How Long to Wait Before Following Up After an Interview

There are two distinct post-interview follow-ups — the thank-you note and the decision follow-up. They have different timing and different purposes.

The thank-you email: within 24 hours

The post-interview thank-you note is not the same as following up on a hiring decision. Send it within 24 hours of the interview — same day is better. Its purpose is to: signal professionalism and genuine interest, reference something specific from the conversation (showing you were engaged), and keep your name fresh in the interviewer's mind before they debrief.

Keep it brief: 3–5 sentences. Address it to the main interviewer or hiring manager. If you met multiple people, send individual notes where you have email addresses — but make each one specific to that person, not a copy-paste.

Template: "Hi [Name], thank you for taking the time to speak with me today about the [Role] position. I particularly enjoyed our conversation about [specific topic]. It reinforced my enthusiasm for the opportunity. I look forward to hearing about next steps." Sign off professionally.

When to follow up on a hiring decision

This is the follow-up people mean when they ask "how long should I wait?" — the check-in when you haven't heard back.

The rule is simple: if the interviewer gave you a timeline ("we'll be in touch by Friday," "expect to hear from us in two weeks"), wait until that date passes plus 3 business days before following up. This buffer accounts for legitimate delays without making you look impatient.

If no timeline was given, wait 10 business days (two full working weeks) after your most recent interview before sending a follow-up.

What to say in the follow-up

Keep it brief, professional, and low-pressure. You're not demanding a decision — you're checking in and restating your interest.

Template: "Hi [Name], I hope you're well. I wanted to follow up on my interview for the [Role] position on [Date]. I remain very interested in the opportunity and am eager to hear about next steps when you're able to share an update. Please let me know if you need any additional information from me."

What not to include: emotional language ("I've been anxiously waiting"), ultimatums ("I need an answer by X"), or lengthy re-pitching of your qualifications. One paragraph. End with an open offer to provide more information.

How many times to follow up

Maximum two follow-ups after the interview. First follow-up: as described above — 10 business days after the interview if no timeline was given, or 3 days after a stated timeline passed. Second follow-up: 7 business days after the first follow-up, if still no response.

After two follow-ups with no response, stop. Continued messages after that cross from professional persistence into pressure, and can damage your standing even if the hiring decision isn't finalised.

The exception: if you have a competing offer with a real deadline, a single, direct communication is appropriate: "I want to be transparent — I have another offer I need to respond to by [Date]. This role is my preference, and I wanted to let you know before responding to the other offer."

How to read the signals while you wait

While you're waiting, there are observable signals worth noting — but hold them loosely, not anxiously.

Positive signals: the interviewer spoke enthusiastically about your start date, said things like "when you join" rather than "if you join," introduced you to people beyond the interview panel, or the recruiter called you (vs emailed) after the interview.

Neutral or ambiguous signals: you haven't heard anything. Silence is the default state of most hiring processes — it doesn't mean rejection.

Signals worth managing: the recruiter gave a specific timeline and blew past it with no communication. This might mean the role is paused or the process is disorganised. A brief follow-up is warranted.

The key practice: don't make hiring decisions with your emotional energy. Keep applying to other roles while you wait. A pipeline of active conversations makes waiting on any single process far more manageable.

Frequently Asked Questions

More questions? Visit our help centre .

Should I send a thank-you email after every interview?

Yes — after every round, not just the final one. A brief, personalised thank-you note after each interview stage keeps your name positively present and signals genuine interest. Make each note specific to that conversation.

Is 2 weeks too long to wait before following up?

Not necessarily. If the company gave you a "2-week" timeline, waiting the full two weeks is appropriate. Follow up only after that stated period has passed. If no timeline was given, 10 business days is the right benchmark.

Is it too pushy to follow up after an interview?

One polite follow-up after a reasonable waiting period is never pushy — it's professional. Recruiters and hiring managers expect it. What feels pushy is multiple rapid-fire messages or emotional language about waiting.

What does it mean if a recruiter doesn't respond to my follow-up?

Usually it means the role was filled, is paused, or the recruiter is overloaded. It's rarely about you specifically. After two follow-ups with no response, redirect your energy to other applications — the signal is clear enough.

Should I follow up directly with the hiring manager or through the recruiter?

Through the recruiter, in most cases. If you've spoken directly with the hiring manager and have their contact, a brief note to them is appropriate. But going around a recruiter who is actively managing the process can create friction — the recruiter is your primary point of contact until told otherwise.

What if I forgot to send a thank-you email and it's been 3 days?

Send it anyway. A slightly late thank-you note is better than none. A brief acknowledgment: "I realised I didn't reach out sooner — I wanted to thank you for our conversation last [Day] and reiterate my interest in the role." It's better than letting the silence persist.

Keep applying while you wait — don't pause your search for one process

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