Glassdoor users rated their interview experience at Airbus as 100% positive with a difficulty rating score of 2 out of 5 (where 5 is the highest level of difficulty). Candidates interviewing for stagaire and rated their interviews as the hardest, whereas interviews for stagaire and roles were rated as the easiest.
I applied online. I interviewed at Airbus (Bengaluru) in Dec 2025
Interview
Asked about basic python, opening a file, accessing a dictionary among other things and how a plane flies, HR round was basic HR questions but you have to record in a platform called hirevue
looking for fit and passion for aviation, and basic thermodynamic/aerodynamic questions like drag vs lift, etc based on your background/experience. Overall easy and need to see the passion for aviation
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
looking for fit and passion for aviation, and basic thermodynamic/aerodynamic questions like drag vs lift, etc based on your background/experience. Overall easy and need to see the passion for aviation
I applied online. I interviewed at Airbus (Filton, England) in Dec 2025
Interview
The interview kicked off with a bunch of basic questions about Airbus. You definitely need to know the company values because they’re really looking for those to be tucked into your answers. They moved into behavioral stuff pretty quickly, asking for a time I made a mistake and what I did to fix it. My advice is to show that you're the type of person who speaks up, notifies the team immediately, and is proactive about resolving it rather than hiding it. They also asked for a time I solved a difficult problem, a time I had to learn something really quickly, and a time I had to deal with conflict or communication issues in a team.
After that, it got way more technical. They spent a lot of time asking about how I think wings fail. They wanted me to explain how I thought composite wings fail versus how metal wings fail, and then they'd follow up by asking how I would actually go about fixing those specific failures. They also asked exactly what the wing structures manual is. Honestly, they aren't necessarily expecting you to get every single technical detail right; it felt more like they just wanted to see your thought process and how you approach a problem you might not have the perfect answer for yet.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
What are the Airbus company values? Name a time you made a mistake and what you did to remedy it. Name a time you solved a difficult problem. Name a time you had to learn something quickly. Name a time you handled conflict or communication in a team. How do you think wings fail? How do you think composite wings fail? How do you think metal wings fail? How would you fix these failures? What exactly is the wing structures manual?