Grammarly Interview Questions (May 2026)
7 questions · 5 experiences · InterviewDB (12)
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All K Substrings - Generate All Substrings of Exactly Length K
Grammarly SWE Phone - Duplicate and Missing Numbers
Grammarly SWE Phone - Fibonacci Number
Grammarly SWE Onsite - Merge Correction
Grammarly SWE Phone - Minimum Time Difference
Grammarly SWE Phone - Remove Adjacent Duplicates
Grammarly SWE Phone - Backspace String Compare
Reduce List - Repeatedly Remove Elements by Rule Until One Remains
Java Code Review - Identify Bugs and Smells in a Concurrent Data Structure
Split Text - Tokenize and Split Text by Sentence and Paragraph Boundaries
Subscription and Subject Class - Implement an Observable/Observer Pattern
Word Match - Find All Dictionary Words Present in a Grid of Letters
All K Substrings - Generate All Substrings of Exactly Length K
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Grammarly Interview Process Overview
The Grammarly interview process typically includes a recruiter screen, one to two technical phone screens, and a 4-6 round on-site or virtual on-site loop. Each round serves a distinct calibration purpose: coding rounds measure correctness, code quality, and complexity reasoning; system design rounds measure architectural judgment at the appropriate level; behavioral rounds measure ownership, leadership scope, and collaboration. Reports tagged on LeakCode from 2024-2026 show Grammarly runs a calibrated process consistent with industry norms for companies of its tier.
Difficulty calibration: Grammarly coding rounds typically run medium difficulty with follow-up depth as the senior discriminator. System design rounds expect production-grade trade-off articulation at L4+ levels. Behavioral rounds expect quantified outcomes ("reduced p99 latency from 800ms to 120ms") rather than vague impact claims. The candidates who advance consistently demonstrate clear thinking out loud rather than perfect final answers.
How To Use Grammarly Question Reports
Real candidate-reported interview questions are a calibration tool, not a memorization target. Grammarly updates its question pool every 2-4 months; memorizing exact problems risks misleading you when the interviewer uses a variant. The high-leverage approach: identify the patterns that appear repeatedly in Grammarly reports, practice those patterns on similar (not identical) problems, and use the reports to understand the interviewer's typical follow-up depth.
Filter the questions above by round type, difficulty, and recency. Focus first on reports from the past 6-12 months; older reports may reference questions that have since rotated out of Grammarly's pool. Reports tagged with quantified difficulty and explicit round type are higher-signal than reports without those tags. The metadata filters help you build a focused study plan in 1-2 hours rather than 8-10 hours of unstructured browsing.
Common Grammarly Interview Mistakes
Reports tagged "no hire" at Grammarly consistently surface a few patterns: jumping into code without clarifying requirements, coding silently for extended periods, missing edge cases (empty input, single element, large input, overflow), producing working code the candidate cannot refactor when probed, and behavioral stories that use "we" instead of "I" diluting individual signal. Strong candidates explicitly avoid these patterns by following a consistent round template.
The single most predictive failure mode in recent reports: not asking clarifying questions. Interviewers are explicitly trained to weight this dimension. Strong candidates ask 3-5 clarifying questions even on problems that look obvious; weak candidates dive into implementation immediately. Strong candidates also verbalize their approach before writing code; weak candidates code in silence and lose the communication dimension of the round's calibration.