We’ve tested a number of ways to embed LinkedIn feeds into WordPress, and most solutions tend to be either overly complex, limited, or poorly integrated into the block editor. ProFeedWP stands out as a much more practical approach.
From an agency perspective, it solves a very common need: displaying a company’s LinkedIn feed in a clean, reliable, and maintainable way without adding unnecessary friction. It’s built as a native Gutenberg block, with the main controls available directly in the block inspector, which keeps the editing experience consistent and easy to manage.
AI makes it easier than ever to build custom WordPress interfaces, but LinkedIn feed integrations are not just a design problem. The real value is in keeping the integration working reliably over time, which is why a dedicated plugin/service makes sense here.
The overall experience is simple, focused, and well executed.
Overall score: 9.0/10

Overview
- Setup & Onboarding – 10/10
- Editor – 9/10
- Performance – 10/10
- Features – 9/10
- Docs & Support – 6/10
- Pricing & Licensing – 10/10
Setup & Onboarding – 10/10
Getting started with ProFeedWP is straightforward. After installing the plugin and adding your license key, a new Gutenberg block becomes available in the block editor.
From there, the setup is simple: add the block, paste in the link to your company’s LinkedIn page, and the feed appears. Most of the remaining work is styling — choosing a theme, adjusting the layout, and fine-tuning the appearance through the block inspector controls.
The onboarding flow is simple and does not require any complex configuration. Compared to many alternatives in this space, especially external widget-style solutions from larger platforms like Elfsight and Juicer, ProFeedWP feels lightweight and quick to get through. It is also a relief not to have to log in to a separate external dashboard just to manage the look of the feed.
The product is positioned as a commercial plugin, but the value proposition is clear early on. Once you are inside the editor, there is very little unnecessary friction.
Editor – 9/10
ProFeedWP adds a dedicated block for displaying LinkedIn feeds, with the main settings handled directly in the Gutenberg inspector.
The block is easy to work with and follows standard Gutenberg patterns. You can add a feed, choose a theme, adjust the layout, and fine-tune the appearance without leaving the editor. This keeps the workflow efficient, especially for editors and clients who are already comfortable working in WordPress.
This is one of the plugin’s clearest advantages compared to many external widget-style solutions. Instead of managing the feed in a separate dashboard and embedding it back into WordPress, ProFeedWP keeps the editing experience where WordPress users expect it to be.
The themes are also a highlight. Several of them are clean and minimal enough to fit into modern business websites without much work, while the Barebone theme gives developers a more neutral starting point for custom styling.
One small note is that the block has quite a few settings, so the inspector can naturally become a bit dense. But that is also part of the trade-off: the plugin gives you meaningful control without forcing you into custom code for common layout and styling changes.

Performance – 10/10
ProFeedWP handles feed rendering efficiently, without introducing unnecessary complexity on the frontend. The plugin uses proper block asset enqueueing, so its frontend assets are only loaded on pages where the block is actually used. For a WordPress block plugin, this is a must.
The plugin outputs a clean feed and avoids heavy dependencies, making it suitable for production use without major performance concerns. It also caches the LinkedIn feed locally, which helps keep page loads fast instead of relying on live external requests every time a visitor loads the page.
As with any external content integration, performance will partly depend on how often data is fetched, how many posts are displayed, and whether media-heavy posts are included. But overall, the implementation feels lightweight, practical, and well considered.
Because the feed is cached locally in WordPress, posts do not need to be loaded from an external service on every page view. This helps performance and also makes the plugin less dependent on view-based limits, which are common with some hosted widget platforms.
Features – 9/10
ProFeedWP is a focused plugin, but it includes most of the features you would expect from a serious LinkedIn feed solution for WordPress.
The core feature is simple: display posts from a LinkedIn company page on your WordPress site. Around that, the plugin adds enough layout, styling, and display controls to make the feed usable in different contexts — from a simple homepage section to a more visual news or social proof block.
Some of the main features include:
- LinkedIn company feed display
- Native Gutenberg block
- 10 themes, including a Barebone theme for custom styling
- Layout options: Masonry, Carousel, List, and Grid
- Show/hide controls for images, date, like count, comment count, and avatar
- Image aspect ratio settings
- Design controls for background color, text color, hover colors, and border radius
- Text truncation settings
- Grid gap controls
- Responsive column settings per device
- Local feed caching
- Automatic feed updates
- Unlimited views
The strongest feature is probably the combination of native block editing and theme flexibility. Many LinkedIn feed tools can display posts, but fewer feel properly integrated into the WordPress editing workflow.
The different layouts also make the plugin more useful than a basic feed embed. A grid or masonry layout works well for visual sections, a list layout can fit better into more editorial pages, and the carousel option is useful when you want to show LinkedIn activity without taking up too much vertical space.
The plugin is intentionally narrow in scope. It is not trying to be a full social media aggregator for every platform. That means it will not replace broader tools like Juicer or Elfsight if you need multiple networks in one feed. But for a dedicated LinkedIn company feed, the focused feature set is a strength rather than a weakness.
Docs & Support – 6/10
The documentation is currently fairly limited. There are only a few help articles available, and we did not find any instructional videos or deeper walkthroughs for more advanced setup scenarios.
That said, ProFeedWP is simple enough that this may not be a major issue for most users. The core workflow is straightforward: install the plugin, add the block, paste in the LinkedIn page URL, and adjust the styling in the editor.
Still, we would like to see the documentation expanded over time. Useful additions would include troubleshooting failed feed updates, explaining how caching and refresh intervals work, shortcode examples for page builders, and more guidance on custom styling.
We cannot say much about the quality of support, because we did not need to contact support during our review. That is partly a good sign — the plugin worked without requiring help — but it also means we cannot judge response times or support quality directly.

Pricing & Licensing 10/10
ProFeedWP’s pricing is one of its stronger points. The single-site plan starts at $49.99/year, with a Freelancer plan at $119.88/year for up to five websites and an Agency plan at $799.99/year for unlimited websites. Lifetime licenses are also available.
For a single business website, the entry price is easy to justify if LinkedIn is an important marketing channel. For freelancers and small agencies, the five-site plan is probably the most attractive option.
A key advantage is that ProFeedWP is not built around feed view limits. Since the feed is cached and rendered through WordPress, the pricing is easier to understand than many hosted widget platforms that limit usage based on monthly views.
That makes the model predictable for client work. You pay based on the number of websites, not how many visitors load the feed.
Overall, ProFeedWP feels fairly priced for what it does: a focused commercial WordPress plugin with clear site-based licensing, no feed view limits, and a pricing model that is easy to explain to clients.
Final verdict
ProFeedWP is a focused and well-executed plugin for displaying LinkedIn company feeds in WordPress.
Its main strength is that it feels native to WordPress. The feed is managed directly in the block editor, the styling options are practical, and the pricing model is predictable without feed view limits.
It is not a full social media aggregator, and that is fine. If you need multiple networks in one feed, this is not the right tool. But if you want a clean, maintainable LinkedIn feed for a WordPress site, ProFeedWP is the plugin of choice.
The documentation could still be expanded, but the core product is simple, lightweight, and easy to recommend.
Overall score: 9.0/10
Get ProFeedWP here.