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      Senior Software Engineer Interview

      Oct 21, 2024
      Anonymous Interview Candidate
      Madrid
      No offer
      Negative experience
      Average interview

      Application

      I applied through a recruiter. I interviewed at Revolut (Madrid)

      Interview

      I was approached by a recruiter on LinkedIn for a Senior Software Engineer position at Revolut. With around 10 years of experience across multiple business domains and tech stacks, I was excited to explore the fintech sector. The initial interaction was with a recruiter who scheduled a call with a technical recruiter. The call felt more like a superficial checklist rather than an in-depth evaluation. The questions were general, basic, and didn’t dive into any real technical expertise. I started the interview process in mid-September. The first round was a coding interview with one engineer. I was tasked with building a load balancer for a maximum of 10 services, and the interview consisted of multiple tasks. I managed to solve all four tasks, including TDD and concurrency. My advice here: keep it simple. They asked for things like ensuring services were unique, which might lead you to think a Set or Map would be appropriate. However, they seemed to prefer an ArrayList and manual validation logic. It felt like they were more focused on following a rigid checklist rather than evaluating real-world problem-solving skills. The first interview was uncomfortable, largely because the interviewer was extremely rude and unengaged. To my surprise, I passed that round. The second technical interview took place two weeks later. The experience was worse. The interviewer arrived 7 minutes late, didn’t introduce himself, nor did he ask me to introduce myself. To make matters worse, he wasn’t prepared with the question and asked me to talk while he searched for it. I humorously tested if he was paying attention by saying random things—he wasn’t. Once we got to the task, I had to implement a money transfer operation using an Account class. I built the Account class, maintaining thread safety with a ReentrantLock and applying all the necessary logical validations. The task required finding the correct type for the transfer amount, and I initially used double and proceeded with the implementation. The rest of the interview involved SQL, where I answered around 15 questions, including writing an optimistic locking query, which I completed correctly. Toward the end, we moved to theory questions covering topics like deployment, production, rollbacks, and monitoring—about 40 questions in total. After all that, the interviewer said, "I wish you had solved the coding question!" Surprised, I asked why. He responded, "You used double for the transfer amount, which is incorrect." Although I immediately acknowledged that BigDecimal would have been more appropriate (recalling an issue with fractions from years ago), he bluntly stated that since I didn’t use it from the start, he couldn’t mark it as solved. It became clear that the interviewer was following a strict checklist rather than truly evaluating my overall solution and technical knowledge. He seemed more focused on ticking boxes than understanding my thought process or experience. Having been through countless interviews, including at companies like Amazon and Google (Where I work), this was one of the most frustrating and disorganized experiences I’ve encountered. The rigid, outdated approach made me question whether I’d even want to continue the process. Before receiving any feedback, I had already decided that I didn’t want to work at a company where the interviewers demonstrated such narrow-mindedness and a lack of professionalism.

      Interview questions [3]

      Question 1

      Technical Recruiter round: SOLID, CQRS, Concurrency challenges, Threads, SQL and NoSQL, DataStrucutres (Very basic)
      Answer question

      Question 2

      Build a Load balancer for at most 10 unique services. You will be asked to use Random algorithm to fetch the service and then use RoundRobin. Concurrency is the last task,
      1 Answer

      Question 3

      You will be provided code for Account class (Empty) and class with transferMoney operation that you would need to write. The signature of transferMoney is (Account a, Account b, ???? amount) Then so many questions about SQL transactions and Isolation levels and consistency and they will ask you to write SQL in the comments and implement locking using it (both optimistic and pessimistic) Then so many theory questions about Production environment, Stability patterns ( at least 3), Roll back, deployment strategies. SOLID, Monitoring code and others.
      1 Answer
      17

      Other Senior Software Engineer Interview Reviews for Revolut

      Senior Software Engineer Interview

      May 1, 2026
      Anonymous Interview Candidate
      No offer
      Negative experience
      Average interview

      Application

      I applied through a recruiter. I interviewed at Revolut

      Interview

      The experience was disappointing and reflected a lack of professionalism. The interaction gave the impression of a disorganised or potentially unhealthy work culture. Answered most of the questions accurately and to the best of my ability. The interview was initially scheduled for a short time slot. Toward the end, the interviewer asked for my availability and indicated that they would schedule a follow-up session to continue the discussion. However, no further communication or follow-up was received.
      1

      Senior Software Engineer Interview

      May 20, 2026
      Anonymous Interview Candidate
      No offer
      Negative experience
      Easy interview

      Application

      I applied online. The process took 5 days. I interviewed at Revolut in May 2026

      Interview

      During the initial HR screening call, the recruiter explicitly stated that Revolut was not hiring for a specific team and that team fit would be determined only after the coding and system design stages. However, after passing the screening, I received the following rejection message: “After carefully reviewing your experience, we've decided to move forward with candidates whose profiles more closely align with the specific requirements of the role. Please note that this decision is based on current team needs.” This creates a clear inconsistency in the communication. If team allocation and specific requirements were to be evaluated only in later technical rounds, a rejection citing “current team needs” right after screening appears contradictory. Such practices can lead to candidates investing time in the interview process based on incomplete or misleading information at the early stage.

      Senior Software Engineer Interview

      Apr 17, 2026
      Anonymous employee
      Accepted offer
      Positive experience
      Difficult interview

      Application

      I applied through a recruiter. The process took 4 weeks. I interviewed at Revolut in Apr 2026

      Interview

      I interviewed for a Senior Software Engineer (Java) role. The process was structured and fairly fast-paced: recruiter/screening conversation, technical discussions (coding and system design) focused on backend engineering and distributed systems, and a final manager/team-fit stage. Communication from recruiting was clear, and timelines were shared proactively. Overall, the process felt rigorous but very professional

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