TL;DR: Asking the wrong question in a job interview can expose your business to discrimination claims across all 7 countries. This guide covers which questions are legally off-limits, what you can ask instead, and how to structure interviews that are fair, compliant, and effective.
Disclaimer: MmowW Scrib🐮 is a document preparation service, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice. This guide is for general informational purposes only. Anti-discrimination laws vary by jurisdiction and are subject to change. Always consult a qualified employment solicitor or attorney for advice specific to your situation.
Job interview questions must be relevant to the role and must not be used to discriminate against candidates based on protected characteristics. The key principle across all 7 countries is the same: ask only questions that are necessary to assess the candidate's ability to perform the role.
Protected characteristics (which vary slightly by jurisdiction) generally include:
Questions that directly or indirectly screen out candidates based on these characteristics are unlawful — even if that was not your intent. Indirect discrimination (where a neutral-sounding question disproportionately disadvantages a protected group) is as legally risky as direct discrimination.
Before asking any interview question, apply this test:
"Is this question necessary to assess whether the candidate can perform the role?"
If the answer is "not really" or "I'm just curious," do not ask it. If the answer is "yes — this is a genuine requirement of the role," document that reasoning in case it is ever challenged.
The following categories of questions create direct or indirect discrimination risk in all 7 countries:
Age
Ask instead: "Are you able to perform the duties of this role?" (If a specific qualification requires minimum time to complete, ask about the qualification, not age.)
Disability and Health
You may ask (after a conditional offer is made): "Are there any adjustments we could make to support you in this role?" — but only after the offer, not during the interview stage in most jurisdictions.
You may ask before offer (where relevant to the role): "This role requires you to [specific physical task]. Are you able to do this?" — but only where the task is a genuine requirement.
Race, Ethnicity, National Origin
You may ask: "Do you have the right to work in [country]?" — this is a legitimate question about work authorisation, not nationality.
Sex, Gender, Pregnancy
If the role requires extensive travel: "This role requires regular travel to [locations]. Are you able to meet this requirement?" — ask this of all candidates equally.
Religion
If the role has specific scheduling requirements: "This role requires work on [specific days / hours]. Are you able to work these hours?" — ask this of all candidates equally.
Sexual Orientation and Marital Status
Credit History and Financial Status (additional caution in some jurisdictions)
Exception: For roles with direct access to financial accounts, some jurisdictions permit financial background checks — but through a formal process, not an interview question.
Focus interview questions on competencies, experience, and genuine role requirements:
Role-specific capability
Qualifications and credentials
Availability and logistics
Right to work
Salary expectations
Asking about a candidate's current or previous salary has been restricted or banned in several jurisdictions to reduce pay gap perpetuation:
| Country | Salary History Question Status |
|---|---|
| 🇬🇧 UK | Not banned federally; widely considered poor practice; organisations with pay equity commitments avoid it |
| 🇫🇷 France | Not banned; but 2023 pay transparency law focuses on salary band disclosure |
| 🇸🇪 Sweden | Not banned; social norms favour transparency about salary ranges |
| 🇦🇺 Australia | Not banned; but asking about salary history can reinforce gender pay gaps |
| 🇳🇿 New Zealand | Not banned; best practice is to focus on the role's pay range |
| 🇨🇦 Canada | Banned in Ontario, Prince Edward Island, and certain other provinces |
| 🇺🇸 USA | Banned in California, New York, Massachusetts, Illinois, and many cities; check state law |
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The Equality Act 2010 prohibits asking about health or disability before a job offer is made, with limited exceptions. Job offers can be made conditional on passing a medical assessment relevant to the role — but the interview stage itself should avoid health-related questions. Pre-offer health questionnaires are generally unlawful.
France
The Code du travail provides that all information sought from a candidate must have a direct and necessary link to the role. Questions about family situation, pregnancy, religion, and political opinions are prohibited. Candidates may not be required to disclose information they are not legally obliged to reveal.
Australia
The Fair Work Act and state anti-discrimination laws prohibit discriminatory interview questions. The Australian Human Rights Commission provides guidance on pre-employment enquiries. Note that some states have broader protected characteristics than federal law.
United States
US discrimination law is fragmented — federal law (EEOC) applies to businesses with 15+ employees, while state laws often cover smaller employers. Some states (including California) have very broad anti-discrimination protections. The EEOC's guidance on pre-employment enquiries provides a useful reference.
1. Asking "tell me about yourself" and letting it run
This open-ended question invites candidates to share protected information (family situation, health, age, religion). Use it sparingly and redirect to role-related content.
2. Treating small talk as low-risk
Small talk before the formal interview ("Do you have far to travel?" "Do you have children who need school pickup?") can elicit protected information. Keep pre-interview conversation professional.
3. Note-taking focused on appearance and characteristics
Interview notes that refer to a candidate's accent, appearance, or family situation create evidence of discriminatory thinking. Notes should record answers to questions — not observations about the person.
4. Asking different questions to different candidates
If you ask question X to female candidates but not male candidates (or vice versa), you create a pattern of differential treatment. Use the same core questions for every candidate.
5. Using social media to find out what you cannot ask
Checking a candidate's LinkedIn, Facebook, or Instagram before interviewing them exposes you to claims that you discovered (and may have acted on) protected information. If you use social media in recruitment, have a clear policy.
Q: A candidate mentioned they have a disability during the interview. What should I do?
A: Do not probe further into the disability at the interview stage. Acknowledge the comment professionally and continue with role-related questions. After making a conditional offer (if you decide to proceed), you can ask what reasonable adjustments might support them in the role.
Q: Can I ask how long a candidate plans to stay with the company?
A: This is generally acceptable — it relates to planning and commitment. However, asking this specifically of women of childbearing age (and not others) would be discriminatory. Ask it of all candidates equally.
Q: What should I do if an interviewer asks a prohibited question by accident?
A: Acknowledge the error to the candidate ("That wasn't a question I should have asked — let's move on") and do not use any response the candidate gave in the selection decision. Document that the question was asked in error.
Q: Can I require candidates to complete a medical examination?
A: In most jurisdictions, pre-employment medical examinations are permitted after a conditional offer is made — not before. The examination must be relevant to genuine requirements of the role. In the UK, the Equality Act 2010 restricts pre-offer health questions and examinations. Seek advice from a qualified employment solicitor or attorney.
Use our Employment Checker to review anti-discrimination obligations by country before you begin your recruitment process.
Track hiring-related deadlines including offer acceptance windows and probationary period start dates with our Filing Deadlines tool.
Estimate total employment costs to support salary benchmarking with our Cost Calculator.
Remember: MmowW Scrib🐮 prepares documents — it does not provide legal advice. A qualified employment solicitor or attorney should review your recruitment process and interview practices.
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