Amazon SDE I (L4) Interview Guide June 2026
Real interview questions, round structure, scope, and compensation data for Amazon SDE I (L4) candidates. Sourced from 8180+ candidate reports aggregated by LeakCode from 1point3acres, Glassdoor, Blind, and 7 other community forums.
What Amazon SDE I (L4) Means
SDE I (L4) is Amazon's new-grad to early-career software engineering level. Candidates at this level typically have 0-3 years of experience and the loop is calibrated for that scope. The bar examines coding depth, design judgment proportional to level, and ability to lead through ambiguity.
Reported total compensation for this level falls in the $165K-$230K range (base + RSU equity + bonus). Offers vary by team, region, prior experience, and competing offers. Senior levels skew higher when candidates have stacked competing FAANG offers.
Interview Process at This Level
- Recruiter screen (30 min): role fit, level calibration, comp expectations.
- Technical phone screen (45-60 min): one coding problem, sometimes a brief system design at higher levels.
- Onsite or virtual loop (4-6 hours):
- 2 coding rounds (medium-hard difficulty).
- 1 system design round.
- 1-2 behavioral rounds (scope, leadership, conflict, ownership).
- Team match + offer: depending on company, team-matching happens before or after the loop.
Sample Amazon Interview Questions
Pulled from recent Amazon reports on LeakCode. Filter by level inside the platform for SDE I (L4) specifically.
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Max Consecutive ON Servers
swe · coding ·
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Minimum Swaps to Make Palindrome
swe · coding ·
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Minimize Maximum Parcels
swe · coding ·
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Implement an LRU Cache
swe · coding ·
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LRU Cache (Design with Doubly Linked List + Hash Map)
swe · coding ·
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Design a Per-User Rate Limiter (Accept/Reject Requests)
swe · coding ·
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Earliest User Who Logged In Exactly Once
swe · coding ·
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DP / State Compression / Memoization (exact problem id unknown)
swe · coding ·
Coding Round Breakdown at SDE I (L4)
Coding rounds at the new-grad to early-career level focus on three things in roughly equal weight: correctness, communication, and code quality. The exact problem difficulty is calibrated so that the question is solvable in 25-35 minutes with clean code, leaving time for the follow-up.
Topic distribution from 8180+ candidate-reported Amazon reports tagged on LeakCode skews toward arrays/hash maps (about 28%), trees/graphs (22%), strings (14%), dynamic programming (12%), heap/priority queue (8%), and sliding window / two pointer (7%). The remainder splits across stacks, intervals, bit manipulation, and math problems. At SDE I (L4), problems lean medium-hard — pure mediums are rare; expect at least one variation, follow-up, or constraint change.
What separates an "advance" from a "no-hire" at this level is rarely whether the candidate solved the optimal solution. It is the path to the solution: did you verbalize the approach before coding, did you handle edge cases without prompting, did you reason about time and space complexity correctly, and did you test your code with concrete examples? Reports tagged "no hire on coding" on LeakCode often cite a working solution that was hostile to debug or unclear under questioning.
Common follow-up patterns reported at Amazon SDE I (L4): change the input format (streaming vs batched), tighten a constraint (memory limit, single-pass), or generalize the problem (k-th instead of largest). The follow-up is the discriminator between "meets bar" and "exceeds bar" calibration notes.
System Design Round at SDE I (L4)
At SDE I (L4) (new-grad to early-career), system design is two or three rounds and the depth of probing increases sharply. Expect prompts that span 3+ subsystems (e.g., the data layer, the serving layer, and a cross-cutting concern like authorization or telemetry). You are calibrated against an internal staff engineer's bar: did your design choose the right abstraction boundary, expose the right interfaces, and minimize the surface area for future failure modes?
Amazon SDE I (L4) candidates report prompts including design a globally distributed key-value store with tunable consistency, design a streaming analytics pipeline, design a multi-tenant ML feature store, design an internal developer platform deployment system, and design a global content delivery network with edge logic. At this level, the strongest signal is your ability to argue for one design over another using cost, complexity, and reliability axes that a non-technical executive would understand.
Behavioral Round Patterns at Amazon
Amazon SDE I (L4) behavioral rounds are calibrated to the new-grad to early-career scope. Expect questions that probe ownership, conflict resolution, technical disagreement, dealing with ambiguity, and managing scope. The STAR (Situation, Task, Action, Result) framework is universally accepted; what differentiates strong from weak is the specificity of the "Action" and the quantifiability of the "Result."
Amazon-specific: every story should map cleanly to one or two of the 16 Leadership Principles, named explicitly. The behavioral interviewer at Amazon is grading you against the rubric of these principles, not a generic "did you sound competent?" check. Strong candidates pre-prepare 2-3 stories per principle, with quantified outcomes. LeakCode has 200+ Amazon LP-tagged reports showing the exact follow-up probes interviewers tend to use.
0-3-Week Preparation Timeline
Most successful Amazon SDE I (L4) candidates report 8 to 16 weeks of dedicated preparation. The exact length depends on your starting point: an internal transfer from another big-tech company at a comparable level might need 4-6 weeks; an external candidate from a non-tech background at the same level often needs 12-16 weeks.
Weeks 1-4 (coding patterns): work through one coding pattern per week. Start with arrays/hash maps and trees because they appear most in Amazon reports. Solve 8-12 problems per pattern, two of which should be slow-and-deep (full optimization, edge cases, dry runs) and the rest fast-and-broad. By end of week 4 you should be able to identify the pattern of an unseen problem within 60 seconds of reading it.
Weeks 5-8 (system design): learn the standard primitives (load balancer, CDN, cache, message queue, sharded DB, replication) and practice 1-2 designs per week. SDE I (L4) candidates should focus on strategic-scope designs that include team boundaries, deprecation paths, and platform-level concerns.
Weeks 9-10 (behavioral): write 8-12 STAR stories covering ownership, conflict, ambiguity, deadline pressure, technical disagreement, and mentorship. Each story should be tellable in 2-3 minutes and quantified at the end. Practice with a partner or record yourself; the failure mode here is rambling, not lack of content.
Weeks 11-12 (mock loops): do 4-8 mock interviews under real-time pressure. The first few will be brutal; that is the goal. By the third or fourth mock, you should be operating at near-real performance. Use the mocks to identify the specific failure modes (rushing the start, freezing on edge cases, talking over the interviewer) and drill those out.
Common Amazon SDE I (L4) Rejection Reasons
Analysis of 8180+ Amazon reports on LeakCode tagged "rejected" or "no hire" surfaces a consistent set of failure modes specific to SDE I (L4).
- Sub-bar coding correctness: a working solution with one or more bugs that the candidate did not catch under interviewer probing. This is the most common reason at SDE I (L4) (new-grad to early-career).
- Insufficient design scope: at new-grad to early-career level, designs that solve the stated prompt but ignore obvious operational concerns (deployment story, monitoring, on-call cost) trigger "below bar" calibration.
- Behavioral stories at wrong scope: stories that show appropriate competence for a level below SDE I (L4). The interviewer is grading not just whether the story was good but whether the demonstrated scope matches the bar.
- Failure to ask clarifying questions: diving into coding or design without scoping the problem signals weak senior judgment. At SDE I (L4) this often disqualifies otherwise strong candidates.
- Defensiveness under follow-up: the interviewer pushes on a design choice or coding decision, and the candidate doubles down rather than considering the new constraint. This is graded as a culture/leadership failure regardless of technical strength.
Compensation and Negotiation at SDE I (L4)
Reported total compensation for Amazon SDE I (L4) is $165K-$230K per year. This is a band, not a point; offers vary based on location, prior experience, competing offers, and team. The band's lower end represents an offer with limited competing leverage; the upper end usually requires multiple FAANG offers in hand.
Compensation structure typically breaks down as 45-55% base salary, 35-45% RSU equity vesting over 4 years (often front-loaded), 5-15% sign-on bonus, and 0-5% annual performance bonus. The exact mix shifts toward equity at higher levels — at SDE I (L4) (new-grad to early-career), expect roughly 40/55/5 (more weighted to equity).
Negotiation playbook: never accept the first offer; always counter once with a specific number and a justification (competing offer, market data, or location adjustment). Compensation reports on LeakCode show Amazon negotiates fairly within the level band but resists moving outside it. The high-leverage moves at SDE I (L4) are sign-on bonus (most negotiable), RSU refresh in year 2 (asked for, rarely volunteered), and start date flexibility.
What does Amazon SDE I (L4) mean?
SDE I (L4) is Amazon's new-grad to early-career software engineer level. Candidates typically have 0-3 years of experience. Total compensation reports range $165K-$230K per year.
How hard is the Amazon SDE I (L4) interview?
The bar focuses on new-grad to early-career calibration: depth of design judgment, scope of impact, and ability to lead through ambiguity. Coding rounds are medium-hard difficulty. System design rounds expect production-grade tradeoffs at appropriate scope.
How long should I prepare for Amazon SDE I (L4)?
Most successful candidates prepare for 8-16 weeks: 4-6 weeks on coding patterns, 3-5 weeks on system design at level, 2-3 weeks on behavioral stories. LeakCode shows exactly which questions appear most for this level.
What is Amazon SDE I (L4) total compensation?
Reported TC for Amazon SDE I (L4) is $165K-$230K per year (base + RSU + bonus). Senior offers vary widely by team, region, and competing offers.
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