# Six rounds. Two months. Rejected for asking about work-life balance.

**[TRUE STORY]** — by Software engineer · mid-sized tech company · via r/recruitinghell

He applied to a mid-sized tech company in early 2026. What followed was a two-month, six-round interview process that included a four-hour unpaid skills assessment.

At every stage, the signals were green. The recruiter told him he was the top candidate. The hiring manager called his technical work "exactly what we need." The team seemed to like him. He started letting himself believe it.

In the final interview, he asked a straightforward question: what does work-life balance look like on this team? The interviewer's expression shifted. The conversation wrapped up quickly.

Two hours later, a rejection email landed in his inbox. The reason: "cultural fit."

He later found Glassdoor reviews for the company. Current and former employees described sixty-plus-hour weeks as standard, weekend work as expected, and a leadership team that treated any mention of boundaries as a red flag.

"They literally rejected me for not wanting to be exploited," he wrote. The post went viral on r/recruitinghell, where the top comment read: "You didn't fail the interview. The interview failed you."

The company reposted the role the following week.

*Source: [r/recruitinghell · via Economic Times](https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/magazines/panache/six-interview-rounds-for-two-months-job-candidate-says-got-he-got-rejected-for-not-wanting-to-be-exploited/articleshow/127781110.cms)*
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