Interview Question Generator

Generates interview questions based on a job role.

Free to run, with no sign-up first. Enter the role and topic above, and get a tailored set of interview questions in seconds.

Whether you are hiring, building a quiz, or prepping for your own interview, coming up with sharp questions on the spot is hard. The free Interview Question Generator takes a job title, skill, or topic and produces a focused list of questions you can use as-is or adapt.

How to Use the Free Interview Question Generator

  1. Enter the role or topic, like “senior product manager” or “React developer.”
  2. Add any focus, such as leadership, a specific skill, or seniority level.
  3. Click Generate to get a list of relevant questions.
  4. Copy the ones you like and tailor them to the specific candidate or conversation.

Types of Questions It Generates

  • Behavioral: “Tell me about a time you handled a missed deadline.” These reveal how someone actually works.
  • Technical: role-specific questions that test real skills, scaled to the seniority you set.
  • Situational: “What would you do if…” scenarios that show judgment.
  • Culture and motivation: questions about working style, goals, and what the candidate is looking for.

Who It Is For

  • Hiring managers and recruiters who want a strong, consistent question set for every candidate.
  • Candidates prepping for an interview by practicing likely questions out loud.
  • Creators and podcasters who need thoughtful questions for a guest or an article.

Interview Question Generator FAQs

Is the interview question generator free?

Yes, the question generator is free with no sign-up needed. A free RightBlogger account lets you save question sets and reuse them for future interviews.

Can it tailor questions to a specific role?

Yes. The more specific your input (exact title, seniority, and the skills you care about), the more relevant the questions. A prompt like “mid-level data analyst, focus on SQL and communication” returns far sharper questions than just “analyst.”

Should I use the questions exactly as written?

Treat them as a strong starting set. Pick the ones that fit the role, adjust the wording to your voice, and leave room to follow up based on the candidate’s answers. The best interviews are a conversation, not a script.