HR interviews test your knowledge of people processes and employment law, but they also test something less obvious: your judgment. Most HR situations don't have a clear right answer, and interviewers want to see how you navigate ambiguity, competing interests, and uncomfortable conversations. Showing good judgment matters as much as knowing the right policy.
What HR interviews are testing
The hiring manager wants to know whether you can handle sensitive situations professionally, build trust with both employees and leadership, stay compliant without being bureaucratic, and move fast enough to support a growing business.
For HRBP roles, they also want to know if you can be a strategic partner, not just an administrator. That means tying HR initiatives to business outcomes, not just HR metrics.
HR generalist and HRBP questions
"How do you prioritise when you have competing HR demands?"
"I triage by urgency and business impact. Employee relations issues with legal risk go first. Active recruiting for roles blocking revenue or a product launch go next. Longer-term projects like policy updates or culture programmes get scheduled in dedicated focus blocks. I've also found that a weekly 30-minute check-in with the business leaders I support reduces fire drills because I catch issues before they escalate."
"How do you stay current on employment law?"
Name your actual sources: SHRM, employment law newsletters, your company's external counsel, and any HR associations you belong to. Show that you have a system, not that you Google things when issues come up.
Employee relations questions
"Walk me through how you've handled a performance improvement plan" is common. Structure your answer around: identifying the performance gap, having an honest conversation with the employee, setting clear measurable goals, regular check-ins, and what happened at the end of the PIP.
"How have you handled an allegation of workplace harassment?" tests whether you know the process: intake, investigation, documentation, impartiality, and outcome. Don't describe details that would identify individuals, but show you understand the steps and the importance of a fair process.
Talent acquisition and recruiting questions
"What's your sourcing strategy for a hard-to-fill role?" should cover: boolean search, LinkedIn Recruiter, niche job boards, employee referrals, passive candidates, and how you write job descriptions that attract the right people, not just the most applicants.
"How do you reduce time-to-fill without sacrificing quality?" is asked at scale-up companies. Talk about structured interview scorecards, intake meetings with hiring managers to align on must-haves vs. nice-to-haves, and parallel interviewing stages rather than sequential ones.
Behavioral questions with sample answers
"Tell me about a time you pushed back on a business leader's request"
S/T: "A VP wanted to terminate an employee immediately after a single incident without going through our standard process, because the employee had been critical of leadership in a team meeting."
A: "I met with the VP privately and explained that immediate termination without documented warnings or an investigation could expose the company to a wrongful dismissal claim. I also noted that the reason given (criticising leadership) could be seen as retaliation, which is higher risk. I proposed a formal process: document the incident, have a structured conversation with the employee, and assess whether a PIP or final written warning was appropriate."
R: "The VP agreed. We followed the process. The employee improved and is still with the company. The VP later told me the structured approach helped him understand why process exists, not just follow it."