Verify Vibe Coding Skills With These New LinkedIn Certificates

AI coding is big right now, and LinkedIn has given employers a way to track down workers with the exact skills they need.

Key Takeaways

  • A new program lets LinkedIn profiles highlight AI skills that are verified by AI platforms Lovable, Relay.app, and Replit.
  • These skills include experience with AI vibe coding, AI agent creation, or video editing.
  • Businesses in search of AI experts can rely on these certificates when finding new talent.

LinkedIn has just announced a team-up with three vibe-coding platforms – Lovable, Relay.app, and Replit – that will give users the ability to connect their coding accounts with their LinkedIn account.

The benefit? Users can advertise their abilities through certificates that will be visible on LinkedIn and helpful for potential employers.

Here at Tech.co, we’ve researched and tested the platforms in question. You can even check out our comparison pages for Replit and for Lovable vs Base44, another popular brand, before you jump into updating your LinkedIn.

How the New LinkedIn/Vibe Coding Team-Up Works

LinkedIn has always had certificates of various accomplishments, thanks in part to their paid “LinkedIn Learning” hub, which offers video courses on any skill under the sun.

However, this new partnership means that the AI coding certificates will be essentially underwritten by the vibe coding platforms themselves. Users can’t self-report their skill — it’s being confirmed (or denied) by the actual AI coding companies.

 

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According to the LinkedIn announcement, Engadget reports, the exact skill-measurements will vary depending on the coding platform: Lovable might award someone a “bronze” score while Replit uses numbers and Relay.app calls them an “intermediate.”

What Skills Will the Certificates Cover?

Lovable and Replit are coding apps, so certificates from them will indicate that someone has AI experience with software coding or debugging.

In contrast, Relay.app is for creating and maintaining AI agents for dedicated tasks like personal assistance or social marketing — so a skills certification from Relay.app indicates a wider application beyond companies that create code as a part of their workflow.

LinkedIn is positioning the new feature as just one of a series of ways to tell who actually has the AI skills that are in demand right now:

“This is less about replacing any of those other existing signals, and more about showing new ways that people are doing work. And how do we give a verifiable signal to both hirers and other people looking at their profile, that they actually are using these tools on a regular basis.” – Pat Whealan, Head of Career Products at LinkedIn

Another platform, the video and podcast editor Descript, is also included in the new integration, giving users a chance to show off their media editing knowledge in addition to AI coding experience.

Why Should Your Business Care?

These new certificates offer a quick way for businesses to figure out which potential employees have the AI coding know-how they need.

In 2026, AI is everywhere, and many businesses are hoping to pick up a few benefits from the tech. Granted, we may be in an AI bubble that will eventually pop, but everyone wants to hedge their bets.

If you’re getting a new white-collar employee anyway, it can’t hurt to pick up one who has some experience with an established vibe coding app such as Lovable, Relay.app, and Replit.

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Written by:
Adam has been a writer at Tech.co for nine years, covering fleet management and logistics. He has also worked at the logistics newletter Inside Lane, and has worked as a tech writer, blogger and copy editor for more than a decade. He was a Forbes Contributor on the publishing industry, for which he was named a Digital Book World 2018 award finalist. His work has appeared in publications including Popular Mechanics and IDG Connect, and his art history book on 1970s sci-fi, 'Worlds Beyond Time,' was a 2024 Locus Awards finalist. When not working on his next art collection, he's tracking the latest news on VPNs, POS systems, and the future of tech.
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