Why Greenhouse tells you so little
Greenhouse is an applicant tracking system designed primarily for hiring teams, not for candidates. The candidate-facing portal is a secondary feature — it exists mainly to collect your information, not to keep you informed. This is by design: Greenhouse gives recruiters control over what information flows to candidates and when.
As a result, the statuses you see in Greenhouse are deliberately vague. You'll typically see "Application Received," "Application Under Review," and eventually either a rejection or a request to schedule an interview — and very little in between.
Greenhouse is popular at high-growth tech companies, Series B–D startups, and mid-size software firms precisely because it gives hiring teams a clean, structured pipeline while revealing almost nothing to candidates.
Common Greenhouse statuses and what they mean
Application Received / Submitted — Your application data has been captured by Greenhouse. The recruiter has not yet reviewed it. You should receive an automated confirmation email.
Application Under Review — A recruiter or hiring manager has opened your application file. As with LinkedIn's "Viewed" status, this doesn't guarantee a human carefully read your resume — it means someone accessed the record. This status can persist for weeks.
Recruiter Phone Screen / Hiring Manager Interview — You've been moved forward. At this point you should already have received a scheduling invitation directly by email or through Greenhouse's built-in scheduling tool.
Offer — A formal offer has been extended. You'll have received communication directly — the portal status alone is not the offer.
Rejected / No Longer Being Considered — The company has decided not to move forward. Greenhouse may send you an automated rejection email, or the status may update with no notification.
No Decision / Application Closed — The role has been closed without a hiring decision (paused, cancelled, or filled internally). Not necessarily a personal rejection — it means the search ended before reaching you.
The gap between recruiter actions and what you see
Here is the most important thing to understand about Greenhouse: there can be a significant lag between what recruiters do in the system and what you see in the candidate portal. A recruiter might advance your application to the "Hiring Manager Review" stage internally, but your portal may still show "Application Under Review" for days or weeks.
This happens because Greenhouse has two separate sets of stages: the internal pipeline stages (which recruiters configure and move candidates through) and the candidate-facing status. Companies customise their internal pipeline with 5–8+ stages, but they typically only surface two or three of them to candidates.
This means the status in your portal is often stale. If a recruiter is interested, they will contact you directly — by email or phone. Don't over-interpret status changes (or lack thereof). The actionable signal is direct outreach, not portal updates.
While you're here
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Start applying automaticallyWhat the Greenhouse pipeline looks like internally
While candidates see a simplified status, recruiters see a detailed pipeline. A typical Greenhouse setup at a tech company looks like this:
Stage 1 — Application Review: All new applications land here. A recruiter (or an automated screening tool) reviews resumes for basic qualifications. Most rejections happen at this stage — before a human reads the resume carefully.
Stage 2 — Recruiter Phone Screen: A 15–30 minute screening call to confirm fit, compensation alignment, and availability. If you haven't heard anything after 2+ weeks in "Under Review," you likely didn't pass Stage 1.
Stage 3 — Hiring Manager Screen: A more focused call or video interview with the person you'd report to. This is where role-specific questions begin.
Stage 4 — Technical / Skills Assessment: For many roles — engineering, data, design, marketing analytics — this is a take-home task or live coding/case study exercise. It's the highest drop-off point in most pipelines.
Stage 5 — Team / Panel Interview: Usually 2–5 back-to-back interviews with team members. This is the longest and most time-intensive step, often involving multiple days of scheduling.
Stage 6 — Executive / Final Round: A call with a VP, director, or founder. Often more about culture and vision than technical evaluation.
Stage 7 — Offer: Reference checks may happen here or before this stage. Once passed, the formal offer is generated directly in Greenhouse and sent via email.
The average time from Stage 1 to offer at a Greenhouse-using company is 3–6 weeks, with most of the variation occurring between Stage 2 and Stage 5.
How long each stage typically takes
Application Review to first contact: 3–14 days at most companies. Startups tend toward the faster end; larger companies with high applicant volume take longer.
Recruiter Screen to Hiring Manager Screen: 3–7 days, typically. Scheduling is usually handled through Greenhouse's calendar integration (Calendly-like tool built in), so once you receive a link, booking happens quickly.
Hiring Manager Screen to Assessment: 2–5 days. Some companies send the take-home task immediately after the screen; others wait until internal calibration.
Assessment submission to team interviews: 5–10 days. This is often where applications stall the longest, because scheduling multiple interviewers across time zones takes coordination.
Final round to offer: 3–7 days. Reference checks are usually the constraint — they require your references to respond, which adds unpredictable delay.
Total expected timeline: 3–8 weeks from application to offer at most Greenhouse-using companies. If you're at 8+ weeks with no contact, the process has almost certainly stalled or you were rejected without notification.
Signs your Greenhouse application is dead
Greenhouse doesn't always send rejection emails — many companies configure the system to update the portal status silently. These are the signals that your application is no longer active:
The status hasn't changed in 4+ weeks. While "Under Review" can last a long time, a complete absence of any movement after a month is a strong signal you've been screened out.
The job posting has been removed or closed. Check the original URL or search for the role on the company's jobs page. If it's gone, the role is either filled or on hold. If it was filled, your application is effectively closed.
You see a new job posting for the same or similar role. Sometimes companies pause a search, restart it, and re-post. Your existing application is unlikely to be re-evaluated in the new batch.
The company's LinkedIn shows they hired someone for that role. If someone has updated their LinkedIn to reflect joining the company in that role, the search concluded.
You sent a polite follow-up and got no response. After 10–14 business days post-application, one brief follow-up (via email to the listed recruiter, or through Greenhouse's messaging feature if available) is appropriate. No response after that follow-up confirms the application is dead.
The healthiest approach: treat any application you haven't heard from in 3+ weeks as closed for planning purposes, even if the status hasn't changed. Continue applying elsewhere.
How to follow up on a Greenhouse application
Direct recruiter contact is the most effective follow-up channel. Here's how to find and use it:
Find the recruiter on LinkedIn. Search for the company name + "talent" or "recruiting" or the job title of the role you applied to. Many job postings link directly to the recruiter's profile — check the original listing.
Check the job posting for a recruiter name. Some Greenhouse postings include the recruiter's name at the bottom. Search their name on LinkedIn to find their profile and contact them there.
Use the Greenhouse portal's messaging feature. Some (not all) Greenhouse implementations include a way to message the hiring team directly from your portal. Look for a "Message recruiter" or contact option in your application view.
What to say: Keep it brief. One sentence expressing continued interest, one sentence on why you're a strong fit, and a request to confirm they received your materials. Don't ask for feedback on whether you're still being considered — that puts the recruiter in an awkward position and rarely gets a useful answer.
When to follow up: 7–10 business days after submitting. Once only. If there's no response, send one final follow-up 7 days later, then move on.
What not to do: Don't email the hiring manager directly before speaking with the recruiter — it bypasses the process and can work against you. Don't follow up more than twice.