What to Wear to a Job Interview

Industry-by-industry guidance on interview attire — so you arrive confident, not overdressed or underdressed.

The Core Rule: Dress One Level Above the Company's Normal Dress Code

The safest universal rule for interview attire is to dress one level above what the company's employees wear day-to-day. If the company is casual (jeans and t-shirts), wear smart casual. If the company is business casual, wear business formal. If the company is business formal, wear formal.

This approach signals that you take the opportunity seriously without looking out of place. It's almost always better to be slightly overdressed than underdressed — being overdressed reads as respectful; being underdressed reads as indifferent.

Where to look for clues:
- Company website and social media (team photos, office images)
- LinkedIn profiles of employees, particularly in the team you're joining
- Glassdoor reviews often mention dress code
- If you have a contact at the company, it's entirely acceptable to ask: "What's the typical dress code for the office?"
- The recruiter — asking them what to expect is professional and practical

Interview Attire by Industry

Finance, law, consulting, and banking: business formal is the baseline expectation. For interviews in these sectors, assume formal unless told otherwise. For men: dark suit, white or pale blue shirt, conservative tie. For women: tailored suit (trousers or skirt), formal blouse, or a conservative dress.

Corporate and professional services: business formal to business casual. Smart, tailored clothing — blazer, trousers or skirt, well-fitted shirt or blouse. Avoid overly casual pieces.

Marketing, PR, media, and creative agencies: smart casual is common, but creative industries often tolerate (or expect) more personal expression. Research the specific company — a boutique creative agency and a large media conglomerate have very different cultures.

Tech companies and startups: smart casual to casual, depending on the company. At early-stage startups, jeans and a smart top may be genuinely appropriate. For larger tech companies, err toward business casual for the interview. Tailored jeans with a blazer is a safe middle ground.

Healthcare and education: professional and conservative. For clinical or teaching environments: neat, professional attire that demonstrates you understand the setting.

Retail, hospitality, and trade roles: smart casual is usually appropriate. Clean, neat clothing that looks professional — you don't need a suit, but you should look polished.

While you're here

Interview booked. Now prepare your answers.

The LoopCV STAR Answer Builder helps you structure experience-based interview answers — so your content matches your confidence. Free, no sign-up.

Build my interview answers — free

Specific Items to Consider (and Avoid)

Consider:
- Well-fitting, freshly ironed or steamed clothing — fit and condition matter as much as style
- Neutral colours for an interview setting (navy, grey, black, white, beige) — safe and professional
- Comfortable shoes you can walk in confidently — heels you can't walk in signal discomfort
- Minimal, understated accessories — a watch, simple jewellery; nothing distracting
- Well-groomed hair — whether styled formally or more casually, it should look intentional

Avoid:
- Strong perfume or cologne — some interviewers are sensitive; err on the side of none
- Clothing with visible logos, graphics, or slogans
- Anything revealing, overly casual, or wrinkled
- New shoes you haven't broken in — painful shoes affect your composure
- Overly bold patterns that distract from the conversation
- Excessive jewellery or accessories that make noise or draw attention

What to Wear to a Video Interview

Video interviews have their own considerations. The camera sees you from roughly the chest up, which changes the calculus slightly.

Dress as you would for an in-person interview — at least from the waist up. It's tempting to wear professional attire on top and something casual below, but this creates risk if you need to stand up, and more practically, it affects your mental state — how you dress influences how you perform.

Background awareness: your attire competes with your background for visual attention. A cluttered background draws attention away from you; a clean, neutral background lets your attire do its job.

Colour on camera: bold, saturated colours often look more intense on screen than in person. Patterns can create a strobing effect (moiré) on some cameras. Solid colours in medium tones — navy, burgundy, forest green, charcoal — work well on video.

Lighting: poor lighting affects how your attire reads on camera. Ensure your face is lit from in front (window or ring light), not from behind.

When You're Genuinely Unsure: The Safe Default

When in doubt, the safe default for almost any professional interview is:

Business casual with one formal element. Tailored trousers or a smart skirt/dress, a well-fitted shirt or blouse, and either a blazer or a clean, structured jacket. Smart shoes. Minimal accessories.

This works for most industries and registers as professional without being stuffy. It's hard to get wrong.

A note on authenticity: if you're applying to a company where you know the culture skews very casual and you'd find it odd or uncomfortable to wear a suit, you don't have to. The goal is to look polished and intentional — not to perform a version of yourself that doesn't match the company you're joining. That said, "polished and intentional" is the minimum. Always aim above your current everyday default when interviewing.

Frequently Asked Questions

More questions? Visit our help centre .

Is it OK to wear jeans to a job interview?

It depends on the company and role. For creative, tech startup, or informal company cultures, well-fitted, dark-wash jeans with a smart top and blazer can be appropriate. For finance, law, corporate, or formal environments — no. When in doubt, err toward trousers or a more formal alternative. If you do wear jeans, they should be immaculate — no distressing, no fading, no casual washes.

What should a woman wear to a job interview?

A tailored suit (trouser or skirt), a smart dress with or without a blazer, or a blouse with tailored trousers or a skirt. The specific choice depends on the industry — finance and law call for more formal options, creative industries allow more flexibility. The key criteria: clean, well-fitting, appropriate for the setting, and polished. Comfortable shoes you can walk and sit in naturally.

What should a man wear to a job interview?

For formal industries: a dark suit (navy or charcoal), white or pale shirt, and a conservative tie. For business casual industries: smart trousers, a well-fitted shirt (with or without a blazer), and smart shoes. For casual company cultures: tailored trousers or smart jeans, a collared shirt or smart polo, and leather or clean casual shoes. Always clean, pressed, and well-fitting.

Can you be overdressed for a job interview?

In rare cases — if you're significantly more formal than the company's culture and it's evident you're not familiar with the environment (e.g., arriving in a full suit for a surfboard startup). But in most professional contexts, being slightly overdressed reads as respectful rather than out of touch. It's much harder to recover from being underdressed than overdressed.

What should I wear to a video interview?

Dress as you would for an in-person interview — at least from the chest up, and ideally fully. Business casual or business formal depending on the company. Solid colours photograph better than bold patterns. Ensure your background is clean and neutral, and that lighting is coming from in front of you rather than behind.

Does what you wear to an interview really matter?

Yes — first impressions form within seconds, and attire is a significant input. Research on interview outcomes consistently shows that appearance (professional, appropriate attire, grooming) correlates with perceived competence and employability. This doesn't mean clothes make the decision — your answers and qualifications are decisive — but attire that's inappropriate for the context creates a gap you then have to close through the quality of your answers.

Should I ask what to wear to an interview?

It's perfectly acceptable to ask the recruiter: "What's the dress code for the office — should I dress formally for the interview?" Most recruiters appreciate the question and give a straight answer. Alternatively, research the company on LinkedIn or Glassdoor for photos of the team and office environment.

Getting interviews. Now get more of them.

LoopCV automates applications across 20+ job boards — keeping your pipeline full while you prepare. Try it free.

Try LoopCV free