How much does it cost to hire a LinkedIn profile writer?
A practical 2026 price guide for LinkedIn profile writers, from cheap marketplace refreshes to executive profile rewrites.
Hiring a LinkedIn profile writer can cost almost nothing, or it can cost more than a decent laptop.
That range is annoying, but it makes sense once you separate the work.
Some sellers rewrite your headline and About section from a resume. Some interview you, reposition your career story, rebuild every section, and help you choose the right keywords for recruiters or buyers.
Those are not the same job.
As of May 2026, a realistic range looks like this:
| Type of help | Typical price | What you usually get |
|---|---|---|
| Cheap marketplace refresh | $25 to $100 | Headline, About section, light keyword edits |
| Standard profile rewrite | $150 to $500 | Better positioning, section-by-section rewrite, one or two revision rounds |
| Senior or executive package | $650 to $1,750+ | Interview, strategy, full profile rewrite, resume or networking add-ons |
| Ongoing LinkedIn management | $1,500 to $8,000+/month | Profile work plus content, engagement, reporting, and strategy |
If the writer never asks what opportunity you want more of, you are probably buying polish instead of positioning.
Why the price range is so wide
A LinkedIn profile is free to own. The cost is in the thinking behind it.
A cheap profile refresh usually starts from what you already have. The writer cleans up your headline, turns your resume summary into an About section, adds a few keywords, and maybe rewrites your experience bullets.
That can be enough if your profile is empty or obviously stale.
It is not enough if you are changing markets, selling advisory work, applying for senior roles, or trying to look credible to people who do not already know you.
The expensive versions usually include more interview time. A good writer is trying to answer questions like:
- What kind of role, client, or opportunity should this profile attract?
- What proof can we show without sounding inflated?
- Which words do recruiters or buyers actually search for?
- What should we leave out because it muddies the story?
That is the real work. The profile copy is the visible part.
What cheap LinkedIn profile writing gets you
Marketplace prices can be surprisingly low. On Upwork's LinkedIn profile services page, many listed projects start around $25 to $75.
At that price, assume the writer is working fast.
You might get:
- a cleaner headline
- a rewritten About section
- keyword stuffing if you are unlucky
- a more complete Experience section
- basic formatting advice
This is fine for a simple tidy-up.
It is risky if your profile needs judgment. Cheap profile writing often makes everyone sound like a "results-driven professional with a passion for cross-functional collaboration." That sentence feels professional until you notice it could fit half the people on LinkedIn.
Use this tier when the stakes are low and your current profile is clearly worse than a generic but tidy version.
What a standard profile rewrite should include
The middle of the market is where most people should look first.
Upwork's own FAQ puts a typical LinkedIn profile makeover around $150 to $500, with resume writers often starting around $50 per hour. That lines up with what you see from many career writers and profile specialists.
For that money, you should expect more than grammar cleanup.
A decent project should include:
- a short intake call or detailed questionnaire
- headline options, not one forced answer
- a rewritten About section
- Experience section guidance
- keyword choices tied to your actual goals
- at least one revision round
This tier makes sense for job seekers, consultants, freelancers, managers, and founders whose current profile is not embarrassing, just unclear.
The test is simple: after the rewrite, a stranger should know what you do, who you help, and why your background supports the claim.
What executive packages charge for
Executive packages can be much more expensive.
Resume Target lists an executive LinkedIn development service at $649.95. The Wilbanks Consulting Group lists executive LinkedIn profile writing at $1,150. Peak Profiles lists an executive LinkedIn makeover package at $1,750, bundled with broader job-search assets.
Those prices cover more than word count.
At the executive level, the writer has to handle a different kind of problem:
- leadership scope without vague bragging
- measurable outcomes without confidential details
- board, recruiter, investor, or client audiences
- a profile that matches the resume, website, and public speaking bio
If you are a senior operator, partner, VP, founder, or fractional executive, the extra cost can be reasonable. One warm intro, recruiter screen, or consulting lead may be worth more than the fee.
If you are earlier in your career, you probably do not need this tier unless the package includes resume work you already planned to buy.
What to ask before you hire
Do not ask only, "How much?"
Ask these instead:
- Will you interview me, or are you rewriting from my resume only?
- What sections are included?
- Do you write for recruiters, clients, or both?
- How do you choose keywords?
- Can I see before-and-after examples?
- How many revision rounds are included?
- Will you explain what changed and why?
The last question matters. You need to keep the profile current after the writer leaves.
Be careful with promises like "guaranteed recruiter attention" or "SEO optimized for maximum visibility." A profile can improve your odds. It cannot control who searches, who clicks, or what the market wants this month.
When you should write it yourself
You should probably write the first version yourself if:
- you are not sure what kind of role or client you want next
- you have no clear proof points yet
- your industry uses language an outsider may misunderstand
- your budget is under $100 and you care about voice
Drafting it yourself forces useful decisions. You can always hire an editor later.
Start with the three sections that do the most work:
- Headline: say what you do and for whom.
- About: explain the pattern of your work, not your whole career history.
- Featured: show proof, not decoration.
For profile language specifically, LinkedIn profile keywords without keyword stuffing is a good next step.
The price that usually makes sense
For most professionals, the sensible range is $150 to $500.
Below that, you can get a useful cleanup, but you may need to manage the positioning yourself.
Above that, you should expect a stronger strategy layer, better interview process, and clearer fit for senior opportunities.
The right question is not whether a profile writer is expensive. It is whether the profile problem is expensive.
If a weak profile is costing you recruiter replies, qualified leads, or credibility before the first conversation, paying for a serious rewrite can make sense. If you just need your About section to stop sounding dusty, do not overbuy.
Working on the posts that sit under that profile too? Run one through the PostMentor demo before publishing, especially if the profile promise and the post voice do not match yet.
Try PostMentor with your next draft
Paste your rough idea and get practical feedback on hook strength, readability, and flow while keeping your voice intact.