How to Block LinkedIn on Chrome (in ways that actually stick)
LinkedIn is the feed your brain has classified as 'career work', which makes it the most defensible doomscroll in the building. The feed mechanics are identical to every other social network: infinite scroll, engagement bait, dopamine-per-swipe. The only difference is the scroll comes dressed in a blazer.
Option 1: Block LinkedIn manually (free, but you hold the keys)
Chrome has no built-in "block this website" button for normal installs, so the manual route means editing your computer's hosts file: point the domain at 127.0.0.1 and the site stops resolving. It costs nothing and needs no software.
The complication: sometimes LinkedIn IS the task (job hunting, recruiting, sales outreach). Blanket domain blocks fail those weeks; that's where task-aware evaluation pays for itself.
The deeper problem is structural: any block you can set up in two minutes, you can undo in thirty seconds, and the moment you'll want to undo it is precisely the moment it exists for. Manual blocks are honor-system locks.
Option 2: A list-based blocker extension
Extensions like BlockSite or StayFocusd let you add the domain to a list, which beats the hosts file on convenience. Two weaknesses remain: the list is binary (the whole domain is blocked even when part of it is genuinely useful for your work), and the off switch is two clicks away in your extensions menu. List blockers stop the absent-minded visit; they rarely survive a motivated one.
Option 3: Block LinkedIn with an AI that knows what you're working on
Focus AI works differently: you type what you're doing ("finish the calculus problem set"), pick a duration, and lock in. During the session, the AI reads every page you open against that task. LinkedIn gets blocked when it doesn't serve the work, and the block page shows your own promise back to you, with an escape-attempt counter and a running tally of the time you've saved.
- Install Focus AI from the Chrome Web Store (free, no account needed).
- Type the task you're actually here to do and choose a session length.
- Click Lock me in. LinkedIn now hits a wall for exactly that long, and quitting early means typing your surrender letter by letter.
Two details matter for professional feed sites specifically: the AI evaluates pages rather than domains, so the useful corners of the internet stay reachable while the feed does not. And every time you walk away from the block page, the win is stamped and timed: resisting LinkedIn becomes a streak you can watch grow instead of a sacrifice you silently endure.
Ready to make LinkedIn a choice instead of a reflex?
Type your goal, lock in, and let the AI hold the door. The next urge you surf gets stamped.
Add Focus AI to Chrome — it's freeFrequently asked questions
Can I use LinkedIn for job applications but block the feed?
Yes: during a 'apply to internships' session, job pages and applications pass while the feed gets caught. That separation is impossible with a domain blocker, and it's the reason recovering LinkedIn scrollers tend to be Focus AI's most grateful users.
Is scrolling LinkedIn really that bad? It's professional content.
Engagement bait with corporate vocabulary is still engagement bait. If you wouldn't count scrolling X as working, the same scroll with thought-leadership captions doesn't count either. Your deadline can't tell the difference.
Will it block LinkedIn Learning too?
Courses you're actually taking pass during related sessions; the AI reads the page. 'Watching a course' as ambient background noise during unrelated work is, fairly, treated as the distraction it is.