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Meta Software Engineer Take-Home Questions

6+ questions from real Meta Software Engineer Take-Home rounds, reported by candidates who interviewed there.

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What does the Meta Take-Home round test?

The Meta take-home assignment is a longer-form coding or design project completed off-site. Software Engineer candidates typically have 3-7 days and are evaluated on code quality, testing, documentation, and problem-solving approach.

Top Topics in This Round

Meta Software Engineer Take-Home Questions

Meta SWE New Grad US | Pass or Fail?

Interview Experience 2024

Hello everyone, I recently took my Meta SWE - New Grad (Menlo Park, CA, USA) Virtual Onsite on Monday 11/11. I know it\'s out of my hands now and I...

I recently completed my full-loop interview at Meta, which included 2 coding rounds, 2 behavioral interviews, and 1 system design interview. Here\u2019s a breakdown of each round: # System Design Interview I...

I recently underwent an onsite interview with Meta, which encompassed a total of five interviews: two coding rounds, one system design interview, and two behavioral interviews. System Design Interview: During this interview,...

Event Packing ## Motivation At Facebook, we try to cluster meetings together across a team to maximize the amount of heads-down focus time for everyone. To do so, we have a set...

1 Billion Users We have N different apps with different user growth rates. At a given time t, measured in days, the number of users using an app is g^t (for...

Facebook Telephonic Interview

Interview-Experience 2020

Standard info : Telephonic Interview Introduction: 5 min. Coding challenge: 35/40 min. Followup questions: 5/0 min. Tip: Remember that the interviewer is ready with 2 questions but you don\'t have to crack both of...

What to Expect in the Meta Take-Home Round

The Meta Software Engineer Take-Home round has a specific calibration purpose distinct from other rounds in the loop. Across 6+ verified reports on LeakCode for this exact round type, the consistent expectations: clear scoping of the problem before diving into a solution, explicit reasoning about complexity, structured handling of edge cases, and the ability to discuss trade-offs between two reasonable approaches.

Reports tagged with the Take-Home round at Meta show recurring patterns in difficulty and topic distribution. The Take-Home round is typically 45-60 minutes; the interviewer is calibrated against a specific rubric. The discriminator between candidates who advance and candidates who do not is rarely the final correctness of the answer. It is the path: did you clarify, did you verbalize your approach, did you handle edge cases, and did you communicate throughout.

How To Prepare for This Specific Round

Filter the questions below to the most recent reports (past 6-12 months). Questions tagged for this exact round type from this exact company at this exact role level are the highest-signal data available. Older reports may reference questions that have since rotated out of the company's pool.

Practice 4-6 representative problems from this set under timed conditions. The goal is not memorization (companies rotate questions); the goal is to internalize the patterns the interviewer typically reaches for and the depth of follow-up to expect. Reports on LeakCode also tag the typical follow-up depth at this round type, which is the discriminating signal between hire and no-hire calibration.

Take-Home Round Timing and Format

The Take-Home round at Meta typically runs 45-60 minutes. Use the first 2-3 minutes to clarify requirements; you should never start coding or designing without verifying the input/output format, constraints, and edge cases out loud. Use the next 5-7 minutes to verbalize your approach before writing any code. The middle 20-30 minutes are implementation. Reserve the final 10 minutes for testing with concrete examples and discussing optimization or trade-offs.

Time budget discipline is one of the most reliable senior-vs-junior discriminators in this round. Strong candidates verbalize where they are in their budget out loud ("I've used about 20 minutes, I have 15 minutes left for testing and one optimization"). This signals engineering maturity to the interviewer and creates positive feedback they can capture in writing.

Common Failure Modes in This Round

Reports tagged "no hire" at Meta Software Engineer Take-Home commonly cite: coding silently without verbalizing approach, jumping to implementation before clarifying requirements, missing edge cases (empty input, single element, very large input), producing working code that the candidate cannot refactor when asked, and failing to test their solution with concrete examples before declaring done.

The single most predictive failure mode in 2025-2026 reports: not asking clarifying questions. Interviewers at all FAANG companies are explicitly trained to weight this dimension. Strong candidates ask 3-5 clarifying questions even on problems that look obvious; weak candidates dive into code immediately. The clarifying-question check is often the first signal recorded in the interviewer's notes.

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