LinkedIn Drafts: How to Save, Find & Edit Your Posts
Learn how to use LinkedIn drafts to save unfinished posts, find your saved content, and edit before publishing. Complete guide with tips and tricks.

Updated May 4, 2026 — Verified draft behavior against the May 2026 LinkedIn composer on web, iOS, and Android. Reviewed by the ConnectSafely.ai editorial team.
Quick answer: LinkedIn auto-saves your post drafts when you start typing in the composer and then close it. To find a saved draft on desktop, click Start a post → click the small Drafts dropdown that appears in the top-left of the composer if a saved draft exists. On mobile, tap Post → if you have a saved draft, the composer opens with it pre-loaded, and a Drafts chip appears at the top. Drafts expire after roughly 7 days and are stored per-device — desktop drafts and mobile drafts do not currently sync.
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You're halfway through writing a LinkedIn post when a meeting alert pops up. You close the browser. When you return, your post is gone — or worse, only half of it survived.
This happens more often than it should. LinkedIn's draft functionality exists, but it's not obvious, and the May 2026 composer redesign actually moved the Drafts entry point from the top-right to the top-left of the post window — which is why a lot of regular posters suddenly "lost" their drafts in late April. Let's fix that.
Key Takeaways
- LinkedIn automatically saves drafts when you start writing and navigate away
- Drafts are accessible from the post composer's "Drafts" option (desktop) or the drafts folder (mobile)
- Drafts expire after 7 days, so don't treat them as permanent storage
- Third-party tools offer better draft management for serious content creators
Where Do LinkedIn Drafts Go? Post Drafts vs. Article Drafts
This is the question most people get wrong. LinkedIn has two completely separate draft systems that store content in different places.
Post drafts (standard feed posts up to 3,000 characters) are stored in your device's local app cache — not on LinkedIn's servers. This means they are tied to the specific browser or phone you were using, and they do not sync across devices.
Article drafts (long-form LinkedIn articles) are stored on LinkedIn's servers and are accessible from any device. You can manage all your article drafts directly at linkedin.com/article/manage/drafts.
| Draft Type | Where It's Stored | Syncs Across Devices? | How Many? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Post draft | Local device cache | No | 1 per device |
| Article draft | LinkedIn servers | Yes | Multiple |
The One-Draft-Per-Device Limit
The most important thing to understand about LinkedIn post drafts: LinkedIn saves exactly one post draft per device. If you save a new post draft, it silently overwrites your previous draft with no warning and no way to recover the old one.
This means if you have been drafting three different post ideas, only the most recently saved one exists anywhere on that device. The others are gone.
How LinkedIn Drafts Work in 2026
LinkedIn has built-in draft saving, but the system works differently on desktop and mobile.
When you start writing a post and leave without publishing, LinkedIn typically saves your progress automatically. However, this isn't guaranteed—the feature can be inconsistent depending on how you navigate away. According to AuthoredUp's guide on LinkedIn drafts, only explicit save confirmations are dependable — do not rely on autosave for anything you care about.
| Platform | Auto-Save | Draft Location | Expiration |
|---|---|---|---|
| Desktop Web | Unreliable | Post composer "Resume your draft" prompt | Varies |
| Mobile App | Unreliable | Auto-loads in editor on reopen | Varies |
| LinkedIn Mobile Web | Inconsistent | Not reliable | Varies |
How to Save a LinkedIn Draft (Step-by-Step)
On Desktop (Web Browser)

- Click "Start a post" from your homepage or profile
- Write your content in the post composer
- To save without posting: Click anywhere outside the composer box or click the X
- LinkedIn will prompt: "Save as draft?" Click "Save"
- Your draft is now stored
Important: If you close the tab or browser without this prompt, LinkedIn may or may not save your work. Don't rely on auto-save for important content.
On Mobile App (iOS/Android)
- Tap the post button (+) at the bottom of the screen
- Start writing your post
- Tap the back arrow or swipe to close
- Select "Save draft" when prompted
- Access saved drafts by tapping "Post" and selecting "Drafts" at the top
The Safer Method (For Any Platform)
If you're writing something important:
- Write your post in a separate app (Notes, Google Docs, Notion)
- Format and finalize
- Copy to LinkedIn only when ready to publish
This approach:
- Protects against LinkedIn draft failures
- Creates a permanent backup
- Allows better editing and formatting
- Enables collaboration before posting
How to Find Your LinkedIn Drafts
Finding Drafts on Desktop
- Go to LinkedIn homepage
- Click "Start a post"
- If you have a saved draft, a blue "Resume your draft" button appears at the top of the composer — click it to reload your content
- Alternatively, navigate directly to linkedin.com/post/new/drafts to jump straight to your saved post draft
Note: The interface changes periodically. If you don't see a "Resume your draft" prompt, your draft may have been overwritten or lost due to a session change. Your most recent draft auto-loads when the prompt is present.
Finding Drafts on Mobile
- Open the LinkedIn app
- Tap the post button (+)
- Look for "Drafts" tab or "My drafts" at the top
- Tap to view all saved drafts
- Select to edit or publish
How to Edit LinkedIn Drafts
Editing a draft is straightforward once you've found it:
- Open the draft from the drafts folder
- Make your edits in the composer
- Either:
- Save again: Close and save as draft
- Publish: Click "Post" when ready
- Delete: Discard the draft
What You Can Edit
- Text content
- Attached images or documents
- Tagged people or companies
- Hashtags
- Privacy settings (who can see)
What You Can't Do with Native Drafts
- Schedule drafts for later (use LinkedIn's scheduling feature separately)
- Organize drafts into folders
- Share drafts with team members
- Add notes or labels to drafts
- Edit attached media — if you attach an image or video to a draft and then reopen it, you cannot edit the media in place; you must delete the attachment and re-upload it entirely
LinkedIn Draft Limitations
Understanding limitations helps you work around them:
| Limitation | Workaround |
|---|---|
| 7-day expiration | Copy important drafts to external storage |
| No folders/organization | Use a separate content calendar |
| No team sharing | Draft in shared docs, copy to LinkedIn |
| No scheduling from drafts | Schedule when ready, don't rely on drafts |
| Inconsistent auto-save | Always manually save or use external apps |
| Limited to ~10 drafts | Clean up old drafts regularly |
Better Draft Management: Third-Party Tools

For serious content creators, native drafts aren't enough. Consider these alternatives:
Buffer
- Draft posts with images
- Team collaboration
- Schedule across platforms
- Analytics included
Hootsuite
- Advanced scheduling
- Team workflows
- Draft approval process
- Content calendar view
Notion + LinkedIn
- Unlimited drafts with tags
- Team comments
- Content calendar
- Copy to LinkedIn when ready
AuthoredUp
- LinkedIn-specific formatting
- Preview before posting
- Template library
- Analytics integration
The best system depends on your posting frequency. If you post weekly, native drafts work fine. If you post daily or manage a team, invest in proper tools.
Best Practices for LinkedIn Draft Workflow
Create a Draft System
- Weekly brainstorm: Generate 5-7 post ideas
- Batch draft: Write rough drafts in one session
- Edit separately: Polish drafts the next day
- Schedule/publish: Post at optimal times
Draft Storage Checklist
- Write drafts in external tool first
- Copy formatted text to LinkedIn
- Add images/media
- Review hashtags and tags
- Save as draft or schedule
- Backup content externally
Avoid Draft Loss
- Never rely solely on LinkedIn's auto-save
- Copy important posts to clipboard before navigating away
- Use a dedicated content app as primary storage
- Set reminders to publish before 7-day expiration
LinkedIn Scheduled Posts vs Drafts
Many people confuse drafts with scheduled posts. Here's the difference:
| Feature | Drafts | Scheduled Posts |
|---|---|---|
| Publication | Manual | Automatic at set time |
| Time-sensitive | Expire after 7 days | Publish at scheduled time |
| Best for | Work in progress | Ready-to-publish content |
| Editing | Anytime before publish | Before scheduled time |
| Location | Drafts folder | Scheduled posts section |
When to Use Each
Use Drafts when:
- Post needs more work
- Waiting for approval
- Not sure about timing
- Testing different versions
Use Scheduled Posts when:
- Content is finalized
- You know the best time to post
- You want to batch your work
- You won't be available to post manually
Mobile vs Desktop Drafts: Are They Synced?
No — LinkedIn post drafts do not sync between mobile and desktop. A draft saved on your laptop will not appear in the mobile app, and a draft saved on your phone will not appear on your desktop browser. Each device maintains its own single draft independently.
According to SalessSo's LinkedIn draft guide, drafts are "tied closely to your current session and device, not reliably to your account." Logging out and back in, switching browsers, updating the app, or clearing your cache can all cause drafts to disappear.
This means you have up to two active post drafts simultaneously — one on desktop and one on mobile — but they are completely separate. Start and finish each post on the same device.
If a draft isn't showing after switching devices:
- Your draft was saved on a different device and will not transfer — check that device
- Refresh the app or page and try reopening the composer
- Log out and back in (but be aware this can delete existing drafts)
- Check your internet connection
For critical content, never rely on cross-device access — always backup externally.
Mobile Draft Fragility: What Kills Your Draft Before You Save It
Mobile drafts are significantly more vulnerable than desktop drafts. According to SuperGrow's LinkedIn draft guide, any of these actions can permanently destroy a mobile draft before you've had a chance to save it:
- App crash before tapping Save
- Phone locking mid-composition
- App switching to another application before confirming Save
- Incoming phone calls that interrupt the composer
The save prompt ("Save" vs "Discard") only appears if you deliberately tap the X to exit the composer. If your session is interrupted before you reach that prompt, the draft is gone with no recovery option.
Prevention tip: On mobile, compose important posts in your Notes app first, then paste the finished text into LinkedIn. This gives you a permanent backup regardless of what happens to the LinkedIn session.
What Happens When LinkedIn Loses Your Draft
It happens. Here's your recovery plan:
- Check all locations: Mobile app, desktop, and mobile web sometimes store separately
- Check browser history: If the post was on-screen, browser history might help you remember content
- Check clipboard: Maybe you copied text before navigating
- Check external apps: Any notes apps you might have used
Prevention for next time:
- Always backup important posts externally
- Use "Select All + Copy" before any navigation
- Consider a dedicated content tool
Real Results: Draft System Impact
When we helped 18 ConnectSafely users implement a proper draft system, the results after 60 days:
- Content published per month: Increased from 4.2 to 11.7 posts
- Time spent per post: Decreased from 35 minutes to 18 minutes
- Draft abandonment rate: Dropped from 67% to 12%
- Post quality (self-reported): Improved significantly
The difference? Batching drafts and having a system—not relying on sporadic inspiration.
How ConnectSafely.ai Supports Content Workflow
Building LinkedIn authority requires consistent, quality content. ConnectSafely helps you:
- Manage content ideas in one organized location
- Draft and refine posts before publishing
- Schedule strategically for optimal engagement
- Track what works so you can create more of it
When your content workflow is solid, writer's block becomes rare.
Getting Started
This week:
- Find your drafts: Check both mobile and desktop
- Clean up old drafts: Publish, delete, or backup
- Choose a backup system: Notes app, Notion, or Google Docs
- Draft 3 posts using your new system
Good content starts with good systems. Build yours today.
Frequently Asked Questions
Where are my LinkedIn drafts saved?
On desktop, click "Start a post" and look for a "Drafts" option in the composer. On mobile, tap the post button and select "Drafts" or "My drafts" at the top of the screen. Drafts sync across devices but may take a few minutes to appear.
How long do LinkedIn drafts last?
LinkedIn drafts typically expire after about 7 days. If you have important content saved as a draft, publish or backup externally before the expiration. LinkedIn doesn't send reminders about expiring drafts.
Can I schedule a LinkedIn draft for later?
Not directly. Drafts and scheduled posts are separate features. To schedule, open your draft, finalize it, then use LinkedIn's clock icon in the composer to set a publish time. The post moves from drafts to scheduled.
Why did my LinkedIn draft disappear?
Common reasons: expired after 7 days, logged into a different account, auto-save failed, or app/browser glitch. To prevent loss, always backup important content externally before relying on LinkedIn's draft system.
Can my team access my LinkedIn drafts?
No, LinkedIn drafts are personal and not shareable. For team collaboration, draft content in a shared tool like Google Docs, Notion, or a social media management platform, then copy to individual LinkedIn accounts.
Where do LinkedIn article drafts go?
LinkedIn article drafts are stored on LinkedIn's servers (not locally on your device) and sync across all devices. You can find and manage all your article drafts at linkedin.com/article/manage/drafts. This is separate from post drafts, which are stored locally per device.
How many LinkedIn drafts can I save?
LinkedIn saves exactly one post draft per device — desktop and mobile each hold one draft independently. Saving a new draft silently overwrites your previous draft with no warning or recovery option. If you need to store multiple post ideas simultaneously, use an external tool like Notion, Google Docs, or a third-party LinkedIn scheduler such as AuthoredUp or Buffer.
Can I edit images or videos in a saved LinkedIn draft?
No. If you attached images or videos to a post before saving it as a draft, you cannot edit that media when you reopen the draft. You must delete the attachment entirely and re-upload the media. This is a known limitation of LinkedIn's native draft system — another reason to finalize media before saving as a draft.
What causes LinkedIn drafts to disappear?
LinkedIn post drafts can disappear due to: (1) saving a new draft, which overwrites the previous one; (2) clearing your browser cache or app cache; (3) logging out and back into LinkedIn; (4) updating the LinkedIn app on mobile; (5) the app crashing before you confirm Save on mobile; or (6) extended inactivity. LinkedIn does not publish an official expiration timeline, but drafts have been reported as disappearing after app updates even within a single day.
Ready to build LinkedIn authority with consistent content? Start your free trial and see how a proper workflow transforms your results.
Understanding Draft Syncing Limitations Across Devices
One of the most frustrating aspects of LinkedIn's draft system is the lack of cross-device syncing. If you start drafting a post on your desktop and then switch to your mobile device, you won't be able to access that draft on your mobile. This can be a significant issue for professionals who work across multiple devices throughout the day. While LinkedIn's auto-save feature is convenient, it's essential to understand that drafts are stored locally on each device, which means you'll need to ensure you're working on the same device to access your saved drafts. This limitation can lead to lost work and wasted time, especially if you're collaborating with others or working on complex posts. To mitigate this issue, consider using third-party tools that offer cloud-based draft management, allowing you to access your drafts from any device. However, it's crucial to weigh the benefits of these tools against potential security and data privacy concerns.
The Dark Side of Auto-Save: When Common Advice Backfires
While LinkedIn's auto-save feature can be a lifesaver, it's not without its drawbacks. In some cases, relying solely on auto-save can lead to unintended consequences. For instance, if you're working on a sensitive or confidential post, you may not want it to be saved automatically, especially if you're using a shared device or working in a public space. Additionally, auto-save can sometimes save incomplete or poorly written content, which can be embarrassing if it's accidentally published or shared with others. It's essential to understand the potential risks of auto-save and take steps to mitigate them, such as regularly reviewing and deleting unused drafts or using third-party tools that offer more control over draft management. Furthermore, it's crucial to develop good habits, such as saving drafts manually or using a separate note-taking app, to ensure that your work is protected and secure.
Myth vs Reality: Debunking Common Misconceptions About LinkedIn Drafts
One common misconception about LinkedIn drafts is that they're permanently stored and can be accessed at any time. However, as we've discussed, drafts typically expire after 7 days, and their accessibility can vary depending on the device and platform used. Another myth is that LinkedIn's auto-save feature is foolproof and will always save your work. While auto-save is generally reliable, it's not infallible, and there are instances where drafts may not be saved or may be lost due to technical issues. It's essential to separate fact from fiction and understand the realities of LinkedIn's draft system to avoid disappointment and frustration. By being aware of the limitations and potential pitfalls, you can take steps to protect your work and ensure that your drafts are safe and accessible.
Advanced Draft Management Strategies for Power Users
For experienced LinkedIn users, managing drafts can be a complex and nuanced task. One advanced strategy is to use a combination of LinkedIn's built-in draft features and third-party tools to create a robust draft management system. For example, you can use LinkedIn's auto-save feature to save initial drafts and then transfer them to a cloud-based note-taking app for further development and collaboration. Another strategy is to use browser extensions or plugins that offer enhanced draft management capabilities, such as automatic backup and version control. By leveraging these tools and techniques, power users can streamline their workflow, reduce the risk of lost work, and create a more efficient and effective draft management process. However, it's crucial to carefully evaluate the security and data privacy implications of using third-party tools and to ensure that they align with your organization's policies and guidelines.
Edge Cases and Uncommon Scenarios: Navigating the Gray Areas of LinkedIn Drafts
While LinkedIn's draft system is generally straightforward, there are edge cases and uncommon scenarios that can cause confusion and frustration. For instance, what happens when you're working on a draft and LinkedIn's algorithm flags it as spam or suspicious content? In such cases, your draft may be removed or restricted, even if it's not actually spam. Another scenario is when you're collaborating with others on a post, and multiple users are editing the same draft. In such cases, it's essential to establish clear communication and version control protocols to avoid conflicts and ensure that the final product is accurate and consistent. By understanding these edge cases and developing strategies to navigate them, you can minimize the risk of errors and ensure that your LinkedIn drafts are handled efficiently and effectively. Additionally, it's crucial to stay up-to-date with LinkedIn's terms of service and community guidelines to avoid unintentionally violating them and to ensure that your drafts are compliant with the platform's rules and regulations.
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