LinkedIn Carousel Downloader

Save public LinkedIn document & carousel posts as the original PDF — paste the link, no login.

Free · No login · PDF slides

A LinkedIn carousel downloader that saves the whole slide deck

SnapSave is a free LinkedIn Carousel Downloader that turns a public document post into the original PDF, with every slide intact and in order. Paste the URL of a LinkedIn carousel into the box at the top of this page, press Download, and the multi-slide deck saves to your device as a clean PDF, ready to read offline. No app, no account, and nothing to stitch back together yourself.

LinkedIn document posts, the swipeable carousels you flick through in the feed, are really multi-page PDFs that creators publish for quick tips, frameworks, and mini-guides. People save them to read later on a commute, to keep a checklist handy, or to file a useful framework away for reference. The snag is that LinkedIn shows you the slides one at a time but doesn’t hand you a clean way to keep the deck. SnapSave reads the carousel link and gives you back the full document in one go, through our SnapSave downloader.

It works only with public LinkedIn posts. Save document posts you published yourself, decks you have permission to keep, or carousels you’re allowed to use, and please respect LinkedIn’s User Agreement and the creator’s copyright. Need moving content or single graphics instead? Reach for the LinkedIn Video Downloader for clips, or the LinkedIn Image Downloader for standalone photos.

How it works

How to download a LinkedIn carousel in three steps

From a document post link to a saved PDF deck in well under a minute, no software to install and no sign-up.

Step 01

Copy the document post link

On the LinkedIn carousel, tap the three-dot menu and choose Copy link to post. On the web, copy the URL straight from your browser’s address bar. Either way you want the link to the post itself.

Step 02

Paste it into SnapSave

Drop the URL into the box at the top of this page and press Download. SnapSave reads the document post, finds the underlying slide file, and gets the full deck ready for you.

Step 03

Save the PDF deck

Download the carousel as the original multi-page PDF, with every slide in order. Prefer pictures? You can also grab each slide exported as a JPG image, ready to save straight to your phone or computer.

What you can download

What you can save from a LinkedIn document post

One box reads the link, recognises a LinkedIn carousel, and offers the deck the way you want it, the whole PDF or its slides as images.

The original PDF deck

Save a public LinkedIn carousel as the multi-page PDF it really is, every slide in order, text and graphics crisp. It’s the cleanest way to keep a document post for offline reading or your reference folder.

Slides as JPG images

Want individual pictures instead of one file? SnapSave can export each slide of the carousel as a JPG image, handy for pulling a single tip into your notes or saving one frame to your camera roll.

Every slide, in order

A carousel is only useful if it’s complete. SnapSave keeps the full deck from a public document post, first slide to last, so the framework or checklist reads the way the creator built it, not just the cover.

Private by design

We don’t log your links or keep your files

Plenty of downloaders quietly keep a record of every link that’s pasted into them. SnapSave doesn’t work that way. There’s no account to sign into, no list of what you’ve saved, and no copy of your PDF left sitting on a server.

When you paste a LinkedIn carousel URL, SnapSave reads the public document post, prepares the slide deck, and passes the finished PDF to your device. The link only lives long enough to build the download, then it’s gone, no upload step, nothing parked on a disk, and no log with your name attached.

No account, no history, no stored files. Your link is used only to prepare the download and is discarded the moment it completes.

Formats & quality

Supported LinkedIn carousel formats

What the creator published is what comes back, the same multi-page PDF, with the option to take each slide as an image if that suits you better.

Source on LinkedIn What SnapSave gives you Quality
Document post (carousel) Original multi-page PDF As published
Single carousel slide JPG image Original
Whole deck as pictures JPG per slide Original
A LinkedIn document post is built as a PDF behind the swipeable slides, so the PDF download is the truest copy, fonts and layout exactly as the creator set them. The JPG option is there for when you just want one slide as a picture rather than the full file.

Tips

Get a clean carousel download every time

Most downloads work first try. A few small habits sort out the ones that don’t.

Copy the post link, not the profile

Open the document post with the carousel, tap the three-dot menu → Copy link to post. On the web, copy the URL from the address bar. You want the link to that specific post, not to the creator’s profile or feed.

Pick PDF for the full deck

If you want the complete carousel exactly as published, choose the PDF, it keeps every slide, the fonts, and the layout in one file. The per-slide JPG option is best when you only need a single page as a picture.

Clarity depends on the upload

SnapSave hands back the deck at the quality the creator published. If the original slides were exported small or a little soft, the download matches that, no tool can sharpen detail that was never in the source file.

SnapSave only works with public posts

The downloader reads document posts that are public on LinkedIn. If a post needs a login to view, SnapSave can’t open it, by design. Stick to public carousels you can see without signing in.

If a download stalls, refresh and retry

A dropped connection happens. Reload the page, paste the URL again, and most stalled downloads finish on the second go. Nothing half-finished is kept, so a retry is always safe.

Why SnapSave

What makes SnapSave a better LinkedIn carousel downloader

One tool for the document posts on LinkedIn, the full deck as a PDF or its slides as images, at the original quality, with no record of what you save.

The real PDF, not screenshots

A LinkedIn carousel is a PDF under the hood. SnapSave saves that file, so you keep sharp text and the exact layout instead of a stack of blurry screen grabs.

Original quality, every slide

SnapSave keeps the deck as the creator published it, all the slides, in order, with no watermark and no resizing. Just the clean document the way it went up.

PDF or slide images

Save the whole carousel as one PDF, or pull out each slide as a JPG when you only need a picture. The same box reads the link and offers what fits.

Free, unlimited, no sign-up

No daily limit, no email, no locked features and no account. Save one deck or fifty, the LinkedIn carousel downloader stays free.

Works on every device

iPhone, iPad, Android, Windows, Mac, Linux and Chromebook, any modern browser, with no app and no extension to maintain.

Keeps long decks whole

Long, multi-slide carousels, the ones where lighter tools tend to grab only the cover or drop a page, come back complete from first slide to last.

Step by step

How to download LinkedIn carousels on any device

The routine is the same everywhere, copy, paste, download. Only the place the file lands changes.

iPhone & iPad iOS

On the document post tap the three-dot menu → Copy link to post, open SnapSave in Safari, paste, and download. The PDF saves to Files → Downloads, where you can open it, mark it up, or share it on.

Android Chrome

Tap the three-dot menu → Copy link to post, open SnapSave in Chrome, paste, and tap download. The PDF shows up in your Downloads notification and folder, ready to read in any PDF viewer.

Windows PC

Open the carousel on linkedin.com, copy the URL from the address bar, paste it into SnapSave, and click download. The PDF lands in your default Downloads folder, usually C:UsersYourNameDownloads.

Mac macOS

Same as Windows, copy the post URL, paste, download. The PDF saves to ~/Downloads and opens in Preview, and SnapSave works in Safari, Chrome, Firefox, Brave and Arc.

Chromebook & Linux

Identical steps: open the post, copy, paste, download. The PDF saves to your Downloads folder and shows up in the Files app on Chromebook or your file manager on Linux.

Use cases

What people save LinkedIn carousels for

Reading a document post offline on a commute
Keeping a framework or checklist for reference
Archiving your own carousel before you edit it
Filing a mini-guide into your study folder
Saving a slide as a JPG for your notes
Revisiting a tip later without scrolling the feed
Saving a carousel you’ll cite in a write-up
Printing a deck to read away from a screen
Sharing a useful deck with a teammate

Compatibility

One LinkedIn downloader, every browser and device

SnapSave runs in your browser, so there’s nothing to install. Open the site on any device, paste your LinkedIn carousel URL, and you’re set.

DevicesiPhone · iPad · Android · Windows PC · Mac · Linux · Chromebook

BrowsersChrome · Safari · Firefox · Edge · Brave · Arc

Where we draw the line

What SnapSave won’t do

A downloader should be a handy tool, not a way around someone’s rights. A few things stay off the table on purpose.

Open posts that need a login

SnapSave only reads document posts that are public on LinkedIn. If a carousel needs you to sign in to see it, it stays off-limits. Getting around access controls is what harms creators and gets downloaders blocked.

Scrape profiles or feeds

Each download is one paste of one public document post. SnapSave isn’t a profile or feed scraper and won’t be bent into one.

Hold on to your downloads

The finished PDF travels from LinkedIn to your device. Nothing stays with us, so there’s nothing to “delete later”, it was never kept.

Ask for your LinkedIn password

SnapSave never needs your login or your account. If a LinkedIn downloader wants you to sign in, close the tab.

Add tracking or a watermark

The PDF you save is the original deck as LinkedIn served it, every slide intact, nothing added, nothing altered, and certainly no SnapSave stamp.

Help you reuse content you don’t own

Saving someone else’s carousel to republish or sell, without permission, isn’t what this is for. Keep it to your own document posts, public-domain material, or decks you’re allowed to save, and respect LinkedIn’s User Agreement and copyright.

FAQ

LinkedIn Carousel Downloader, frequently asked questions

Is SnapSave free to use?

Yes. SnapSave is a free LinkedIn Carousel Downloader with unlimited downloads, no signup, no email, no premium tier and no daily cap. A few light ads keep the service going.

Do I need an account or to sign in?

Neither. SnapSave runs in your web browser, so there’s no app, no extension and no software to install, and it never asks for your LinkedIn login.

Do I get a PDF or images?

Both options are there. A LinkedIn document post is built as a PDF behind the swipeable slides, so the main download is the original multi-page PDF. If you’d rather have pictures, SnapSave can also export each slide of the carousel as a JPG image.

Does it save all the slides?

Yes. SnapSave keeps the whole deck from a public document post, first slide to last and in order, so you get the complete carousel rather than just the cover. With the PDF you keep the entire file in one piece.

Can I save LinkedIn videos or images too?

Yes, with the matching tools. For a clip in the feed use the LinkedIn Video Downloader, and for a standalone photo use the LinkedIn Image Downloader. This page is the one for document posts, the swipeable carousels saved as a PDF.

Is it legal to download LinkedIn carousels?

It depends on the post. Saving a document post you created, decks in the public domain, or carousels you have the owner’s permission to download is generally fine. Downloading or re-sharing someone else’s copyrighted deck without permission is not, and SnapSave isn’t meant for that. You’re responsible for respecting copyright, the creator’s rights, and LinkedIn’s User Agreement. SnapSave works only with public posts.

Does it work on iPhone and Android?

Yes. SnapSave runs in any modern browser on any device. On iPhone or iPad, copy the post link, open SnapSave in Safari, paste, and the PDF saves to Files → Downloads. On Android, do the same in Chrome and the PDF lands in your Downloads folder.