LinkedIn Skill Assessments Are Gone — Here’s What to Do Now

Until recently, LinkedIn Skill Assessments gave job seekers a way to validate their expertise with timed, topic-specific quizzes. A passing score in the top 30% earned a badge — a small but visible signal to recruiters that you weren’t just claiming a skill, you proved it.
Why Did LinkedIn Retire Skill Assessments?
According to LinkedIn, hiring managers now prioritize real-world application of skills over standardized tests. They want to see where and how you’ve applied your skills. In jobs, projects, or academic work. Not just in a badge or exam result.
In response, LinkedIn has made several changes to help professionals showcase skills more meaningfully:
- Tag skills directly to work experience, certifications, and education.
- Showcase skills applied in projects or job roles.
- Add context around tools used (e.g., Figma, SQL, Tableau, Python).
What Should You Do Now?
If you relied on LinkedIn badges in the past, now’s the time to shift to a more narrative, strategic approach. Here’s how to stay visible:
- Audit your skills section. Focus on current, high-impact skills relevant to your industry or job target.
- Link skills to outcomes. Don’t just list “Excel”. Explain how you built a dashboard that saved 15 hours a week.
- Use the new tagging feature. Attach your skills to real experience entries for instant credibility.
- Upload project samples. Use the Featured section to highlight work samples, case studies, or deliverables.
- Write in terms of impact. Quantify how your skills solved problems, saved money, or improved outcomes.
What’s Gone, And Gone for Good
LinkedIn has made it clear:
- Old skill badges are gone unless you saved them.
- You can no longer retake past assessments.
- No new badges or learning suggestions will be offered based on assessment results.
The Upside: Skill Stories Matter More
If you’re better at doing than test-taking, this shift is good news. You now get to show, not just tell.
Craft a LinkedIn profile or resume that tells a clear story: What skill, what challenge, what outcome? That’s what recruiters want to see in 2025 and beyond.



