LinkedIn company banner size
4200 × 700px
Aspect ratio
6:1
Upload LinkedIn Company Page covers at 4200 × 700 px (6:1) — they display as a slim ~1128 × 191 strip that punishes detailed designs.
Last verified June 2026
Company Pages use a much slimmer cover than personal profiles: LinkedIn lists 4200 × 700 px (6:1) as the recommended upload, which renders as a strip of roughly 1128 × 191 px on desktop. Displayed at under 200 px tall, this is closer to a website header than a billboard — photography with faces, dense screenshots, and multi-line copy all collapse at this height — and designing at the display size instead of the full upload leaves the banner soft on high-DPI screens. The companion asset is the Page logo at 400 × 400 px (268 × 268 minimum), which appears beside the company name, on employee profiles, and in feed posts; together the two define how the company renders everywhere on LinkedIn.
| Variant | Dimensions | Ratio |
|---|---|---|
| Company cover (recommended upload) | 4200 × 700 pxLinkedIn’s listed size; PNG or JPEG, max 3 MB — GIF is not supported. | 6:1 |
| Cover display size | ~1128 × 191 pxRendered strip on desktop — design at the full 4200 × 700 so it stays sharp on high-DPI screens. | — |
| Page logo | 400 × 400 pxLinkedIn’s listed size; minimum 268 × 268 px, PNG or JPEG, max 3 MB. | 1:1 |
| Logo display contexts | small square/circleFeed posts, employee profiles, search, ads. | 1:1 |
The cover’s extreme left can sit behind or beside the Page logo block depending on layout and screen width, and the strip’s edges get trimmed at some viewport sizes. Keep any text or focal element in the central 60% of the width and vertically centered — at a display height of about 191 px there is no room for vertical hierarchy anyway. For the logo, the standard avatar rules apply: centered mark, ~15% padding, legible at 40 px, because it spends most of its life beside posts at comment-thumbnail scale.
The formats that work at 6:1 are the ones built for slimness: a wordmark with a tagline, a repeating product pattern, a gradient with one line of positioning text. Choose a single horizontal composition, let it breathe, and build it at the full 4200 × 700 upload size — not the smaller display size. If your current brand assets are all square or 16:9, crop a detail rather than squeezing a full layout.
The logo at 400 × 400 px appears in orders of magnitude more impressions than the cover — beside every post the Page publishes and on every employee’s profile. A wide wordmark crammed into that square becomes unreadable; use the icon or monogram variant of the brand and verify it at 40 px before shipping.
A polished Page header over a feed that last posted months ago undercuts the brand more than a default banner would. Set a sustainable rhythm — even one strong post a week keeps the Page alive in followers’ feeds. Scheduling helps a small team look consistent: SocialKit queues LinkedIn Page posts alongside the other 10 platforms it publishes to.
LinkedIn lists 4200 × 700 px (6:1) as the recommended cover upload; it displays as a slim strip of roughly 1128 × 191 px on desktop — much slimmer than the 1584 × 396 personal-profile banner. Design a simple horizontal strip; detailed layouts collapse at this height.
LinkedIn lists 400 × 400 px for the Page logo, with a 268 × 268 px minimum — PNG or JPEG, up to 3 MB. Use the icon version of your brand — wide wordmarks turn illegible at the small sizes the logo renders at.
The strip’s edges get trimmed at some screen widths and the left side can interact with the logo block. Keep text and focal elements in the central 60% of the width, vertically centered.
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