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MBA Admissions Interview Primer: Open vs. Invitation-Only Interviews

interview tips for mba applicants

In this first part of a multi-part series, we’ll unpack the different types of interviews—open, invited, resume-based, application-based, behavioral-based, team-based, etc. Along the way, we’ll offer some tips for how best to prepare for each and explore a few of the more interesting wrinkles in the world of MBA interviews.

When all is said and done, you’ll have a much firmer grasp on the MBA interview landscape as a whole, which we hope will better prepare you for interviews at all of your target schools.

Open Interviews Versus Invited Interviews

Also known as open interviews, applicant-initiated interviews are what they sound like. At Dartmouth Tuck, Round 1 and Round 2 applicants have the option to choose to interview if they submit their materials by a certain date. There’s no need to wait—or stress over—receiving an interview invitation. Just schedule a date, pack your bags and go. Of course, the opportunity to initiate your own interview at Tuck only lasts until the open-interview application period ends or capacity is met, respectively. Tuck then switches to invitation-only interviews, in which selected candidates are invited to interview.

For the 2025-2026 admissions season, there are two paths to a Tuck interview:

  • Guaranteed interviews — All applicants who submit their complete application, including test scores and Letters of Reference, by 5:00pm ET on:
    • September 2, 2025, for Round 1 / Consortium 1 or
    • December 1, 2025, for Round 2 / Consortium 2

    will be guaranteed an interview.

  • Invitational interviews — For all other applicants, interviews are offered by invitation only.

If a School Offers Open Interviews, You’d Do Well to Sign Up

For schools that do offer open interviews, you’d do well to take them up on it. “There is really no scenario where taking advantage of the open interview policy can hurt a candidate,” says Alex Brown, who worked in admissions at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School for several years. Schools will evaluate candidates, in part, on fit for the school, so this initiative can dial into that, he adds.

Graham Richmond, cofounder of Clear Admit, concurs. “You should really make the effort to get a spot—after all, you shouldn’t apply if you aren’t excited about the school or wouldn’t be happy to attend,” he says. “I can’t think of a scenario in which you would purposely not sign up, unless geography or work travel gets in the way, in which case you should talk to the Admissions Committee to explain and perhaps seek a solution.”

Tuck features a smaller applicant pool than the likes of HBS, Wharton or Stanford, making it more feasible for them to accommodate applicant-initiated interviews. Tuck, for its part, also leans on second-year students to conduct the majority of its interviews, which further increases the resources it has available for interviews.

Moreover, if you are a weaker candidate or have an issue in your file—like low test scores, for example—it’s prudent to get your application in as soon as possible and get a spot, Richmond counsels. “This is especially true in the case of applicants who think they will do well in person and that an interview might push their candidacy over the hump,” he says.

Interviews by Invitation

The interview allows MBA admissions committees to move beyond the restraints of the written application and letters of recommendation to focus on things they can only learn about a person when they meet them—oral communication skills, emotional intelligence, maturity, presence and self-awareness, for starters. Most admissions committees at leading business schools agree that to make a fully informed admission decision without the greater insight into a candidate that an interview provides is difficult—if not impossible.

This is why all leading business schools require an interview as part of the application process. Few leading programs can support an open interview policy, which has led most other top business school programs to offer interviews by invitation only. These invitations can be delivered via email or can be seen by logging into your application portal, in line with the timelines schools may individually announce. It is also worth sorting LiveWire history to get a sense of timing, as real applicants report their live results throughout the admissions season.

See the next post in our series, which takes a closer look at the different interview formats these various schools employ, here.

If you’re gearing up for an interview at a leading business school, don’t miss Clear Admit’s Interview Guide Series. Featuring school-specific interview prep strategy, evaluation of how the adcom weighs the interview, in-depth analysis of the most frequently asked questions by that school and more, these are a valuable resource to help you prepare and are available for 21 different schools. There’s also our Interview Report Archive, where applicants share their personal experiences interviewing at a range of schools and learn from those of others. And don’t forget, you can share where you are in the process—and keep tabs on your peers—via Clear Admit’s MBA LiveWire

See the other parts in our MBA Admissions Interview Primer series:

MBA Admissions Academy

Episode 20: Interviews I: The Basics