J'ai postulé en ligne. Le processus a pris 1 semaine. J'ai passé un entretien chez Stripe (Calgary, AB) en août 2025
Entretien
The first round was a 15 minute chat with a recruiter - pretty standard, not super personal, just asking about my prior experience, why I am leaving my current job, what I want out of my future career.
I was then sent a meeting invite for the next round, 1 hour but 45 mins to code and then buffer for questions. Thought it was interesting that the person running the interview had only been at the company for months… It was a 4 part question, where each part is unlocked as you finish the previous one. I made it to part 4 and got about 90% done and they had me just talk about how I would have finished it. Afterwards I asked a few questions and we had a nice chat. I felt very confident coming out of that interview.
Then got the rejection email the next day, asked for feedback, haven’t heard back. It is frustrating not know what they dinged me on after feeling good about it.
First an OA which is very hard, you have to be really fast. Then HR call and then phone round. Unfortunately I got unlucky and my interviewer was doing something else while doing the interview, he was muted and I had to ask for his attention twice. Of course in the end he said I did very well and one day later I was rejected. The phone round is not particularly difficult but you have to be fast and talking too much will cost you.
Questions d'entretien [1]
Question 1
They have a bunch of questions about string parsing, more often than not you will need to read a CSV so know how to do that, and know how to use the split function.
1 round of team screen - go/no go with a multi step problem
Design - classic interview
Integration - work on integrating some new systems
Bug bash - find and solve a bug
Programming exercise - same as team screen maybe a bit harder
J'ai postulé via un recruteur. J'ai passé un entretien chez Stripe en juil. 2026
Entretien
started with a quick recruiter chat (checking developer infrastructure know-how), followed by a 45-min live coding screen where they look for production ready code. onsite was 5 rounds: coding, bug bash, integration, system design, and behavioral. bug bash was the most interesting part. they just drop you into a random repo with failing tests and watch how you track down the root cause. integration is pure API work - reading docs and wiring things up, but they lean heavy on error handling. sys design felt very grounded. instead of drawing huge scalable architecture, we basically just talked through failure modes and backward compatibility.behavioral was standard. across the board, stripe cares way more about readable code and communication than tricky algorithms.for prep, practice reading other people's code and fixing bugs. i had a mock on prepfully with a stripe SWE to test my bug bash process, and it really highlighted some messy debugging habits i had. tough loop, but it actually feels like real engineering.
Questions d'entretien [1]
Question 1
Given a stream of Stripe checkout session events, identify sessions abandoned at each step of the checkout flow and calculate conversion rates