This question feels casual, but it's not small talk. Interviewers use it to get a sense of your personality, your curiosity, and whether you'll fit the team. The best answers are honest and specific — a real hobby, briefly described, with a genuine connection to how you think or work. The worst answers are either so generic they mean nothing ("I like travelling and spending time with family") or so surprising they create an awkward pause.

Why interviewers ask about hobbies

Three reasons:

Personality fit. Skills and experience get you through the door. Personality determines whether you'll be a good colleague. Hobbies give a glimpse of who you are when you're not performing for an audience.

Self-awareness and depth. How you talk about what you love in your spare time says something about your energy, commitment, and intellectual curiosity. Someone who talks enthusiastically about a genuine interest is more memorable than someone who lists activities.

Life outside work. Companies increasingly recognise that sustainable high performance requires people who have real lives. Hobbies signal that you have interests beyond the job — which is healthy.

Safe hobbies vs risky ones

Generally safe: sport and fitness (running, cycling, team sports, gym), creative pursuits (writing, photography, music, painting), community involvement (coaching, volunteering, local clubs), learning (languages, courses, reading non-fiction), cooking, hiking, travel (but avoid making it your only answer).

Worth being thoughtful about: Extreme sports (some interviewers focus on injury risk — mention briefly and move on). Very niche hobbies that need long explanation. Hobbies that could be seen as politically contentious. Anything that might signal you prioritise leisure over commitment.

Not actually risky, just over-used: Reading, travelling, and spending time with family aren't problems — they just need specificity to land well. "I read a lot" is forgettable. "I read a lot of narrative non-fiction — I'm currently in the middle of [specific book] which is about [topic]" is memorable and shows genuine engagement.

How to connect hobbies to work traits

You don't need to force a connection on every hobby — that can feel contrived. But one natural connection (where it genuinely exists) adds depth and purpose to an otherwise routine answer.

The connection should feel natural, not manufactured. If you're stretching, skip it — the authenticity of the hobby is more valuable than a forced connection to your job.

Sample answers

Sample Answer — Active / Team-oriented

"Outside of work I play five-a-side football twice a week. I've been playing in the same league for about three years — I actually help organise the team now, which means rounding up eight people reliably every Tuesday, which is its own challenge. It's a good reminder of how much easier coordination becomes when people feel ownership over the team rather than just turning up."

Sample Answer — Intellectual / Creative

"I write a lot in my spare time — mainly long-form personal essays. Nothing published, but I find it useful for making sense of ideas I've been sitting with. I also read a lot of narrative non-fiction. I'm currently reading [specific title] which is about [topic]. I find that type of writing — real stories told in the style of fiction — teaches me more about how to structure complex information than most professional development books do."

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Frequently asked questions

What if I don't have any impressive hobbies?
You don't need impressive hobbies. You need genuine ones. "I spend a lot of time cooking — I've been working through a fairly ambitious recipe book this year" is better than a fabricated impressive hobby. Authenticity is the point. Everyone has things they spend time on voluntarily — that counts.
How many hobbies should I mention?
Two or three is the sweet spot. One can feel thin. Four or more feels like a list. Pick the two or three that you can talk about with genuine enthusiasm, even briefly, and that paint a rounded picture of who you are.
Is it okay if my hobby is something like gaming or watching TV?
Gaming is fine and increasingly mainstream — you can mention it without elaboration or add specific context (competitive gaming, a specific genre you love). Watching TV alone is probably not worth leading with, but there's usually something about your leisure habits that's more specific and more interesting. If you're a film buff with genuine knowledge of world cinema, that's more interesting than "I watch Netflix."