The electrostatic effects of protein crowding have not been systematically explored. Rather, protein crowding is generally studied with co-solvents or crowders that are electrostatically neutral, with no methods to measure how the net charge (Z) of a crowder affects protein function. For example, can the activity of an enzyme be affected electrostatically by the net charge of its neighbor in crowded milieu? This paper reports a method for crowding proteins of different net charge to an enzyme via semi-random chemical crosslinking. As a proof of concept, RNase A was crowded (at distances ≤ the Debye length) via crosslinking to different heme proteins with Z = +8.50 ± 0.04, Z = +6.39 ± 0.12, or Z = À10.30 ± 1.32. Crosslinking did not disrupt the structure of proteins, according to amide H/D exchange, and did not inhibit RNase A activity.