Linkedin Tips & Strategies

How to Find a LinkedIn Company Page URL

By Spencer Lanoue
November 11, 2025

Finding a LinkedIn Company Page URL seems straightforward, but when you're in a hurry to add it to a spreadsheet, plug it into a marketing tool, or hyperlink it in a proposal, frustration can quickly set in. This guide cuts through the noise and shows you a few foolproof methods for finding any company’s LinkedIn URL, from the simple to the slightly more advanced. We'll cover how to find it on your desktop and phone, what to do when your search gets tricky, and even some advanced tips for marketers and developers.

Why You Need a Company Page URL in the First Place

Before we get into the "how," let's quickly touch on the "why." A LinkedIn company URL is more than just a link, it's a critical piece of data for countless professional activities. You might need it to:

  • Populate Marketing and Sales Tools: Many CRMs, prospecting platforms, and outreach automation tools require the precise company URL to enrich contact data or track company activity. Supplying the correct URL is the foundation for accurate targeting.
  • Enhance Your Professional Materials: Add your company's LinkedIn page to your email signature, business cards, website footer, and presentation slides. It's an easy way to boost brand visibility and provide a direct path for potential clients, partners, or hires to learn more. Learning how to use LinkedIn for business effectively can significantly amplify these efforts.
  • Streamline Social Media Management: When you connect a LinkedIn page to a social media scheduling tool, you often need the direct link to identify the correct page, especially if you manage multiple accounts.
  • Conduct Competitor Research: Compiling a list of competitor URLs is a fundamental step in analyzing their content strategy, employee growth, and overall digital presence on the platform. This research can also inform how to optimize your own company page for better performance.
  • Apply for Jobs: Some application systems or networking outreach efforts are enhanced when you can reference a specific company page, showing you’ve done your homework.

Having a quick, reliable method to grab this URL saves time and prevents the small annoyances that can derail your workflow.

Method 1: Find the URL on Desktop (The Most Common Way)

This is the most direct method and usually takes less than 30 seconds. If you're at your computer, follow these simple steps.

Step 1: Navigate to LinkedIn and Log In

Open your favorite web browser and go to LinkedIn.com. If you aren't already logged in, enter your credentials. Being logged in provides the most accurate and personalized search results.

Step 2: Use the Search Bar at the Top

At the top of the homepage, you'll see a prominent search bar. Type the name of the company you're looking for. As you type, LinkedIn will suggest companies, people, jobs, and more. You might see the company you want in the dropdown list.

Step 3: Filter Your Search for Companies

If the company doesn't appear right away in the dropdown menu, simply hit the Enter or Return key. This will take you to a full search results page. To eliminate noise from people's profiles and job postings, click the “Companies” filter button just below the search bar. This isolates your search to only official Company Pages.

Step 4: Select the Correct Company Page

From the filtered list, locate the correct company. Pay attention to the logo, employee count, and a brief description to confirm it's the right one, especially for companies with common names. Click on its name to navigate to their official Company Page.

Step 5: Copy the URL from Your Browser's Address Bar

Once the Company Page loads, the URL you need is right at the top of your browser in the address bar. It should look something like this:

https://www.linkedin.com/company/company-name/

Click on the URL to highlight it, then right-click and select “Copy” or use the keyboard shortcut (Ctrl+C on Windows, Cmd+C on Mac). That's it! You have successfully copied the company’s LinkedIn URL.

Method 2: Find the URL on the LinkedIn Mobile App

When you're away from your desk, the LinkedIn mobile app provides a slightly different, but equally simple, path to getting the URL.

Step 1: Open the App and Search

Tap the search bar, which is usually found at the top of your feed. Type the name of the company.

Step 2: Go to the Company Page

Much like on desktop, you'll see a list of results. You can tap on the "Companies" tab to narrow it down, then tap on the correct company profile to open their page.

Step 3: Find the “More” or Three-Dot Menu

This is the key difference from the desktop version. You can't just copy the URL from an address bar. On the company's page, look for a three-dot icon (...) or a button labeled "More" near the company's name and Follow button. It’s usually located in the upper right corner.

Step 4: Share and Copy the Link

Tap the three-dot icon. This will bring up a menu with several options. Select “Share via…” or a similarly phrased option. From there, another menu - your phone’s native sharing menu - will appear. Look for the “Copy” or “Copy Link” icon. Tap it, and the URL will be saved to your clipboard, ready to be pasted wherever you need it.

Decoding LinkedIn URLs: Vanity vs. Numerical IDs

If you perform this process frequently, you'll notice that not all LinkedIn URLs look the same. Understanding the difference can help you troubleshoot issues and even identify older, more established company pages.

Vanity URLs

Most companies have what is known as a "vanity" or "custom" URL. This is a clean, customized link that includes the company's name and is easy to read and share. It's the standard for most brands today.

Example: https://www.linkedin.com/company/microsoft

Numerical ID URLs

In some cases, especially with older pages or when a specific page name has already been taken, you might find a URL that contains a string of numbers. This number is the company’s unique LinkedIn ID.

Example: https://www.linkedin.com/company/1441/ (This is the URL for Google)

Both types of URLs are valid and will direct you to the same page. The vanity URL is simply better for branding. If you are an administrator of your own company's page and have a numerical URL, you can typically set a custom vanity URL in your "Admin View" settings, provided the name you want is available.

Advanced Tips for Finding Company URLs

What if the simple search isn't cutting it? Here are a couple of other ways to track down that elusive URL.

Technique 1: Find the URL from an Employee's Profile

If you know someone who works at the company, this is an excellent workaround. Find their personal LinkedIn profile. In their "Experience" section, their current role will be listed. The company's name in this section is almost always a direct link to the official Company Page. Simply click on the company name or logo, and it will take you straight there. From there, you can copy the URL as usual.

Technique 2: Use a Targeted Google Search

Sometimes, Google is quicker than LinkedIn's internal search, especially if a company has a generic name. You can use search operators to pinpoint the page.

Go to Google and type in the following format:

site:linkedin.com/company "Company Name"

For example, to find Canva, you would search:

site:linkedin.com/company "Canva"

This tells Google to search only within the /company/ directory on LinkedIn for the exact phrase "Canva." The first result is almost always the official page you're looking for.

Troubleshooting: What if You're Still Stuck?

While the methods above work most of the time, here are solutions for common roadblocks.

  • Multiple Companies with the Same Name: It happens. When you search for "Apex Consulting," you might get dozens of results. Use context clues to find the right one. Check the company logo against their official website. Look at the employee count - is it 10 or 10,000? Verify the HQ location listed on their page.
  • The Company Is a Subsidiary: Sometimes, well-known brands operate as subsidiaries. They might not have their own page and instead fall under the parent company’s LinkedIn Page. For example, search for Instagram, and you will be directed to Meta's LinkedIn page. Always check the official website’s career or "About Us" page if you are unsure.
  • The Company Has No LinkedIn Page: It's less common for established businesses these days, but it happens. If you cannot find a page through any of these methods, the company may simply not have an official LinkedIn presence. If so, you might want to consider creating one.

For the Developers: Finding the Numerical Company ID

For certain API integrations or data scraping tasks, you might need the numerical ID of a company, not just its vanity URL. If the URL is already numerical, you're all set. But what if it's a vanity URL like /company/microsoft?

The easiest method is to view the website's source code.

  1. Navigate to the Company Page.
  2. Right-click anywhere on the page and select "View Page Source."
  3. A new tab containing the HTML code for the page will open.
  4. Use your browser's find function (Ctrl+F or Cmd+F) and search for the phrase: fs_company:
  5. Look for a piece of code that looks like this: "urn:li:fs_company:1813". The number that appears (in this case, "1813" for Microsoft) is the permanent numerical ID for that company.

This ID is incredibly useful for technical applications because it never changes, even if the company updates its vanity URL.

Final Thoughts

Finding a LinkedIn Company Page URL is a fundamental digital skill for any professional today. Whether you're using the simple search-and-copy method on your desktop, grabbing it through the share menu on your phone, or using a creative workaround, you now have a full toolkit to find what you need quickly and get back to work.

On our end, when we built Postbase, we spent a lot of time focusing on these small but important details. Things like making account connections stable and effortless are vital for a modern social media manager. Juggling clients and brands is complex enough, which is why your tools shouldn't add to the headache. We've ensured that linking your accounts, including LinkedIn pages, is a seamless process so you don't have to keep re-authenticating and can trust your posts - from text updates to short-form video - will go live when they're supposed to.

```

Spencer's spent a decade building products at companies like Buffer, UserTesting, and Bump Health. He's spent years in the weeds of social media management—scheduling posts, analyzing performance, coordinating teams. At Postbase, he's building tools to automate the busywork so you can focus on creating great content.

Other posts you might like

How to Add Social Media Icons to an Email Signature

Enhance your email signature by adding social media icons. Discover step-by-step instructions to turn every email into a powerful marketing tool.

Read more

How to Record Audio for Instagram Reels

Record clear audio for Instagram Reels with this guide. Learn actionable steps to create professional-sounding audio, using just your phone or upgraded gear.

Read more

How to Check Instagram Profile Interactions

Check your Instagram profile interactions to see what your audience loves. Discover where to find these insights and use them to make smarter content decisions.

Read more

How to Request a Username on Instagram

Requesting an Instagram username? Learn strategies from trademark claims to negotiation for securing your ideal handle. Get the steps to boost your brand today!

Read more

How to Attract a Target Audience on Instagram

Attract your ideal audience on Instagram with our guide. Discover steps to define, find, and engage followers who buy and believe in your brand.

Read more

How to Turn On Instagram Insights

Activate Instagram Insights to boost your content strategy. Learn how to turn it on, what to analyze, and use data to grow your account effectively.

Read more

Stop wrestling with outdated social media tools

Wrestling with social media? It doesn’t have to be this hard. Plan your content, schedule posts, respond to comments, and analyze performance — all in one simple, easy-to-use tool.

Schedule your first post
The simplest way to manage your social media
Rating