The process took 3 weeks. I interviewed at Uber (New York, NY)
Interview
Interview process was standard. Started of with phone screen and then onsite.
Phone screen was pretty straightforward. Nothing hard there.
Onsite was weird. Firstly the interviewer just left me in the room and went away. After about 10 mins, first interviewer came. Some people in the onsite were rude and kept interrupting while I was answering. Later they told me, I didn't cover some of the topics.
The recruiter was pretty responsive in the beginning. Once I told him, I had counter offers, he started becoming unresponsive. Emails were replied after few days. Eventually gave a low ball offer and made no effort to match the competing offers.
The recruiters kept talking about how Uber stock is going to explode this year. Honestly Uber stock has performed worst than most of it's peers in the last 4 years.
The interview process started with a recruiter screen where they covered my background and the role's expectations. Next, I had a phone screen focused on technical skills where I faced a DSA question on frequent elements in an array. I had practiced similar problems on prachub.com beforehand, which helped me tackle it effectively. The technical rounds consisted of coding and system design questions, including rate limiting. Finally, I had a behavioral interview where they assessed cultural fit. Overall, the experience was average, but I received and accepted an offer.
I interviewed at Uber (San Francisco, CA) in Apr 2026
Interview
Recruiter screen then there was a hiring manager round which felt more like a mix of product sense + execution - mostly a mix of OOP algorithms in Python or Java and some high-level system design. The onsite was 5 back to back rounds covering data structures, database management (heavy on SQL and data lifecycles), deep sys design, and behavioral. The sys design round was the real test where I had to walk through building a scalable real-time gaming leaderboard, discussing tradeoffs ofcourse in architecture, APIs, and data flow. The coding rounds was around things like linked lists and tree traversals, while the behavioral part focused heavily on ownership of my code and handling feedback. When you prep, make sure you can go a level deeper on database management and object oriented patterns instead of just grinding LC I’d say. I did grind LC though but ensure you understand the depth behind everything you solve. I also did a few mocks with uber swe on prepfully specifically for the sys design and database rounds and that honestly helped me catch some blind spots in my architecture knowledge and practice explaining my tradeoffs clearly. I’d say get a mock or two from anywhere if you can - helped me a lot!
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