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June 3, 2026

LinkedIn Sales Navigator Cost: The 2026 Pricing Guide

How much LinkedIn Sales Navigator costs in 2026 — the Core, Advanced, and Advanced Plus tiers, monthly vs. annual billing, why the price varies, and how to cut it by 75%.

If you've gone looking for a straight answer to "how much is LinkedIn Sales Navigator?" you've probably come away frustrated. LinkedIn keeps the numbers off its main pages, pushes higher tiers toward a "Contact sales" button, and only reveals a figure once you're partway into a trial signup. To make it worse, the price you see isn't the price someone in another country sees — Sales Navigator is billed in local currency and varies by region, and LinkedIn adjusts it over time.

So rather than quote a number that's wrong for half the people reading this, this guide explains the structure of Sales Navigator pricing: the three tiers, how billing works, what actually drives the cost, who each plan is for, and — most usefully — how to pay dramatically less for the exact same product.

The three tiers, and what really separates them

LinkedIn sells Sales Navigator in three tiers. The names have shifted slightly over the years, but the shape has been stable for a long time.

Sales Navigator Core is the individual plan. It's what the overwhelming majority of solo sellers, founders, recruiters, and freelancers actually buy. You get the advanced lead and account search, lead and account lists, saved searches with alerts, a monthly allotment of InMail credits, and the relationship signals (job changes, mentions in the news) that make the tool worth using. If you're one person prospecting, Core does everything you need.

Sales Navigator Advanced is the team plan. It layers collaboration and light admin features on top of Core: TeamLink, which surfaces warm paths into a prospect through your colleagues' networks; Smart Links, which let you package and track content you send to buyers; and basic usage reporting for a manager. It's sold per seat, so the total scales with headcount.

Sales Navigator Advanced Plus is the enterprise tier, and it's quote-only for a reason: its headline feature is CRM integration — real-time data validation and contact updates flowing into Salesforce or Microsoft Dynamics — plus advanced buyer-intent signals and enterprise admin controls. Pricing is contract-based and scales with seats, connectors, and term length.

For a deeper, feature-by-feature breakdown of which tier fits which team, see our Sales Navigator Core vs. Advanced comparison.

Monthly vs. annual billing

Whatever tier you choose, LinkedIn offers two billing cadences, and the choice matters more than people expect.

Month-to-month is the flexible option. You can cancel whenever, but you pay a premium for that flexibility — the effective monthly rate is meaningfully higher.

Annual (paying for twelve months up front) lowers the effective monthly rate by a noticeable margin. The trade-off is commitment: if your needs change a few months in, that money is already spent. For anyone who's confident they'll use the tool for the year, annual is almost always the better deal on a pure cost basis.

The practical rule: if Sales Navigator is core to how you generate pipeline, annual billing is the cheaper path. If you're still testing whether it earns its keep, pay monthly until you're sure — then switch.

Why it costs what it costs

Sales Navigator isn't priced like a typical SaaS subscription, and understanding why helps you judge whether it's worth it.

You're not really paying for software features — you're paying for access to LinkedIn's graph. No other database has the same combination of breadth (most of the professional world maintains its own profile), freshness (people update their own job titles and employers), and structure (you can filter by seniority, function, company headcount, growth, geography, and recent changes). Building or buying a comparable dataset elsewhere costs far more and decays far faster.

That's also why the price holds up against discounting through normal channels: the underlying asset is genuinely hard to replicate. The lever that does exist isn't a coupon — it's a legitimate promotional rate, which we'll get to below.

Who each tier is for

  • Core — solo operators. Founders doing their own outbound, individual AEs, recruiters, agency owners, and freelancers. If it's just you (or a couple of people working independently), Core is the answer and the other tiers are overkill.
  • Advanced — collaborative sales teams. Teams of three or more who want to share warm intros, track the content they send, and give a manager visibility. The team features only pay off if people actually use them.
  • Advanced Plus — revenue orgs on a CRM. Organizations running Salesforce or Dynamics that need Sales Navigator data kept in sync automatically and want intent signals feeding their pipeline. If you're not living in a CRM, you're paying for plumbing you won't use.

Not sure whether the spend is justified at all? We wrote a full ROI breakdown: Is LinkedIn Sales Navigator worth it?

The hidden costs people forget

The headline subscription rate isn't the whole bill. Three things quietly add up:

  1. Seats nobody uses. Teams over-provision constantly. Every seat that isn't being worked is full price walking out the door — audit usage quarterly.
  2. InMail overages. Core includes a monthly InMail allotment; heavy outbound users blow through it and pay for more. Budget for your real send volume, not the included number.
  3. Paying list price by default. This is the big one. Most buyers never look for a better rate and simply pay the standard price month after month — easily the most avoidable cost of all.

How to reduce the cost

There are a handful of legitimate ways to pay less, and one that beats the rest.

  • Start with the free trial to confirm fit before you spend a cent. Here's how the Sales Navigator free trial works, including what happens when it ends.
  • Right-size your tier. Don't buy Advanced for features only a team uses, or Advanced Plus if you're not syncing a CRM. Most individuals need Core.
  • Choose annual once you're committed, to drop the effective monthly rate.
  • Use an authorized promotional partner. This is the one most people miss, and it's where the real savings are.

That last route is exactly what we offer — and it's worth being precise about how it works, because it's a two-part model:

  1. You pay us a one-time $180 setup fee. That's our promotional fee, charged once. It's the only fixed dollar amount involved.
  2. From then on, LinkedIn bills you directly each month at 75% off their regular rate — you pay just 25%. Because LinkedIn handles that billing on your own account, your exact figure follows your region.

You activate the discount on the LinkedIn account you already use. You don't create a new profile, you don't migrate anything, and you keep every lead, list, note, and saved search exactly where it is.

For the complete walkthrough — including how this compares to coupon codes and "Sales Navigator discount" claims floating around Reddit — read our LinkedIn Sales Navigator discount guide, or jump straight to the offer.

The bottom line

LinkedIn Sales Navigator's cost depends on your tier, your billing cadence, and your region — which is why no single number tells the truth. What's consistent is this: Core covers what most individuals need, annual billing beats monthly once you're committed, and the single biggest lever on price isn't a tier change or a coupon — it's a legitimate promotional rate that takes 75% off the monthly bill while leaving your account and data untouched.

Related reading

Ready to stop overpaying for Sales Navigator?

Pay a one-time $180 setup fee, then LinkedIn bills you directly at 75% off their regular rate — you pay just 25%, on your own account. Keep all of your existing leads and data.

Claim the discount