Why employers ghost candidates
Being ghosted is almost never personal. The most common reason: a role put on hold or cancelled. Budget freezes, reorgs, and internal promotions happen mid-hiring, and companies often don't bother notifying candidates when this happens.
Other common causes: the hiring team is still deciding between finalists and hasn't reached a conclusion; administrative overwhelm at larger companies where recruiters manage dozens of roles and hundreds of candidates; an internal hire that the manager finds awkward to announce; or straightforwardly — poor communication habits on the employer's side.
How long to wait before following up
The right wait time depends on where you are in the process.
After a phone or first-round interview: wait 5–7 business days past the expected decision date. After a final-round interview: wait 7–10 business days. If they gave you a specific date ("we'll be in touch by Friday") and that date passes, wait 2 business days before reaching out.
Keep the follow-up short: you're still interested, you wanted to check in, and you'd love an update when they have one. No guilt-tripping. No "I'm concerned I haven't heard back."
Follow-up templates that don't burn bridges
First follow-up: Reference the interview date and role, say you're still very interested, and ask for next steps when they're available. Two to three sentences maximum.
Second follow-up (5 more business days later, if no reply): This is your last attempt. Acknowledge things get busy, mention you wanted to check in one more time before making any other decisions, and offer a clean exit — "if the position has been filled or put on hold, completely understand." This professionalism leaves a positive impression even if the answer is no.
Two follow-ups is the professional limit. A third starts to look desperate.
When to officially move on
Give up after two unanswered follow-up emails, more than three weeks of silence since your interview, or when the job disappears from the company's careers page.
Moving on doesn't mean burning the bridge. Consider sending one final brief note: acknowledge you're assuming the role has been filled, wish the team well, and leave the door open for future opportunities. This kind of professional close is rare — and hiring managers remember it.
If you eventually reach someone and they confirm the role was filled, you can absolutely ask for feedback. Interviewers who ghosted you often feel some guilt about the silence and tend to respond more candidly than usual.
The real solution: never rely on a single application
Ghosting hurts most when it's your only active opportunity. The best defense against it is a full pipeline — multiple companies, multiple conversations, multiple interviews running in parallel.
When you're actively applying to 20 or 30 roles, one company going silent is annoying but not devastating. When you're waiting on one company, it's everything. Keep the volume up.