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AI CVF Assessment Engine · OAC & In-Person Interview Practice · 2026

Police Officer Interview Questions &
Mock Interview Simulator UK

Practise timed STAR answers for UK police officer recruitment interviews, including the Online Assessment Centre, PCEP, PCDA, DHEP and in-force structured interviews. Get feedback against CVF Level 1 behaviours before the real assessment.

This page is for police officer recruitment interviews, not suspect interviews, custody interviews or legal advice.

Based on published CVF framework
OAC and in-person recruitment practice
STAR method feedback
Built for PCEP, PCDA and DHEP candidates
Independent PolicePay preparation tool
3
Core CVF values
3 min
STAR practice
Level 1
Constable behaviours
OAC +
In-person prep
Quick answer: What is a UK police officer recruitment interview?

The Definitive Definition

A UK police officer recruitment interview is a structured assessment used to test whether a candidate can demonstrate the behaviours and values expected under the College of Policing Competency and Values Framework. Candidates may be assessed through the Online Assessment Centre, written exercises, briefing exercises, video responses or an in-person structured interview. Strong answers usually follow the STAR method: Situation, Task, Action and Result.

A strong police officer interview answer should be:

  • structured using STAR
  • focused on what you personally did
  • linked to a CVF value
  • specific about the result
  • reflective about what you learned
  • delivered within the time limit

Free Practice vs Full CVF Feedback

Use the free practice engine to learn the structure. Upgrade when you want your own answer assessed.

Free Practice

Best for learning the format

£0
  • Common police officer interview questions
  • OAC and in-person practice mode
  • CVF value selection
  • 3-minute timer
  • STAR method guidance
  • Weak vs strong examples
  • Preparation rubric
Start Free Practice
One-time payment

Full CVF Feedback Pass

30 days access

£19.99
  • AI CVF preparation score
  • STAR structure breakdown
  • Missing behaviour detection
  • Ownership language analysis
  • Improved answer rewrite
  • Model answer guidance
  • Downloadable prep report
  • OAC and in-person feedback modes

Free Police Officer Interview Practice Engine

Choose a CVF value, receive a realistic police officer recruitment interview question, and practise a timed STAR response.

Most candidates do not fail because their example is bad. They fail because the answer is too vague, uses “we” instead of “I”, misses the result, or does not clearly show the CVF behaviour being assessed.

Unlock the Full CVF Feedback Pass for £19.99 30 days access

Verifying access

Step 1: Configure Practice

Free Police Interview Practice

Choose your assessment format and target CVF value to receive a realistic interview question.

Practice Format

Simulates recorded video and strictly timed responses.

Each selection pulls a unique question from our 2026 database.

OAC / Online Assessment vs In-Person Interview

Police candidates may face different interview formats depending on force, entry route and recruitment stage. The core principles of STAR and CVF apply to both.

Area OAC / Online Assessment Centre In-Person Structured Interview
Format Recorded video, written response or online simulation Live panel interview with 2-3 assessors
Timing Strict, automated timer (usually 3 mins) Timed answers, with some flexibility for probing
Main risk Running out of time or giving vague evidence Nerves, weak ownership or poor reflection
Best preparation Timed STAR practice in a simulator STAR rehearsal plus follow-up question practice
CVF focus Level 1 behaviours and core values Level 1 behaviours, values and personal motivation
Delivery Clear, concise and high-energy for camera Clear, confident, professional and reflective
Common mistake Over-explaining the situation context Talking about 'the team' instead of 'I'

Police Officer Interview Questions UK

Police officer recruitment interviews are competency-based. This means assessors aren't looking for "theoretical" answers; they want real-life evidence of how you have behaved in the past. Every question is mapped to the Competency and Values Framework (CVF).

Example Question:

"Tell us about a time you helped someone who was vulnerable."

Online Assessment Centre Practice

The Online Assessment Centre (OAC) is now the standard entry point for most UK forces. It includes a video response interview where you record your answers to pre-set questions. The pressure of the 3-minute timer is the biggest hurdle—practising in a timed simulator is essential for success.

View OAC Hub →

PCEP, PCDA and DHEP Interview Prep

Whether you are applying via the Police Constable Degree Apprenticeship (PCDA), Degree Holder Entry Programme (DHEP), or the Police Constable Entry Programme (PCEP), the interview standards are identical. You are assessed against Level 1 of the CVF, which focuses on individual contributor behaviours.

In-Person Interview Questions

Some forces still conduct in-person structured interviews, often as a second stage after the OAC. In these sessions, assessors will "probe" your answers, asking follow-up questions to dig deeper into your evidence. You must be prepared to justify your decisions and reflect on the outcome.

How to Pass a Police Officer Interview

Prepare 6 Examples

Two per core value (Respect, Courage, Service).

Use 'I' Language

Never say 'we'. The assessor only cares about your actions.

Situation & Task

Keep context very short (max 45 seconds).

Focus on Action

This is where the marks are. Explain exactly what you did.

Clear Results

Explain the outcome and how it was measured.

Include Reflection

What did you learn? What would you do differently?

Practise Out Loud

Reading is not enough. You must speak your answers.

Time Every Answer

Stick to the 3-minute limit used in the OAC.

Avoid Scripts

Do not memorise word-for-word. Stay natural.

Common Police Interview Questions

Police officer recruitment questions are mapped to the core values of the CVF. Here are the most common scenarios you should prepare for.

Respect and Empathy

  • ?

    Tell us about a time you dealt with someone from a different background.

  • ?

    Tell us about a time you helped someone who was vulnerable.

  • ?

    Tell us about a time you listened carefully before making a decision.

  • ?

    Tell us about a time you adapted your communication style.

Courage

  • ?

    Tell us about a time you challenged inappropriate behaviour.

  • ?

    Tell us about a time you made a difficult decision.

  • ?

    Tell us about a time you admitted a mistake.

  • ?

    Tell us about a time you stood up for what was right.

Public Service

  • ?

    Tell us about a time you put others first.

  • ?

    Tell us about a time you improved something for a customer, colleague or community.

  • ?

    Tell us about a time you worked under pressure.

  • ?

    Tell us about a time you took responsibility for solving a problem.

Additional Common Questions

  • ?

    Tell us about a time you worked with a difficult person.

  • ?

    Tell us about a time you had to be fair and impartial.

  • ?

    Tell us about a time you dealt with conflict.

  • ?

    Tell us about a time you learned from feedback.

College of Policing Framework

Police CVF Interview Questions and Answers

Entry-level police officer candidates (PCEP, PCDA, DHEP) are assessed against Level 1 of the CVF, focusing on these three core values.

RaE

Respect and Empathy

Treating people with dignity, listening properly, recognising difference, managing bias and adapting communication.

Example evidence:
Supporting a vulnerable person
Resolving a misunderstanding
Adapting communication
Listening before acting
C

Courage

Making difficult decisions, challenging poor behaviour, admitting mistakes and doing the right thing even when uncomfortable.

Example evidence:
Challenging inappropriate comments
Escalating a concern
Admitting an error
Making a difficult but fair decision
PS

Public Service

Putting the public or community first, acting with professionalism, improving outcomes and taking pride in service.

Example evidence:
Helping someone under pressure
Improving a process
Taking responsibility
Going beyond minimum expectations

Police STAR Interview Answers

The STAR method is the industry-standard framework used by police assessors to score your interview evidence.

S
S
20–30s

Situation

Set the scene in 1–2 sentences. Explain where you were, who was involved and why the situation mattered.

Assessor tip

Do not spend too long here. The situation gives context, but it is not where most marks are scored.

T
T
20–30s

Task

Explain your specific responsibility. This should be about your role, not the team’s general aim.

Assessor tip

Use phrases like 'I was responsible for...' or 'My role was...'

A
A
90–120s

Action

Explain what you personally did, step by step. This is the most important part of the answer.

Assessor tip

Use 'I' language: 'I decided', 'I spoke', 'I asked', 'I checked', 'I escalated'.

R
R
30–40s

Result

Explain the outcome and what you learned. Include measurable impact where possible.

Assessor tip

A strong result shows change, learning or improvement.

Case Study

Example Police Interview Answer:
Weak vs Strong

Question:

Tell us about a time you challenged inappropriate behaviour.

Weak Answer:

“I was working with a colleague who was rude to someone, so we spoke to them and it was sorted.”

uses 'we' instead of 'I'
gives no clear personal action
does not explain what was inappropriate
gives no measurable result
lacks reflection
Stronger Excerpt:

“I noticed the comment had made the person visibly uncomfortable. I decided to speak to my colleague privately rather than challenge them publicly. I explained why the comment could damage trust and asked them to reflect on how it may have been received.”

The full premium feedback tool can rewrite your own answer using stronger STAR structure, clearer CVF language and better ownership wording.

Most candidates fail because their answer is too vague, uses “we” instead of “I”, or does not clearly show the CVF behaviour.

Model Explanation

A strong answer does not need to sound dramatic. It needs to show ownership, judgement, fairness and reflection. The assessor needs to understand what you personally did and why your action matched the CVF value being tested.

Why Candidates Fail Police Officer Interviews

The most common pitfalls candidates encounter during the structured interview.

Using 'we' instead of 'I'

Assessors score your behaviour, not the team’s. If your answer is mostly about what 'we' did, it becomes difficult to award marks to you.

No measurable result

A weak answer ends with 'it worked out'. A strong answer explains what changed, what was resolved, or what you learned.

Too much background

Candidates often spend too long explaining the situation and leave no time for action and result.

Weak CVF link

A good story can still fail if it does not clearly show the value or behaviour being assessed.

No reflection

Police assessors want to see learning. Even a difficult example can score well if you explain what you learned.

Over-rehearsed

Memorised answers can sound robotic. Candidates should practise structure, not scripts. Stay adaptable to probing questions.

Police Officer Interview Preparation Score

For preparation purposes, our simulator uses a simple 10-point scale to help you understand the strength of your response.

Score Meaning What it usually shows
1–3 Weak Vague answer, poor STAR structure, little personal ownership
4–5 Borderline Some structure, but limited action, result or CVF evidence
6–7 Passable Clear STAR structure, relevant example and some reflection
8–10 Strong Strong ownership, clear CVF evidence, measurable result and learning

Note: This scoring is for preparation only and does not replace official recruitment scoring.

Full CVF Feedback Pass · £19.99 · 30 Days Access

Unlock Full CVF
Interview Feedback

£19.99
30 days access • One-time payment

Practise like the real assessment. Submit your police officer interview answer, receive a CVF preparation score, identify missing behaviours and see how your STAR response could be improved before the real interview.

AI-scored CVF preparation feedback
STAR structure breakdown
Missing behaviour detection
Ownership language analysis
Model answer guidance
Rewritten improved answer
OAC and in-person interview modes
Question bank by CVF value
Downloadable prep report

30-day access • One-time payment • Independent preparation tool • No guarantee of recruitment outcome

Common Questions

Everything candidates ask before their first CVF practice session.

What questions are asked in a police officer interview? { View }
Police officer recruitment questions are usually competency-based and ask for real examples from your life, work or volunteering. Common themes include respect and empathy, courage, public service, conflict resolution and taking ownership. Answers should follow the STAR method.
How do I pass a police CVF interview? { View }
To pass, you must demonstrate Level 1 CVF behaviours using the STAR method. Focus on 'I' not 'we', provide a clear result, and show reflection on what you learned. Most failures are due to vague examples or lack of personal ownership.
What is the STAR method for police interviews? { View }
STAR stands for Situation, Task, Action and Result. It is the required structure for UK police recruitment answers. The 'Action' section should be the longest, detailing exactly what you personally did.
How much does the PolicePay CVF interview simulator cost? { View }
The Full CVF Feedback Pass costs £19.99 as a one-time payment and gives 30 days access to AI CVF preparation feedback, STAR structure analysis, missing behaviour detection and improved answer guidance.
Is the police interview simulator a subscription? { View }
No. The Full CVF Feedback Pass is a one-time payment for 30 days access. It is not a monthly subscription.
What do I get for free? { View }
The free version lets candidates view common police officer interview questions, choose OAC or in-person practice mode, select a CVF value, use a 3-minute timer and learn the STAR structure. Personal AI feedback on your own answer is part of the paid pass.
Does the simulator guarantee I will pass? { View }
No. The simulator is an independent preparation tool based on the published CVF framework. It provides practice feedback only and does not guarantee a recruitment outcome.
What is the police online assessment centre? { View }
The OAC is a remote assessment stage for UK police recruits. It includes video response interviews where you record your STAR answers under strict time limits, usually 3 minutes per question.
Is the OAC interview different from an in-person police interview? { View }
OAC is remote and often recorded without a live interviewer. In-person interviews are live and may include 'probing' follow-up questions from a panel of assessors.
Is this page for police officer recruitment interviews? { View }
Yes. This simulator and guide are specifically for candidates applying to join the police. It is NOT for suspect interviews, legal advice or custody procedures.
Can I use examples from retail, university, volunteering or sport? { View }
Absolutely. Assessors value evidence of behaviours (like courage and empathy) from any walk of life. You do not need previous policing experience to pass.
What score do I need to pass a police interview? { View }
Pass marks vary by force and entry route, but you generally need to meet a minimum threshold across all core CVF values. Our simulator provides a preparation score to help you benchmark your performance.
Do police interviews use STAR answers? { View }
Yes, STAR is the standard framework expected by assessors to ensure your evidence is structured, clear and measurable.
What are the CVF values for police recruitment? { View }
The three core values assessed in entry-level recruitment are Respect and Empathy, Courage, and Public Service.

Independent Preparation Tool

PolicePay is an independent platform. This simulator and the associated scoring feedback are based on the published College of Policing Competency and Values Framework (CVF) but are not affiliated with, endorsed by, or official products of the College of Policing, Home Office, or any UK police force. The AI feedback is for preparation purposes only and does not guarantee a specific recruitment outcome.