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Amazon Site Reliability Engineer Interview Questions

4+ questions from real Amazon Site Reliability Engineer interviews, reported by candidates.

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2026
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Basically title. I currently live in Seattle and have two offers, one fully remote with a medium sized startup as a platform engineer. Other offer is for 300 k in the Bay Area, requiring 3 days in off

Curious how people handle oncall at 40 years as a SWE IC? It’s so exhausting! One page going off at 2 am ruins the entire next day!! I feel like quitting just for this!

I received my bachelors in December. I was splitting time between leetcode practice and other skill building and applying to jobs that I thought were good fits. Definitely not spam applying obviously.

Hi, y'all. I am reaching out to ask. What would be the best starter jobs to get while working my way up to a software engineer? I work with advanced coding, technology fixing, troubleshooting, and har

What Amazon Looks for in Site Reliability Engineer Interviews

Amazon Site Reliability Engineer interviews are calibrated against the level and scope expected of the role. Across 4+ verified candidate reports on LeakCode, the consistent signals interviewers look for: clear problem decomposition before coding, explicit complexity reasoning, structured handling of edge cases, and the ability to articulate trade-offs between two reasonable approaches.

The discriminator between candidates who advance and candidates who do not is rarely the final correctness of the solution. It is the path to the solution: did you ask clarifying questions, did you state your approach before coding, did you handle edge cases without prompting, and did you communicate your reasoning throughout. Reports tagged "no hire" frequently cite a working solution with poor communication; reports tagged "strong hire" cite clear thinking even when the final solution was incomplete.

How To Use This Question Set

Real interview reports are a calibration tool, not a memorization target. Companies update their question pools every 2-4 months; memorizing exact problems risks misleading you when the interviewer uses a variant. The high-leverage use: identify the patterns that appear repeatedly in Amazon Site Reliability Engineer 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 below 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 Amazon's pool. Reports tagged with quantified difficulty (e.g., "medium-hard") are higher-signal than reports without difficulty tags.

Round-by-Round Expectations

Amazon Site Reliability Engineer loops typically span 4-6 rounds across phone screens and on-site or virtual on-site interviews. The structure varies by company: some run 1 recruiter screen + 1 technical phone + 3-4 on-site rounds; others run 1 recruiter screen + 1 OA + 4-5 on-site rounds. The recruiter screen is logistics and culture-light; the technical phone screen is medium-difficulty coding; the on-site loop covers coding, system design (at L4+ levels), and behavioral rounds.

Each round is designed to surface a specific signal. Coding rounds: correctness, code quality, complexity reasoning, communication. System design rounds: requirements clarification, design judgment, operational thinking. Behavioral rounds: ownership scope, leadership, ambiguity tolerance, conflict navigation. Strong candidates explicitly hit each signal dimension out loud during the round; weak candidates focus only on solving the prompt.

Common Interview Mistakes At This Combination

Reports tagged "no hire" at Amazon Site Reliability Engineer commonly cite: jumping into code without clarifying requirements, coding silently for 10+ minutes without verbalizing approach, missing edge cases (empty input, single element, very large input, overflow), and producing a working solution that the candidate cannot explain or refactor when probed. Strong candidates avoid these patterns by following a consistent template: clarify, verbalize approach, code with narration, test with examples.

Behavioral and design rounds have their own failure modes. Behavioral: stories that use "we" instead of "I" diluting individual signal, stories with no quantified outcome, defensiveness when probed about failure. Design: not asking clarifying questions, not stating requirements out loud, designing for a single server when the prompt clearly implies scale, ignoring operational concerns (deployment, monitoring, rollback). These show up in roughly half of Amazon Site Reliability Engineer interview retrospectives on LeakCode.

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