searchable wording instead of vague one-line notes.
That’s the whole trick. LinkedIn doesn’t hide sent messages in a secret folder. It keeps them inside the conversation itself. Once you search the right name, word, or filter, the thread usually shows up in seconds.
References & Sources
- LinkedIn.“Searching for Sent and Received Messages.”States that LinkedIn has no sent folder and that sent messages appear inside the existing conversation thread.
- LinkedIn.“Use filters and search for messages in LinkedIn Messaging.”Lists inbox categories and filters such as Archived, Spam, My Connections, Unread, and InMail.
- LinkedIn.“Edit or delete a sent message within a conversation.”Explains the 60-minute window for editing or deleting text messages and what remains visible after deletion.
