When tech executive David Martinez died at 52, his LinkedIn profile became an unexpected memorial. His 15,000+ connections, thought leadership articles, recommendations, and professional accomplishments—30 years of career documented—suddenly faced an uncertain future.

His widow Amanda faced questions: – Should the profile stay up as a professional legacy? – Should it be memorialized with “In Remembrance” badge? – Should it be deleted entirely? – What about his articles that people still read? – His recommendations for former employees? – Business contacts trying to reach him?

LinkedIn has 1 billion+ members. Every day, some of them die. Unlike Facebook or Instagram where memorialization is common, LinkedIn’s professional context creates unique considerations.

LinkedIn offers two main options for handling deceased members’ accounts: memorialization or account closure.

This guide covers what happens to LinkedIn profiles when members die, how to memorialize or close accounts, the professional legacy considerations, and how to plan ahead.

LinkedIn’s Deceased Member Policies

Option 1: Memorialization

Memorialized accounts allow a person’s legacy to remain on LinkedIn after they’ve passed away.

What memorialization does:

Once an account is memorialized, access to the account is locked. The following changes occur:

Visual indicators:A memorialized badge appears on the profile page as a symbol of remembranceThe word “In Remembrance” will appear under the member’s name

Account access: – Account locked (no one can log in) – LinkedIn products cancelled (except Apple subscriptions) – Connections to 3rd party services terminated – Mobile and desktop sessions expire immediately

Profile visibility: – Profile remains visible – Professional history preserved – Articles and posts remain accessible – Recommendations and endorsements stay – Connections list stays

Interaction limitations: While you can continue to engage with the posts, articles, and other content created by a memorialized account, you can’t engage directly with the profile.

What you CAN do: – View profile – Read their articles – See their posts – Comment on their posts – Share their content

What you CANNOT do: – Send connection requests – Message them – Endorse skills – Write new recommendations – Tag them in posts

Option 2: Account Closure

If you choose to close their account, LinkedIn will remove their profile.

What happens with closure:Immediate account closureDeletion of account data within 21 daysDelisting from search engines within a few weeks

What gets deleted: – Profile completely removed – All posts and articles deleted – Connections severed – Recommendations deleted – Endorsements removed – Messages deleted – Activity history erased

What’s lost forever: – Professional legacy documentation – Thought leadership articles – Recommendations for others – Network connections – Years of career history

Permanent and irreversible.

Who Can Request Memorialization or Closure

Authorized Representatives

Authorized representatives need a death certificate to prove to LinkedIn that the deceased LinkedIn member has truly passed, and legal documentation showing authority to act on behalf of the deceased member’s estate.

Authorized representatives: – Executor of estate – Administrator (if no will) – Legal representative – Power of attorney holder (if granted posthumous authority) – Immediate family with legal documentation

Required documentation: – Death certificate (certified copy) – Letters testamentary or letters of administration – Legal proof of authority – Your identification – Deceased’s LinkedIn profile URL

What authorized representatives can choose: – Memorialize account – Or close account completely – Full control over decision

Unauthorized Individuals

If you aren’t authorized, you can only report a member as deceased and LinkedIn will memorialize the profile.

Anyone can report: – Colleagues – Friends – Family members (without legal docs) – Former employees – Business partners

What happens: – LinkedIn memorializes profile automatically – No choice in the matter – Profile stays up with “In Remembrance” badge – Cannot request deletion without legal authority

Why this matters: If you want profile deleted (not memorialized), you MUST be authorized representative.

How to Request Memorialization or Closure

Step 1: Gather Documentation

Required documents: – ☐ Death certificate (certified copy, PDF acceptable) – ☐ Deceased’s LinkedIn profile URL – ☐ Your identification – ☐ Legal documentation proving authority (if requesting closure) – ☐ Your relationship to deceased – ☐ Your contact information

Step 2: Access LinkedIn’s Deceased Member Form

Two paths:

Path A: General reporting (unauthorized) 1. Go to LinkedIn Help Center 2. Search “deceased member” 3. Click “Report a deceased member” 4. Fill out form 5. Result: Profile will be memorialized

Path B: Authorized representative (can choose memorial or closure) 1. Go to: linkedin.com/help/linkedin/answer/a1336663 2. Click “Request to memorialize or close account” 3. Fill out detailed form 4. Upload documentation 5. Specify preference: Memorialize OR Close

Step 3: Complete Form

Information requested: – Deceased member’s full name – LinkedIn profile URL – Date of death – Your name – Your relationship to deceased – Your email address – Your phone number – Reason for request – Preference (memorial or closure)

Upload documents: – Death certificate – Legal documentation (if applicable) – Your ID

Step 4: Submit and Wait

Timeline: – Typical response: 7-14 business days – May take longer during high volume – No instant confirmation

What LinkedIn does: 1. Verifies death certificate authenticity 2. Confirms your legal authority (if claiming) 3. Processes request 4. Memorializes or closes account 5. Sends confirmation email

Follow up: – Week 2: Check email for response – Week 3: Submit follow-up inquiry if no response – Verify action was taken (profile memorialized or deleted)

Decision Framework: Memorialize vs. Close

When to Memorialize

Consider memorialization if: – Deceased was public figure or industry leader – Extensive thought leadership content – Many recommendations for others (they lose these if profile deleted) – Professional legacy matters – Articles still valuable to industry – Family wants professional memorial – Large professional network that knew them

Benefits of memorialization: – Legacy preserved – Articles remain accessible – Recommendations for others maintained – Professional accomplishments documented – Connections can visit as memorial – Content continues helping others

Example: University professor with years of published articles on LinkedIn. Memorialization preserves educational content for students and colleagues.

When to Close Account

Consider closure if: – Privacy concerns paramount – No significant public content – Family prefers no digital presence – Deceased would have wanted deletion – Profile contains outdated/inaccurate information – Risk of impersonation or hacking – Family wants clean break

Benefits of closure: – Complete privacy – No risk of account hacking – Definitive end to digital presence – Prevents inappropriate posts/tags – Finality for family

Example: Private individual who used LinkedIn minimally for job search. No public content. Family prefers complete removal.

Middle Ground Considerations

Partial preservation (before deletion): 1. Screenshot profile 2. Download articles (copy text) 3. Save recommendations given/received 4. Export connections list (if accessible) 5. Archive in family records 6. THEN request account closure

Result: Professional legacy preserved privately, profile removed publicly.

What Happens to LinkedIn Content

Articles and Posts

If memorialized: – All articles remain published – All posts remain visible – Likes and comments preserved – Engagement metrics frozen – Content searchable – Can still be shared

If closed: – All articles deleted – All posts deleted – Comments from deceased on others’ posts removed – Shared content disappears – Gone forever

Important: If deceased wrote valuable thought leadership, consider memorialization to preserve.

Recommendations

Recommendations GIVEN by deceased:If memorialized: Remain on recipients’ profiles – If closed: Deleted from recipients’ profiles

Impact: Colleagues and former employees lose valuable recommendations.

Consideration: Contact key people first, suggest they screenshot recommendations before account closed.

Recommendations RECEIVED by deceased: – Always remain (other people wrote these) – Attached to their profiles, not deceased’s

Connections

If memorialized: – Connection list visible – Shows “In Remembrance” – Connections can’t message – Can view mutual connections

If closed: – All connections severed – Removed from others’ connection lists – Network graph broken

Messages

If memorialized: – Account locked, can’t access – Messages remain in other people’s inboxes – Can’t send new messages to deceased

If closed: – Deceased’s inbox deleted – Messages in others’ inboxes remain – Conversation history one-sided

Professional Legacy Considerations

Industry Thought Leaders

If deceased was: – Published author on LinkedIn – Regular content creator – Industry influencer – Conference speaker

Memorialize to: – Preserve body of work – Maintain citations/references – Continue benefiting industry – Honor professional contributions

Example: Marketing executive with 200+ published articles on LinkedIn. Articles regularly shared and cited. Memorialization preserves knowledge base.

Business Owners and Entrepreneurs

Considerations: – Business may continue – Profile promotes business – Recommendations establish credibility – Network connections valuable

Options: 1. Memorialize to maintain business credibility 2. Transfer business to LinkedIn Company Page (separate from personal profile) 3. Close personal but maintain Company Page

Note: Personal profiles different from Company Pages. Company Pages can outlive founders.

Executives and Leaders

High-profile individuals: – Public figures – C-suite executives – Board members – Industry pioneers

Likely choice: Memorialization – Professional legacy important – Public record of career – Recommendations support former colleagues – Industry remembers contributions

Job Seekers and Early-Career Professionals

Minimal LinkedIn presence: – Basic profile – Few connections – No published content – Used primarily for job hunting

Likely choice: Closure – Little to preserve – Privacy preferred – No public legacy value

Special Situations

LinkedIn Premium Subscriptions

Active subscriptions: – Premium Career – Premium Business – Sales Navigator – Recruiter Lite

What happens: LinkedIn products are cancelled (except Apple subscriptions).

Action required: – Cancel subscription to stop charges – Contact LinkedIn billing support – Provide death certificate – Request refund for unused time

Apple subscriptions: – Must cancel through Apple – Not automatically terminated – Contact Apple Support with death certificate

InMail and Recruiter Contacts

If account memorialized: – Can’t send new InMails – Recruiter can’t contact – Profile remains in search but marked deceased

For recruiters: – Deceased profiles appear in searches – “In Remembrance” badge visible – Can filter out to avoid confusion

Company Pages Managed by Deceased

Problem: Deceased was admin of Company Page. Now no one has access.

Solution: 1. Identify other admins (if any) 2. If sole admin, contact LinkedIn Support 3. Provide: – Death certificate – Proof you’re authorized representative – Business documentation 4. LinkedIn can transfer admin rights

Critical: Company Pages separate from personal profiles. Company Page continues even if personal profile memorialized.

Groups Owned by Deceased

LinkedIn Groups: – Deceased was group owner/manager – Group continues – LinkedIn may transfer ownership

What happens: – LinkedIn monitors for inactive admins – May designate new manager – Or archive group if no activity

If you want to manage deceased’s group: – Contact LinkedIn Support – Prove relationship/authorization – Request transfer of ownership

Pre-Planning: Control Your LinkedIn Legacy

LinkedIn’s Limitation

LinkedIn does not have any pre-planning tools that let account holders choose how they would want their accounts handled after death.

No features like: – Legacy Contact (Apple) – Inactive Account Manager (Google) – Pre-selected preferences – Designated heir for profile

Result: Decisions must be made by loved ones or executors after death.

But: LinkedIn accounts will stay active until someone takes action to have it taken down or memorialized.

Document Your Preferences

Include in estate plan:

LINKEDIN ACCOUNT INSTRUCTIONS

Profile URL: [your LinkedIn URL]
Username: [email address]
Password: [stored in password manager]

MY PREFERENCE UPON DEATH:
☐ Memorialize profile (preserve professional legacy)
☐ Close account completely (delete profile)

REASON FOR PREFERENCE:
[Explain your reasoning so family understands]

Example - Memorialize:
"I have published 150+ articles on digital marketing that are
regularly shared and cited. I want these preserved to continue
helping professionals in the industry. Please memorialize my
account to maintain this body of work."

Example - Close:
"I value privacy and used LinkedIn minimally. I prefer my profile
be completely removed after my death. Please close my account."

ADDITIONAL INSTRUCTIONS:
- Screenshot key recommendations (given and received)
- Export article text to [Google Drive folder]
- Notify key contacts: [list important professional contacts]
- Transfer admin of [Company Page name] to [successor name]

Password Manager Emergency Access

Set up emergency access: – LastPass, 1Password, Dashlane – Grant access to executor – Includes LinkedIn credentials – Executor can then log in (if memorialized, can’t log in; if closing, helpful for data export first)

Share Credentials with Trusted Person

Tell executor: – Where LinkedIn credentials are stored – Your preference (memorialize vs. close) – Any important content to preserve – Company Pages you manage – Groups you own

Archive Important Content

Before death (ideally): – Export articles to PDF – Save to Google Drive or similar – Screenshot key recommendations – Download connection list – Preserve important messages

Result: Professional legacy preserved regardless of profile decision.

For Executors: LinkedIn Account Checklist

Week 1: Assessment

  • ☐ Locate deceased’s LinkedIn profile
  • ☐ Review content (articles, posts, recommendations)
  • ☐ Check for Company Pages they managed
  • ☐ Check for Groups they owned
  • ☐ Review their estate plan preferences (if documented)
  • ☐ Assess professional legacy value
  • ☐ Decide: Memorialize or close?

Week 2: Documentation

  • ☐ Obtain certified death certificate
  • ☐ Obtain letters testamentary
  • ☐ Gather your identification
  • ☐ Screenshot profile (before changes)
  • ☐ Export articles (copy text)
  • ☐ Screenshot key recommendations

Week 3: Submission

  • ☐ Go to LinkedIn deceased member form
  • ☐ Complete as authorized representative
  • ☐ Upload required documents
  • ☐ Specify preference: Memorial or Close
  • ☐ Submit request
  • ☐ Note confirmation number

Week 4-5: Follow-Up

  • ☐ Check email for LinkedIn response
  • ☐ Verify action taken
  • ☐ If memorialized, confirm “In Remembrance” badge appears
  • ☐ If closed, confirm profile no longer accessible
  • ☐ Handle Company Page admin transfer if needed
  • ☐ Notify key professional contacts

Additional Tasks:

  • ☐ Cancel LinkedIn Premium if active
  • ☐ Request refund for unused subscription
  • ☐ Transfer Company Page admin rights
  • ☐ Archive preserved content
  • ☐ Update professional contacts if needed

Conclusion

LinkedIn profiles represent professional legacies—decades of career accomplishments, thought leadership, and industry contributions. What happens to these profiles after death matters.

The problem: – No pre-planning tools from LinkedIn – Family must decide memorialization vs. closure – Valuable content at risk if account closed – Recommendations for others lost if profile deleted – Professional network disrupted

The solution (after death): ✓ Gather legal documentation (death certificate, letters testamentary) ✓ Assess professional legacy value ✓ Choose memorialization (preserves content) or closure (complete removal) ✓ Submit request to LinkedIn as authorized representative ✓ Preserve important content before requesting closure ✓ Handle Company Pages and Groups separately

The solution (proactive planning): ✓ Document your preference in estate plan ✓ Explain reasoning to family ✓ Archive important articles and content ✓ Share credentials with executor ✓ Identify Company Pages you manage ✓ Make your wishes known

Key considerations:Memorialize: Preserves professional legacy, articles remain, recommendations stay – Close: Complete removal, privacy, no digital presence – Middle ground: Archive content privately, then close account

Most important: Your professional legacy and LinkedIn content have value. Make your preferences known, so family can honor your wishes and preserve what matters.

Tell your executor what you want. Document it in your estate plan. Your professional legacy deserves intentional planning.


Resources

Sources

By Pixels & Probate

Pixels & Probate covers the full spectrum of digital estate planning and administration — from recovering a deceased loved one's accounts to proactively organizing your own digital life. Founded from personal experience navigating a parent's digital estate in 2025.

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