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Amazon Interview Guide

Leadership Principles, the bar raiser, and how coding + behavioral are weighted in Amazon loops.

9 min readUpdated Jul 2026By the TopCoding team

Amazon is one of the few tech companies where behavioral rounds carry as much weight as coding. The 16 Leadership Principles are not aspirational posters - they are a literal scoring rubric, and every interviewer arrives with 2-3 LPs they're responsible for probing. Understand that, and the whole loop becomes predictable.

16
Leadership Principles - each mapped to interview questions
5-7
Rounds in a typical SDE on-site loop
1
Bar raiser per loop - with veto power over the hiring team

Why Leadership Principles matter

At most companies behavioral questions are a formality - a box to tick before getting to the "real" part. At Amazon they are the real part. The 16 LPs were codified by Jeff Bezos and extended over time; every interviewer is trained to probe 2-3 of them using structured follow-up questions designed to surface whether a candidate genuinely operated that way or is just pattern-matching the answer they think Amazon wants.

The behavioral bar is deliberately set at least as high as the coding bar. A candidate who writes flawless code but whose LP answers signal poor ownership or an inability to earn trust will receive a no-hire.

Ownership cluster
Ownership & Deliver Results
The most commonly probed pair. They want proof you took something hard from ambiguous problem to concrete outcome - without being managed every step.
Judgment cluster
Are Right, A Lot & Dive Deep
Not about being infallible - about having a rigorous, data-driven process for forming and revising your views.
Trust cluster
Earn Trust & Have Backbone
They want someone who admits mistakes directly, disagrees explicitly, and then commits fully once a decision is made.

Loop structure

A standard SDE on-site at Amazon runs 5-7 rounds, usually condensed into one day. Most rounds mix coding and behavioral - there is no clean separation between the two.

  1. 1

    Recruiter screen

    Filter30 min
    Resume walk-through, level calibration, and logistics. No technical bar here, but compensation and timeline expectations are set in this conversation.
  2. 2

    Technical phone screen

    1-2 rounds60 min
    1-2 coding problems in a shared editor plus 1-2 LP questions. This is the primary filter. Failing here means no on-site.
  3. 3

    On-site coding rounds

    Core2-3 rounds
    LeetCode-style problems, typically medium difficulty, with an expectation of a working, reasonably optimal solution communicated out loud. Test cases are expected at the end.
  4. 4

    Behavioral / LP rounds

    Core1-2 rounds
    Each interviewer probes 2-3 specific LPs using structured follow-up. They want a specific, recent example - not a hypothetical.
  5. 5

    Bar raiser round

    Veto60 min
    A senior interviewer from outside the hiring team runs a mixed coding and behavioral round. Their explicit job is to raise - not merely maintain - the bar. They hold veto power.
  6. 6

    Debrief & decision

    Decisionasync
    All interviewers submit written feedback with hire/no-hire votes. The bar raiser must agree for an offer to be extended. A single no from the bar raiser blocks the hire.

The bar raiser

The bar raiser is Amazon's most distinctive structural feature. They are a senior employee - often from a completely different part of the business - who has completed a multi-month training program to serve as a calibration point across all Amazon hiring. Two things define the role:

  • Independence: they have no stake in whether this team fills the role. Their job is to ensure the hire raises the overall bar - not just fills an open headcount.
  • Veto power: if the bar raiser votes no-hire, the offer cannot be extended even if every other interviewer voted hire. The hiring manager cannot override them.
You may not know who the bar raiser is
Amazon does not always identify the bar raiser to candidates. Treat every round as if it could be the veto holder - because any interviewer can block you, and the bar raiser round often looks like a normal mixed round.

The coding bar

Amazon's coding bar is roughly equivalent to medium LeetCode under time pressure. The expectation is that you arrive at a working, reasonably optimal solution while communicating your thinking throughout. Multiple signals are scored in each coding round:

SignalWhat Amazon is looking for
Problem solvingState assumptions, articulate a brute force, then optimize - do not jump straight to the answer
Code qualityClean and readable. Not necessarily perfect, but not a hack that would fail review
TestingWalk through test cases - including edge cases - before declaring done
CommunicationNarrate your approach out loud. Silence reads as uncertainty even when your code is correct
OptimalityReaching O(n) or O(n log n) where O(n²) is naive is generally expected at SDE II and above

Difficulty ramps with level. SDE I centers on clean, working mediums. SDE II and above see harder mediums and easy hards, with system design added for senior roles.

Building STAR stories per LP

The most efficient prep strategy is to prepare 6-8 strong STAR stories and map each to the 3-4 LPs it best illustrates. A single rich story about leading a high-stakes project might cover Ownership, Deliver Results, and Earn Trust - retold with a different emphasis depending on the LP being probed. See the STAR Method Examples guide for full worked answers.

Leadership PrincipleRepresentative questionWhat the follow-up probes
Customer ObsessionTell me about a time you put the customer first at personal costDid you have data? Was it a genuine trade-off or the obvious right call?
OwnershipTell me about taking initiative outside your scopeWhat stopped you from ignoring it? Who gave you permission?
Have Backbone; Disagree and CommitTell me about disagreeing with your managerHow explicit was the pushback? Did you commit fully once overruled?
Dive DeepTell me about finding a root cause others had missedWhat tools and data? How deep vs when did you delegate?
Deliver ResultsTell me about delivering a critical project despite obstaclesWhat were the specific obstacles? What did you cut vs protect?
Earn TrustTell me about admitting a serious mistakeDid you proactively surface it or were you caught? What changed?
Bias for ActionTell me about acting under significant uncertaintyWhat was the reversibility? How did you weigh speed against risk?
Specifics survive follow-up questions
Amazon interviewers are trained to ask "And what exactly did you do in that moment?" Generic or theoretical answers collapse under this. Every story needs a specific, datable event with your personal actions clearly separated from the team's.

The writing exercise

Some Amazon loops - particularly for senior and principal roles - include a written exercise. Amazon has a strong writing culture rooted in the 6-pager memo format, and candidates are occasionally asked to draft a short document (a design doc, a strategy brief) and present it in the loop.

  • Writing is evaluated on clarity and structure first, detail second. A crisp one-page document beats a dense three-pager.
  • Amazon's preferred narrative structure means full prose - not PowerPoint decks or bullet lists.
  • If asked to prepare something in advance, treat it as seriously as the coding prep. It signals the level of written reasoning expected from you on the job.

How to prepare

Amazon prep has two tracks that must run in parallel. Most candidates under-invest in one or the other - usually the LP track.

  • Coding track: drill LeetCode mediums with emphasis on arrays, trees, graphs, and dynamic programming. Practice writing working code with test cases in 30-40 minutes, not just arriving at the algorithm.
  • LP track: write out 6-8 STAR stories. Map each to at least 2-3 LPs. Practice telling each one out loud in under 3 minutes, then answer cold follow-up questions. See the Behavioral Questions guide for the recurring themes.
  • Read the LPs: go to amazon.jobs and read each principle carefully. Internalize what Amazon actually means - the content is often more specific than the label suggests.
  • Mock with someone who has been inside the loop: solo prep reveals what you know; mock interviews reveal how you perform under pressure and what follow-up questions expose.

For a broader view of how Amazon fits into the FAANG landscape, see the FAANG Interview Process guide.

Get a dry run before the real loop
Amazon's bar raiser setup means a single weak LP round can block you even with perfect coding scores. TopCoding pairs you with engineers who have run Amazon loops from both sides - book a free call to map your story bank and practice under realistic pressure.

Sources & further reading

  1. 1Amazon Leadership Principles (official) — Amazon Jobs
  2. 2Software Development Engineer roles at Amazon — Amazon Jobs
  3. 3Cracking the Coding Interview, 6th edition — Gayle Laakmann McDowell / CareerCup
  4. 4Salary data by company and level — levels.fyi