Real Interview Questions (2026): 51,000+ Verified Reports

Every question on this site came directly from a candidate who sat in the interview. We aggregate from 7 sources, translate where needed, and surface them in one searchable database.

What "real" actually means here

"Real interview questions" is a phrase that gets overloaded. Some sites use it to mean questions that could plausibly come up in interviews, curated by an editor. That is not what this site does.

On LeakCode, every entry traces back to a candidate who completed an actual interview and then posted about it. The original post lives on LeetCode forums, Reddit, Blind, 1Point3Acres, GeeksForGeeks, or InterviewDB. We crawl those posts, deduplicate them, and surface them here with source attribution.

The result: questions candidates actually saw, in the wording they actually used, tagged to the company and role where they appeared. Not editorial invention. Not guesswork.

Where the questions come from

LeetCode discussion forums

22,000+ indexed

The largest English-language source of self-reported coding questions. Candidates post the exact problem statement and share which company asked it. Scattered and messy by itself; structured here.

Reddit (r/cscareerquestions, r/leetcode)

15,000+ indexed

Full interview loop reports. Redditors tend to share the entire experience: recruiter call, phone screen, onsite, offer or rejection. Rich for behavioral and system design rounds.

1Point3Acres (1P3A)

5,700+ indexed

The largest Chinese-language interview community. High signal for US tech companies, especially FAANG roles that attract candidates from top Chinese universities. Original content is in Chinese; LeakCode surfaces it in English.

GeeksForGeeks

5,000+ indexed

Structured interview experience articles. Excellent coverage of Indian tech and US companies that recruit heavily from South Asian engineering programs.

InterviewDB, Blind, and more

Additional sources

InterviewDB aggregates reports with careful quality control. Blind captures high-level professionals who share candid experiences. Combined, these fill gaps the other sources miss.

How to access them in three steps

1

Go to your target company

Visit /browse to find your company. You will see the total count of real reports and a breakdown by source.

2

Filter by role and round

Every question is tagged by role (SWE, PM, ML, etc.) and round type (OA, phone screen, onsite coding, system design, behavioral). Filter down to exactly what you are preparing for.

3

Sort by recency for 2026

The default sort is newest first. This surfaces questions from 2026 candidates at the top. Company pools rotate, and the most recent reports reflect the current pool most accurately.

A note on ethics

Self-reported interview experiences are not confidential. Candidates share their own account of their own experience. No NDA in standard tech recruiting covers the questions a candidate is asked. Companies know candidates share interview questions and have known it for years.

The candidates who get offers at top companies use this preparation method. If you do not, you are at a structural disadvantage. LeakCode exists to make this signal accessible to everyone, not just those with personal connections to insiders.

Browse real questions by company

Frequently asked questions

What makes an interview question "real"?
Real interview questions are self-reported by candidates who sat in the interview. They trace back to an original post on LeetCode forums, Reddit, Blind, 1P3A, GeeksForGeeks, or InterviewDB. No editorial invention; no AI generation. Actual candidates, actual questions.
How accurate are candidate-reported questions?
Very accurate. Candidates have no incentive to fabricate. Accuracy improves further when you see the same question reported multiple times from different sources and time periods. LeakCode surfaces that frequency signal.
Are questions updated for 2026?
Yes. The pipeline runs daily. The default sort on every company page is recency, showing the most recently reported questions first. You can also filter by year to narrow specifically to 2026 reports.
Do I need to pay to see the questions?
Most questions are visible without an account. A premium subscription unlocks the full text of every question and filters across the entire database.
Which companies have the most questions?
Amazon (8,000+), Google (5,900+), Meta (4,600+), and Microsoft (3,000+) have the largest question pools. Coverage spans 2,000+ companies total.

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