How to Crack a UX Designer Interview in India (2024 Guide)

UX Design has become one of the most sought-after creative-technical careers in India. Companies like Swiggy, Zomato, PhonePe, Razorpay, Flipkart, Meesho, and virtually every serious product startup now have dedicated design teams. Salaries range from ₹6–12 LPA for junior designers to ₹25–60 LPA for Senior UX and Design Leads. But UX interviews are unlike most other roles — your portfolio carries as much weight as your answers, and you’ll often be asked to design something live. This guide prepares you for all of it.

UX Design Landscape in India

Role LevelCompaniesCore ResponsibilitiesSalary Range
Junior UX DesignerStartups, agencies, IT servicesVisual design, wireframing, user research₹5–10 LPA
UX DesignerMeesho, Razorpay, Urban CompanyEnd-to-end design, user testing₹10–20 LPA
Senior UX DesignerSwiggy, PhonePe, FlipkartSystems thinking, design leadership₹18–35 LPA
Design Lead / Head of DesignZepto, CRED, GrowwTeam management, design strategy₹30–70 LPA

What UX Interviews Actually Test

CompetencyHow It’s Evaluated
Portfolio qualityCase study depth, process visibility, outcome measurement
Design processHow do you go from problem to solution?
User empathy“Who is your user and how do you know?”
Problem-solving (live design)Design a feature or product in 20–30 minutes
Systems thinkingConsistency, scalability, design system awareness
CommunicationCan you explain your decisions to non-designers?
Business acumenHow does design contribute to product and company goals?

Your Portfolio: The Most Important Asset

In UX interviews in India, your portfolio speaks first — often before you do.

What makes a portfolio case study strong:

ElementWeak VersionStrong Version
Problem statement“I designed a food ordering app”“Users abandoned checkout 68% of the time — I redesigned the flow to reduce friction”
Process shownScreenshots of final screensDiscovery → Definition → Design → Testing → Iteration
Research“I did user interviews”“I conducted 8 user interviews and identified 3 key pain points, validated by a 200-person survey”
Outcome“The design looked better”“Post-launch: checkout abandonment fell from 68% to 41%; conversion rate +38%”
Your role“I worked on this project”“I led discovery and wireframing; collaborated with PM and engineering on implementation”

India-specific portfolio tip: Show at least one project relevant to the Indian market — payment flows (UPI), vernacular UI, low-bandwidth design, or feature-phone accessibility. This signals deep India product understanding.

Portfolio platforms popular in India: Behance, Dribbble, Notion case studies, personal website (Webflow, Cargo), or a custom GitHub Pages site.

The 5-Round UX Interview Structure

Round 1: Portfolio Walkthrough

The most important round. You’ll be asked to walk through 1–2 case studies in detail.

How to structure your walkthrough (5-minute per case):

  1. Problem (30 sec): “The challenge was…”
  2. My role (15 sec): “I was the lead designer responsible for…”
  3. Discovery (60 sec): Research methods, what you found
  4. Key insight (30 sec): The single most important finding that shaped the design
  5. Design decisions (90 sec): 2–3 specific choices and why you made them
  6. Outcome (30 sec): Metrics — what changed after launch

Don’t: Read through every screen. Do: Tell the story of design decisions.

Round 2: Live Design Challenge

This is the most stressful round — you design something in real time.

Common prompts at Indian companies:

  • “Design an onboarding flow for a new [Razorpay / Zepto / CRED] user”
  • “Redesign the returns flow on Flipkart”
  • “Design a feature that helps users track their spending on PhonePe”
  • “How would you improve the checkout experience for an India-first e-commerce app?”

The live design framework:

Step 1 (2 min): Clarify

→ Who is the primary user? What is the business goal? What constraints exist?

Step 2 (3 min): Define the user problem

→ State the problem statement: “As a [user], I struggle to [problem], which results in [impact]”

Step 3 (3 min): Map the current flow (if applicable)

→ Where does the user drop off or struggle today?

Step 4 (10–15 min): Design

→ Low-fidelity wireframes first (boxes and labels, not pixel-perfect)

→ Think out loud as you draw

→ Show 2 alternatives for at least one key decision

Step 5 (3 min): Walk through your design

→ Explain each decision: “I chose to [action] because [reason]”

→ Identify what you’d test first and why

Tools for live design in India: Figma (most common), Balsamiq, or even whiteboard + pen. Many companies provide Figma access during the round.

Round 3: Design Critique (Senior Roles)

You’ll be shown an existing product (sometimes their own) and asked to critique it.

Critique framework:

  1. User problem it’s solving (acknowledge what’s working)
  2. Usability issues (where might users struggle and why)
  3. Accessibility gaps (colour contrast, touch target size, screen reader support)
  4. Improvement hypothesis (what you’d test and why)

India-specific tip: When critiquing an Indian product, consider Tier-2 user context, lower-end Android devices, and vernacular users. This shows depth that generic UX critique misses.

Round 4: Cross-Functional Scenario

> “A PM wants to add a prominent banner ad to the home screen. You believe it will hurt the user experience. How do you handle it?”

Strong answer: Frame disagreements as experiments, not vetoes. “I’d propose we A/B test both versions and let the data decide — the hypothesis from UX is that it hurts key actions; let’s measure it.”

Round 5: Behavioural Questions

QuestionKey Elements
“Tell me about a design decision you pushed for against resistance”Data-backed rationale, stakeholder management, outcome
“Describe a time user research changed your design significantly”What you expected vs what you found, how you pivoted
“Tell me about a design failure and what you learned”Real failure, honest retrospective, what changed

UX Tools Every Indian Designer Should Know

Design:

☐ Figma — industry standard, must-know

☐ Adobe XD — used at older enterprise companies

☐ Sketch — used at some US-focused teams

Research:

☐ Maze or Useberry — unmoderated user testing

☐ Dovetail or Notion — research synthesis

☐ Google Forms / Typeform — survey design

Handoff:

☐ Zeplin — developer handoff

☐ Figma Dev Mode — increasingly used instead

References:

  1. Nielsen Norman Group — UX Career Guide — https://www.nngroup.com/articles/ux-career-advice
  2. Figma — Design Interview Prep Resources — https://www.figma.com/resources
  3. InVision — UX Portfolio Guide — https://www.invisionapp.com/inside-design/how-to-create-a-ux-portfolio
  4. Naukri.com — UX Designer Jobs India 2024 — https://www.naukri.com/ux-designer-jobs
  5. AmbitionBox — UX Designer Salary India — https://www.ambitionbox.com/salaries/ux-designer-salaries

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