What "Application Viewed" actually means
LinkedIn marks an application as "Viewed" when someone — a recruiter, hiring manager, or an HR system — opened your application file. This includes cases where an applicant tracking system (ATS) automatically pulled your application for parsing. It does not mean a human read your resume carefully or that you're moving forward.
In practice, "Viewed" can mean any of the following: a recruiter opened your application briefly before moving on, an ATS ingested your profile data, a hiring manager did a first-pass skim, or someone opened it to reject it. The status tells you your application reached the employer's system and was accessed — nothing more.
How long after "Viewed" should you expect a response?
There is no consistent timeline. In fast-moving hiring processes (typically startups or roles with urgency), a viewed application can lead to a phone screen request within 24–72 hours. In corporate environments with longer hiring cycles, applications can be viewed and then sit in a queue for weeks.
A rough benchmark: if your application has been marked as "Viewed" for more than 10 business days with no follow-up, the recruiter has likely moved on or the role's hiring is paused. This is not a hard rule — some companies genuinely have slow processes — but it's a reasonable signal to stop waiting and start applying elsewhere.
Should you follow up after "Application Viewed"?
Yes — but once, and after a reasonable interval. If the job posting includes the recruiter's name or LinkedIn profile, a brief, polite message 7–10 days after the "Viewed" status appears is appropriate: "Hi [Name], I applied for [Role] last week and noticed my application was reviewed. I'm very interested and happy to provide any additional information." Keep it short. A second follow-up is rarely worth the risk of seeming pushy.
The more important question is: what are you doing while you wait? Checking the "Application Viewed" status every day is not a productive job search activity. Every minute spent refreshing LinkedIn is time not spent submitting new applications.