What Not to Ask in Interviews: Staying Compliant in 2025
September 2nd 2025

Interviews in 2025
Hiring foreign nationals? Whether you’re working with OPT candidates, H-1B sponsorship, or trying to reduce compliance risk, your interview process can be a legal landmine if you’re not careful.
Asking the wrong question—or asking the right question at the wrong time—can violate federal immigration laws and trigger discrimination claims under the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA).
This blog breaks down what HR and hiring managers cannot ask, what’s still legal, and how to screen for work authorization without crossing the line.
Why Interview Questions Matter More Than Ever in 2025
The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), through the Immigrant and Employee Rights Section (IER), has made it clear: it is illegal to ask applicants to specify their immigration or citizenship status unless and until a conditional offer has been made.
Even with good intentions, poorly worded questions can violate anti-discrimination provisions of the INA—especially when hiring OPT, CPT, STEM OPT, or H-1B candidates.
Questions You Should Not Ask Before Making an Offer
- “Are you a U.S. citizen?”
- “What visa are you on?”
- “Will you need sponsorship to work here?”
- “Where are you from originally?”
- “Do you have a green card?”
- “Do you need work authorization?”
These questions are not permitted prior to a conditional job offer. Asking them during interviews could be interpreted as national origin or citizenship discrimination.
What You Can Ask — Legally and Safely
You are allowed to ask work-eligibility-neutral questions such as:
“Are you currently authorized to work in the United States for any employer?”
“Will you now or in the future require employer sponsorship for work authorization (e.g., H-1B)?”
- Focus on job eligibility, not citizenship or nationality
- Apply to all candidates equally
- Are legally permissible under DOJ and EEOC guidance
Best practice: Ask these questions on your standard job application form or after initial screenings, not during the early stages of live interviews.
Quick Table: Facts and Supporting Links
Claim/Fact | Source Link |
---|---|
IER enforces INA anti-discrimination protections | DOJ IER overview (Department of Justice) |
Employers must treat all applicants equally regardless of citizenship status | IER hiring best practices (Department of Justice) |
Do not mention immigration status in job postings—even if cover export-controlled roles | DOJ export control guidance (Department of Justice) |
FAQs on prohibited interview practices | DOJ IER FAQs (Department of Justice) |
Immigrants have protection from discriminatory hiring | EEOC fact sheet (EEOC) |
EEOC guidance on anti-discrimination | EEOC portal (EEOC) |
Communicate hiring policies to prevent bias | EEOC small business guidance (EEOC) |
Examples of improper interview questions | FindLaw guidance (FindLaw) |
Employers can ask about work authorization—without going further | DOJ webinar reps guidance (Upwardly Global) |
Documented hiring practices are critical during DOJ investigations | Perkins Coie guidance (Perkins Coie) |
DOJ expanded investigation authority—IRI can act proactively | National Law Review article (National Law Review) |
Train Your Hiring Managers: The Front Line of Risk
Most compliance issues in hiring happen because line managers and interviewers aren’t trained on the legal boundaries. HR may know the law—but if a hiring manager slips up, the liability still hits your organization.
What HR should do in 2025:
- Provide interview compliance training at least annually
- Use standardized questions and scoring guides
- Audit interviews periodically to catch noncompliant patterns
- Include scripts and dos/don’ts in your interview toolkit
Common Scenarios That Get Employers in Trouble
“We want someone who doesn’t need sponsorship.”
Intent doesn’t matter. This can imply discriminatory hiring practices based on perceived immigration status.
“We’ve had issues with visa timelines, so we’re avoiding it.”
Denying applicants based on future sponsorship needs—before evaluating them on merit—can violate the INA.
“They mentioned they’re international, so we didn’t move forward.”
That’s a lawsuit waiting to happen. Always evaluate based on qualifications and eligibility—not assumptions.
Summary: Stay Focused on Eligibility, Not Status
Your hiring process should assess skills, fit, and eligibility—not citizenship or origin. A good rule of thumb: if the question wouldn’t be appropriate for a U.S. citizen born abroad, it’s not appropriate for anyone.
How MP Can Help
At MP, we work alongside HR teams to build hiring processes that are not just compliant—but confident. Whether you’re scaling up, sponsoring international talent, or just tightening up your risk, our team is here to support yours.
Let’s build interview practices that protect your people and your organization.
We’re not here to replace your team; we’re here to support it.
Let’s build confidence into your compliance.
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