The best time to send automated LinkedIn messages is between 9 AM and 11 AM on Tuesday, Wednesday, or Thursday in your prospect’s local time zone. Tuesday produces the highest reply rates across all LinkedIn outreach types at 6.90%, followed closely by Monday at 6.85%. Weekends perform significantly worse — Saturday reply rates drop to 6.40% — and messages sent on Saturday are effectively buried under everything that arrives over the weekend.
Best Days to Send LinkedIn Messages
| Lā | Pane Laki | Manaʻo |
|---|---|---|
| Pōʻalua | 6.90% | Best day — highest reply rate across all industries |
| Monday / Thursday | 6.85% | Strong alternatives — especially Thursday for follow-ups |
| Pōʻakolu | 6.62% | Solid mid-week option |
| Pōʻalima | 6.58% | Acceptable but engagement tapers off |
| Saturday / Sunday | 6.40% a i ʻole lalo | Avoid — recipients are not in a business mindset |
Best Times of Day
Two windows consistently outperform the rest:
9 AM – 11 AM: The peak window. Professionals have settled in for the day, cleared early notifications, and are in an active working mindset — but are not yet blocked by back-to-back meetings. LinkedIn’s own data confirms InMails sent between 9 AM and 10 AM on weekdays achieve the highest response rates.
5 PM – 6 PM: A secondary window driven by mobile use. Professionals checking LinkedIn during commute or end-of-day wind-down are more likely to engage with shorter, conversational messages.
Avoid sending between midnight and 7 AM. Beyond low response rates, messages sent outside working hours produce bot-like activity signatures that LinkedIn’s detection systems flag regardless of message volume — a compliance risk on top of a performance one.
Why Timing Also Affects Account Safety
Timing is not just a reply-rate question. LinkedIn monitors whether your automated activity looks human. Sends at fixed intervals — every message exactly 30 seconds apart, or all 100 weekly requests fired on Monday morning — are detectable patterns that trigger spam flags even when volume is within limits.
The correct approach: spread outreach across business hours with natural variation in send times, no activity during nights or weekends, and no burst-sending that concentrates your weekly quota into a single session. This is what compliant, cloud-based automation handles automatically.
Timing Is Third — Not First
Personalisation and message brevity outperform timing as response-rate drivers. A perfectly timed generic message still fails. A well-personalised message sent at a slightly suboptimal hour still converts. The correct hierarchy:
1. Hoʻopilikino — reference something specific to the prospect
2. Message length — under 80 words consistently outperforms long pitches
3. ʻO ka manawa — Tuesday to Thursday, 9–11 AM local time
Get the first two right before optimising the clock.
Konnector.ai handles timezone-aware scheduling automatically — every send lands in the right window without manual campaign duplication, and human approval is required before anything fires. Helu ʻia kahi demo to see how it works, or kau inoa manuahi and run your first time-optimised outreach campaign today.
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Pinepine ninau ninaninau 'ana i
Yes. Monday performs nearly as well as Tuesday, especially for first-touch messages.
No. Personalisation and brevity have a greater impact on reply rates than timing.
9 AM to 11 AM on weekdays, especially Tuesday to Thursday, delivers the highest reply rates.
Weekend messages are often buried under Monday inbox volume and receive lower engagement.
Yes. Unnatural sending patterns (fixed intervals, bulk sends) can trigger spam detection.




