Interview prep

Goldman Sachs interview questions and how to prepare

The kinds of questions Goldman Sachs asks, and a clear plan to prepare for each of them.

How the Goldman Sachs interview process works

Goldman Sachs is in finance and investment banking. A leading global investment bank and financial services firm.

Its interviews generally involve technical questions plus behavioral and fit questions. Understanding the format is the first step, because each type rewards a different kind of preparation.

Types of questions Goldman Sachs asks

We describe the categories rather than repeat specific questions, since real prompts vary by round and change over time:

  • Accounting and the three statements
  • Valuation (DCF, comparables, precedent transactions)
  • Deal and markets discussion
  • Behavioral questions on drive, attention to detail, and teamwork

How to prepare

Focus your prep on what the format actually tests:

  • Know the three financial statements and how a change in one flows through the others cold.
  • Be able to walk through a DCF and the main valuation methods without notes.
  • Have a clear, specific answer for why this group and why finance.

Practice the way you will be tested

Reading about questions is not the same as answering them under time pressure. Run mock interviews that match the real format, get feedback, and fix the same weakness each round until it is gone.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Goldman Sachs interviews involve technical questions plus behavioral and fit questions. Expect accounting and the three statements, valuation (DCF, comparables, precedent transactions), deal and markets discussion and behavioral questions on drive, attention to detail, and teamwork. Prepare for the format rather than trying to memorize specific questions.

It is demanding because it tests structured thinking and specific examples under time pressure. Candidates who practice the exact format with feedback tend to do much better than those who only read about it.

Learn the format, prepare for each question type, and practice out loud in mock interviews so your structure and delivery hold up when it counts.

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