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The Jane Street Interview, Explained

NeetQuant Team · June 2026 · 6 min read

Jane Street runs one of the most distinctive interview processes in quant trading. It is heavy on probability and expected value, light on finance trivia, and unusually focused on how you think rather than whether you reach the answer.

The process at a glance

By Jane Street's own description, the process runs from phone interviews to an in-person final stage. The final round mixes several question types:

AreaWhat it looks like
Probability & statisticsDice, coins, cards; "what's the fair price of this game?"
Expected valuePricing bets and decisions under uncertainty
Mental mathQuick, accurate arithmetic woven into larger problems
Market-making gamesQuote a price on an uncertain quantity, update as info arrives
Coding & data analysisFor technology and research roles, in your strongest language

Key insight. Jane Street states plainly that they will not test you on knowledge of finance or economics — a finance background is optional for trading. They are sampling your reasoning, not your vocabulary.

What they're really evaluating

The recurring theme in Jane Street's own materials is that the method matters as much as the answer. Interviews are collaborative: they want to see you reason out loud, take a hint gracefully, and work the problem with the interviewer.

Worked example: the spirit of it. Asked to price a simple card-drawing game, a strong candidate narrates the expected-value setup, states assumptions, sanity-checks the number, then adjusts when the interviewer adds a twist. A silent, exact answer often scores worse than a clear, slightly-off one — because the job is collaborative problem-solving, and that is exactly what they are sampling.

How to prepare

  1. Build deep probability and expected-value fluency — the highest-leverage prep by far.
  2. Practise quoting and updating prices. The Make a Market and Take the Bet games train exactly this under time pressure.
  3. Rehearse thinking aloud, so your reasoning is legible to an interviewer.
  4. For technical roles, be ready to code cleanly in your strongest language.

When you are ready, work the Jane Street question set and run the timed Probability OA to simulate the pace. For other game- and speed-driven shops, see the SIG and Optiver guides.

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Frequently asked questions

Does Jane Street test finance knowledge?
No — they state plainly they won't test you on finance or economics, and a finance background is optional for trading roles. They care about probability, expected value, and how you reason under uncertainty.
What are the famous Jane Street 'games'?
Widely reported formats involve quoting a price on an uncertain quantity and updating as cards or information are revealed — market-making under uncertainty. The exact games vary; the skill being tested (pricing, hedging, updating) does not.
How much coding is there?
It depends on the role. Technology and research roles include coding challenges in your strongest language; pure-trading interviews weight probability, EV, and market-making more heavily.
The Jane Street Interview, Explained · NeetQuant