40 Video Interview Questions to Ask Candidates in 2026 (With Templates)
The questions you ask in a video interview matter more than most hiring managers realise. A landmark meta-analysis spanning 85 years of hiring research found that structured interviews — where every candidate answers the same carefully chosen questions — predict job success about twice as well as unstructured conversations. A 2022 update by Sackett et al. in the Journal of Applied Psychology confirmed that structured interviews now rank among the very top predictors of job performance.
The implication is direct: your question list is your most important hiring tool. It matters more than how long the interview lasts, more than the platform you use, and more than the interviewer's experience.
This guide gives you 40 structured video interview questions organised by category, with guidance on what strong and weak answers look like for each. There's also a section on questions specifically designed for async (one-way) video interviews, where candidates record responses without a live interviewer and the absence of follow-up questions makes initial question design even more important.
How to Use This Guide
The questions are organised into six categories that together cover the full picture of a candidate:
- Opening and background — calibrate baseline communication and self-awareness
- Behavioural questions — past behaviour is the strongest predictor of future behaviour
- Role-specific and competency questions — assess the skills that directly matter for the job
- Culture and motivation — identify fit and genuine interest
- Problem-solving and situational — see how candidates think under pressure
- Closing — reveal curiosity, preparation, and decision-making
For async (one-way) video interviews, you typically select 4–6 questions from this list. The section at the end of this article gives specific guidance on which questions work best in async format and how to structure time limits.
Category 1: Opening and Background Questions
These questions start the interview, give candidates a chance to settle in, and provide context for everything that follows. They're also diagnostic: how candidates structure a brief self-introduction tells you a lot about their communication style and what they prioritise.
The classic opener. Look for a focused, structured answer that connects their experience to the role — not a full CV recitation. Strong candidates move deliberately from past to present to why this role matters to them. Weak answers are either too brief (“I've worked in marketing for five years”) or unfocused (“Well, I started out studying biology…”).
More specific than “tell me about yourself” — asks for ownership and scope. Listen for specificity: strong candidates describe concrete outcomes, not just job duties. Watch for candidates who describe what the team did rather than what they personally contributed.
Reveals motivation and career trajectory. Genuine answers — “I've grown as far as I can in my current role” or “the company direction changed” — are different from rehearsed ones. Avoid candidates who speak negatively about their current employer; it's a signal about how they'll talk about you.
47% of interviewers say they would not offer a job to a candidate who had little knowledge of their company. This question distinguishes candidates who applied to 50 companies from candidates who applied to yours. Strong answers reference specific things about your product, mission, or team. Weak answers are generic enough to apply to any company.
Category 2: Behavioural Questions
Behavioural questions — “Tell me about a time you…” — have a predictive validity of .56–.63, roughly twice the power of unstructured conversation, because past behaviour predicts future behaviour. These are the most valuable questions in any structured interview.
The STAR framework (Situation, Task, Action, Result) is the standard for evaluating behavioural answers: a strong response describes the context briefly, explains what specifically the candidate did (not “we”), and gives a concrete outcome.
The single most consistently useful interview question. Reveals problem-solving approach, resilience, and self-awareness. Strong candidates give a specific example, take personal ownership of their actions, and describe what they learned. Watch for candidates who describe external factors rather than their own decisions.
Tests prioritisation, focus, and execution under pressure. Strong answers include specific decisions about what to cut or delegate, not just “I worked harder.”
A culture and communication question disguised as a conflict question. Strong candidates describe respectful disagreement with a clear rationale, not avoidance or aggressive escalation. Watch for candidates who reframe the question to avoid giving an example — it usually means they either haven't experienced productive disagreement or aren't comfortable with conflict.
Particularly valuable for fast-moving organisations. Strong answers are specific about what they learned, how they went about it, and what they applied. Weak answers stay abstract (“I'm a fast learner”) without a concrete example.
This is truly a tough question, but it can tell you how the candidate approaches problems. Look for candidates who don't give you a rehearsed answer and instead pick a weakness they are addressing and have learned from. Strong candidates describe a real mistake — not a humble-brag disguised as a failure — and show what changed in their behaviour as a result.
Tests teamwork and ownership simultaneously. Listen for the balance between “we” and “I” — strong candidates can describe what the team accomplished and articulate precisely what they personally did within it.
Particularly relevant in any organisation that's growing or evolving. Strong answers describe a genuine disruption (restructure, strategy shift, technology change) and specific adaptations the candidate made, not just tolerance for change.
Reveals initiative and ownership. Strong candidates describe specific actions they took without being asked. Watch for answers that describe something that was actually in the job description — candidates sometimes reframe standard duties as extra effort.
Category 3: Role-Specific and Competency Questions
These questions should be tailored to the specific role. The examples below are grouped by common competency areas — adapt them to your context.
Communication and influence
Problem-solving and analytical thinking
Look for a methodical process, not a specific answer. Strong candidates describe how they'd gather information, identify constraints, and test hypotheses. Weak answers jump to solutions without diagnosis.
Leadership and ownership
Technical roles (adjust for your tech stack)
Category 4: Culture and Motivation Questions
46% of small business new hires fail within the first 18 months — and in 89% of those cases, the reason was a company culture mismatch. You can train for skills. You can't train for culture fit.
Strong answers are specific and honest, not a recitation of your job posting. They describe real preferences — collaborative vs. independent, structured vs. ambiguous, high-feedback vs. autonomous. The question to ask yourself: does their ideal environment match reality at your company?
Dig below “I want to grow” and “great opportunity.” Strong candidates reference something specific — a product decision, a person on the team, a problem you're working on. Generic answers suggest you're one of many applications.
Reveals values and long-term fit. Look for alignment with the type of impact this role creates, not just career ambitions.
Tests self-awareness and growth mindset. Strong candidates can describe specific feedback and the concrete change it produced. Candidates who struggle to give an example may have limited self-awareness or have worked in environments without honest feedback.
More revealing than “what are your strengths?” — it shows enthusiasm and what kind of work the candidate will actually do well because they care about it.
Category 5: Problem-Solving and Situational Questions
Unlike behavioural questions (past behaviour), situational questions present hypothetical scenarios. Research shows they're less predictive than behavioural questions, but they're useful for assessing judgment and values — especially for candidates with limited direct experience.
Tests initiative vs. deference. Look for a balanced answer — observe and understand before acting, identify the right person to raise it with, bring a proposed solution rather than just a problem.
Tests prioritisation and communication under competing demands. Strong answers describe a process for triaging, communicating transparently with stakeholders, and making an explicit decision — not just “I'd work harder.”
Reveals how candidates handle authority and conviction. Strong answers describe raising concerns through appropriate channels while continuing to execute professionally — neither passive acceptance nor undermining.
Tests interpersonal courage and professionalism. Strong candidates describe direct, private conversation first — not immediate escalation.
Category 6: Closing Questions
The questions candidates ask tell you as much as the ones they answer. Candidates who've prepared thoughtful questions have thought carefully about the role. Candidates with no questions either aren't genuinely interested or haven't prepared — neither is a strong signal.
Shows results orientation and desire to understand expectations before starting.
Shows maturity and realism. Strong candidates want to know the hard parts, not just the positives.
Reveals interest in working style and process fit.
A confident, direct question that invites the interviewer to share concerns. Strong candidates can handle the answer and respond to it.
Questions That Work Best in Async (One-Way) Video Interviews
Async video interviews are most commonly used for early-stage screening — narrowing 30–50 applicants to 8–10 before live rounds. The absence of follow-up questions means you need to design each question to be self-contained and clear.
Best question types for async format:
A structured opener that works well without follow-up. Clear time limit (90 seconds) produces comparable, reviewable answers.
One behavioural question, clearly framed. Enough context to evaluate without follow-up.
Reveals preparation, self-awareness, and what the candidate considers their strongest selling point. Works exceptionally well in async format because it invites candidates to demonstrate their best thinking.
Async interview design principles:
- Keep it to 3–5 questions. Longer async interviews have significantly lower completion rates.
- Set per-question time limits: 60–90 seconds for opener questions, 90–120 seconds for behavioural questions.
- Give candidates 30–60 seconds of thinking time before recording starts — it reduces first-take anxiety and improves response quality.
- Allow candidates to re-record individual answers before submitting. This produces better responses without reducing comparability.
- Add a practice question before the real questions begin. Candidates who've tested their setup give more focused answers.
→ See how one-way video interview software works
Ready-to-Use Templates by Role Type
- In 90 seconds, tell me about your background and why you applied for this role.
- Tell me about a time you had to deliver results under a tight deadline. What did you do?
- Describe a situation where you disagreed with a decision. How did you handle it?
- What's one question you hope we ask you — and how would you answer it?
- Tell me about yourself and why this role.
- Describe a time you had to manage a difficult customer or stakeholder. What did you do?
- Tell me about a time you had to hit a target that felt out of reach. What happened?
- What kind of work environment brings out your best performance?
- Walk me through your most relevant technical experience for this role.
- Describe a technically complex problem you solved. What trade-offs did you make?
- Tell me about a time you had to make a technical decision under time pressure.
- What does meaningful technical work look like to you?
- Tell me about your management experience and your approach to developing people.
- Describe a time a team you led wasn't performing as expected. What did you do?
- Tell me about a time you had to make a difficult decision with incomplete information.
- How do you build trust with a new team?
Frequently Asked Questions
Key Takeaways
The complete list above is a starting point. The most effective question sets are tailored to the specific competencies that matter most for each role — which is worth doing for every hire, not just senior positions.
If you're looking for a tool that helps generate role-specific structured interview questions automatically, EasyHire's AI question generator produces a competency-mapped question set from a plain-language role description in under two minutes — free plan available.
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EasyHire's AI builds a competency-mapped, async-ready question set from your role description — then analyses every candidate's answers. Free plan includes 5 interviews/month, no credit card.
Last updated: June 2026. → How to Reduce Time to Hire · One-Way Video Interview Software · Best Video Interview Software 2026