Hello from the future. I’ve had multiple people dm me about my interview process for this role because of this post. So I’ll be leaving some FAQ below: Q: What interview questions did they ask? A: 80% of the interview was asking very probing and deep questions about my personal projects and why I made the design choices that I did. The other 20% was behavioral/LP questions and questions about why I wanted to be an SA. So yeah, focus on your personal projects because I’ve had multiple other SA interviewees confirm that the interview went HARD on your projects Q: Technical questions? A: These questions were more in relation to your projects than what you would typically expect and prepare for. You are NOT going to do a leetcode type question, but will get ask about algorithms if your projects used one and explain why. Q: Is there another interview? A: No. Q: When did you hear back? A: 5 business days. Q: What is the pay? A: For summer 22, I have a monthly salary of ~$8600 a month, which equates to around $50 an hour. This is for the Bay Area and may be different for you so don’t take that number at face value. Q: Housing stipend? A: Yes, for Bay Area, NYC, and Seattle, it is $2400 a month. Everywhere else is $1900 a month Again, remember to focus on your personal projects while prepping and you’ll be ok. If you have more questions please DM me. Good luck! Answer from Jaysunny420 on reddit.com
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/csmajors › is the amazon solutions architect intern role a good fit for a cs major?
r/csMajors on Reddit: Is the Amazon Solutions Architect Intern role a good fit for a cs major?
November 3, 2021 -

I have a phone interview coming up for this role and would get the offer if I pass. The description for this role does require me to know code, but the job requirements don’t really seem code oriented. So my question is, is this role worth it or should I keep looking for a software dev specific role?

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Hello from the future. I’ve had multiple people dm me about my interview process for this role because of this post. So I’ll be leaving some FAQ below: Q: What interview questions did they ask? A: 80% of the interview was asking very probing and deep questions about my personal projects and why I made the design choices that I did. The other 20% was behavioral/LP questions and questions about why I wanted to be an SA. So yeah, focus on your personal projects because I’ve had multiple other SA interviewees confirm that the interview went HARD on your projects Q: Technical questions? A: These questions were more in relation to your projects than what you would typically expect and prepare for. You are NOT going to do a leetcode type question, but will get ask about algorithms if your projects used one and explain why. Q: Is there another interview? A: No. Q: When did you hear back? A: 5 business days. Q: What is the pay? A: For summer 22, I have a monthly salary of ~$8600 a month, which equates to around $50 an hour. This is for the Bay Area and may be different for you so don’t take that number at face value. Q: Housing stipend? A: Yes, for Bay Area, NYC, and Seattle, it is $2400 a month. Everywhere else is $1900 a month Again, remember to focus on your personal projects while prepping and you’ll be ok. If you have more questions please DM me. Good luck!
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CS != SWE You have a lot of doors open in CS and it entirely depends on what you want to do. If the job description sounds like something you’d be interested in doing, do it. If not, don’t.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/aws_certified_experts › solutions architect intern interview q's?
r/AWS_Certified_Experts on Reddit: Solutions Architect Intern Interview Q's?
April 11, 2020 -

So, I'm a Computer Engineering and Computer Science Junior. I applied for a few random internships at Amazon, and two days after submission they requested an interview with me for Solutions Architect Intern, which I never applied for... I'm not entirely sure what to expect on this interview, I have no experience with AWS. Anyone have any tips or how to prepare? This seems like a really neat job that I'm excited to interview for, but there's only a few posts on reddit that reference this position...

I feel like my tech background is pretty strong overall, seeing all sides of tech via my pursuement of degrees in CE and CS, being CompTia A+ certified, and classes at the local tech school during high school in Vmware and Cisco IOS... but that was 3+ years ago...

Anyone have advice or insight?

https://amazon.jobs/en/jobs/1028352/solutions-architect-intern

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I applied for an AWS Solutions Architect jobs a few years ago, long before I have the AWS exp that I do now. Some of the things they'll ask you are if you know the AWS services, and if you do, they'll deep dive on it. They'll ask about networking concepts, DNS, compute, storage and cloud concepts to get a general sense of which vertical you may be strong in.

Be honest if you don't have AWS exp, but express interest in learning about cloud tech if you do want to go into that area.

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Signup for a free AWS account through AWS Educate. You don't need a credit card because you are a student. And the account is free for more than a year.

Take some free qwiklabs to get a feel for the services.

take some of the short intro course on AWS free training from Amazon.

Amazon has a program for students worldwide called AWS Educate. You need your student email from your university to join and gain access to this resource.

On AWS educate, you can take courses. Get free access to AWS without a credit card being required and access can last more than one year depending on your graduation date. They also give you access to a job board. But best of all, students are given priority access to jobs and interviews once they finish their degree.

They also have conference call presentations where they explain exactly what to do to be successful getting a job.

Also as a student, you can take advantage of the Cisco Networking Academy free courses. The course on Linux are very useful for AWS.

Github student benefits.

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Reddit
reddit.com › r › aws › comments › 1iiaoa5 › solution_architect_intern
Solution Architect Intern : r/aws
February 5, 2025 - News, articles and tools covering Amazon Web Services (AWS), including S3, EC2, SQS, RDS, DynamoDB, IAM, CloudFormation, AWS-CDK, Route 53, CloudFront, Lambda, VPC, Cloudwatch, Glacier and more. ... Does anyone know what an actual solution architect intern does?
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/itcareerquestions › amazon solutions architect intern interview
r/ITCareerQuestions on Reddit: Amazon Solutions Architect Intern Interview
January 5, 2020 -

Has anyone interview for the solutions architect position as an intern at amazon? I have an interview coming up and I want to know what are the questions they ask.

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Congratulations! I have worked with ASA's, SA's and senior SA's from AWS as part of my job. You should expect the bread and butter solutions architect questions like "whiteboard me a three tier app" and then expect optimization questions like "how would you control costs in this section of the architecture you drew out" (ASG's, CloudWatch alerts). The more experienced answer would include Technology Partner vendors, for example, you might push back on the interviewer and say, "well it depends on the client, if they're multicloud and are already on StackDriver, I might use their existing StackDriver implementation to trigger alerts for their AWS resources since StackDriver has native integration with AWS despite being a GCP product" -- or something else along the lines of "Before committing the customer to this architecture I'd want to have a discussion with them about their refactoring strategy for 2020 and see if they want to get away from traditional EC2's, and if not, then see if they're open to things like Spot instances or (formerly) Reserved Instance pricing. I'd get in touch with a Partner Development Manager to see if we could leverage a system integration partner of AWS depending on the environment complexity and/or spend that the customer expects to have with AWS." Either way, best of luck. It's an honor to be interviewing with AWS for an Associate Solutions Architect or SA Intern role. Good luck!
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Don’t be! I’m doing very well now. Kind of wish she would’ve been a little bit more transparent with me instead of vague and not really answering the emails. Even my wife who works for Amazon is still very shocked about it. I did what my wife did long ago and enrolled in a Cisco Networking Academy here in Seattle. Same college she went to same teacher. I haven’t taken the CCNA just yet, but I’m working as a Printer Support Specialist at a hospital. Almost 960 printers for two guys to worry about. But it’s not bad ! 27.00 an hour. In my downtime I might just try to study for the solutions Architect program on my own.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/itcareerquestions › what does an amazon web services solution architect intern do in their normal day of work?
r/ITCareerQuestions on Reddit: What does an Amazon Web Services Solution Architect Intern do in their normal day of work?
October 14, 2018 -

Hello everyone, I'm in my final year of engineering school computer science specialty networking and telecommunication actually CCENT certified , I recently change orientation I want to learn more about Cloud and AWS precisely , I did pass the whole summer studying and doing labs in AWS environment with the help of many online platforms, now after 4 months I passed the AWS Solution Architect - Associate Certification and I succeed without real-life hand of experience only using videos, labs , and Aws free trial account, now I need to an internship of 4 to 6 months this year and I want to know more about AWS but I don't know what do interns do in their internships so can someone clarify this to me please ?

Thanks for your time and I apologize in advance for my English I'm working on it right now

Find elsewhere
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/amazonemployees › aws solutions architect intern (us, job id 3187408) interview prep: what were you asked in technical + behavioral rounds?
r/amazonemployees on Reddit: AWS Solutions Architect Intern (US, Job ID 3187408) interview prep: what were you asked in technical + behavioral rounds?
March 18, 2026 -

Hi everyone,

I recently moved forward in the interview process for the AWS Solutions Architect Intern, US role (Job ID: 3187408) and I’m trying to understand what the actual interview experience has been like for people who already went through it.

From the recruiter email, it sounds like there are 2 separate 45-minute interviews, likely back to back over Zoom:

•	Interview 1: Technical Depth / Communication, AI knowledge, and Behavioral

•	Interview 2: Technical Breadth, Cloud Computing, and Behavioral

•	The order can vary

I wanted to ask people who have already interviewed for this role, or a very similar AWS Solutions Architect intern / early career SA role:

1.	What kinds of technical questions were you actually asked?

Were they more AWS-service based, cloud fundamentals, networking/security, architecture design, databases/analytics, coding concepts, or more resume/project deep dives?

2.	What did “technical depth” look like in practice?

Did they pick one area and go very deep, or was it still fairly broad?

3.	What did “technical breadth” look like?

Was it more like surface-level questions across multiple topics such as networking, databases, security, hardware, app development, and AI/ML?

4.	Were you asked architecture / design scenario questions?

For example, things like designing a scalable app, handling uploads, reliability, cost, security, load balancing, etc.

5.	What kind of behavioral questions came up?

Which Amazon Leadership Principles showed up the most?

Were the questions more around conflict, ownership, ambiguity, customer obsession, learning quickly, delivering results, or something else?

6.	How deep did they go into your resume/projects?

Did they interrupt and keep drilling down on one project, or move across multiple experiences?

7.	How important was the “explain technical concepts to non-technical people” part?

Did they explicitly ask you to simplify something technical?

8.	For the AI knowledge part, what did that mean in your case?

Was it very basic high-level knowledge, or were there deeper questions?

9.	Did anyone already get scheduled for interviews yet?

I’m also trying to understand the timeline. If you’ve already been scheduled, roughly when did you hear back after getting the prep email?

10.	If you interviewed recently, what would you focus on most if you had to prepare again?

I’d especially appreciate responses from people who interviewed for:

•	AWS Solutions Architect Intern

•	Associate / Early Career Solutions Architect

•	similar AWS customer-facing intern roles

Also, if anyone else is currently in the process for this same role and wants to connect / compare prep, feel free to comment or DM me.

Thanks a lot, I’d really appreciate any insight. I’m trying to prepare smart and focus on the most likely question types instead of spreading myself too thin.

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/csmajors › advice from anyone who has completed a solutions architect internship
r/csMajors on Reddit: Advice from anyone who has completed a Solutions Architect Internship
January 25, 2022 -

Hello everyone posted this on r/cscareerquestions but figured maybe I might have more insightful internship-related answers from current students. I am very honored to have accepted a role as a solutions architect intern from AWS for the summer. I want to hit the ground running when I get there and be ahead of the curve. I'm wondering if anyone has completed this internship before or any other solutions architect/engineer intern positions that could give me advice on what things I should study and be familiar with before I get there to be ready to contribute from day 1. Thank you.

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/itcareerquestions › should i leave my current role for an aws solutions architect internship?
r/ITCareerQuestions on Reddit: Should I leave my current role for an AWS Solutions Architect Internship?
February 28, 2025 -

Hi,

I'm a 29yr old intern who made a career change into tech last summer. Currently, I work as a infrastructure/devops engineer intern with a large defense contractor. I had a discussion this week with my leadership, and they mentioned potentially bringing me on full-time.

However, recently, I applied, interviewed, and received an offer letter to work as an AWS Solutions Architect intern. It's customer-based focused. I'm introverted, but I can be good with people when I try to be.

I enjoy technical work and my current job, but I honestly don't think I'm a good engineer. I also don't think that in the long term, I would want to be in a technical role given the nature of the work, like deadlines, and often working more than 40 hours a week.

Given the opportunities with my current internship and with Amazon, would it be too much of a risk to go for the latter and maybe try to convert that internship to full-time? The internship is 12 weeks and is not part of the Amazon TechU program so I'm questioning whether it's designated a one-and-done opportunity. Having Amazon on my resume wouldn't hurt either but with the current tech market. I'm not sure taking this opportunity would be wise.

Thank you in advance for your input.

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/awscertifications › current aws solutions architects | was it worth it and what is the realistic pay range for the job?
r/AWSCertifications on Reddit: Current AWS Solutions Architects | Was it worth it and what is the realistic pay range for the job?
October 16, 2023 -

I'll start by saying that like many, I found the posts online about the salary range being $120k+ which is pretty enticing. Unlike some people seeing those posts and wanting to transition into cloud with no tech skills, I actually do have some IT skills (Although not at a senior level yet). I am fairly new into the career world as I am only 26, but I do already have some relevant work experience in line with what I have seen about cloud solution architects (Including customer facing roles with big companies).

My current job is basically being a product expert and solutions architect (for the product suite) in a major live broadcast manufacturing company. I've been doing it for about 3 years and I have been the one tasked with learning cloud. In my current role I mainly deal with EC2 with some exposure to some true cloud experts here and there. I'm also learning a lot of handy networking and general IT skills with this job. This and my general interest in cloud makes me think jumping to a cloud solutions architect job is not too far out of reach with some studying and a little more experience.

My questions to the current cloud solution architects out there are:

  • What is the salary expectations compared to all the hype online?

    • Of course experience will matter, I just see some posts online stating that entry level can go up to $110k+. I want to make sure I am not taking a sizable step down in pay as I get to the family making years. Canada is expensive as hell right now haha

  • What are the general differences between an associate level vs professional?

  • How much scripting knowledge is required?

    • This is probably my weakest point right now. Definitely something I am working on and learning.

Any insight you guys can give me will be greatly appreciated! I'll be getting my Cloud Practitioner cert in the next few months for my current job. If my idea of what the Solutions Architect job is correct, it will be my next step.

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Its not a job. Its a Certification that tells that you can do this stuff on AWS. You still have to be some kind of software engineer or infrastructure guy. Just doing the cert wont land you a job.
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I work as a Senior Cloud Engineer in my team, will input my thoughts. How much scripting knowledge is required. Not too much to be honest. If you know bash and python you are good to go. You should know how to automate things, you should be able to have a basic-intermediate understanding of Python to be able to complete task, and you should know enough to work in CiCd pipelines. 2. What are the general differences between an associate level vs professional? In my experience, professional will build the brunt of the infrastructure, they design with the usual stuff (cost, performance, uptime, security), and then make sure it's fully automonous with little intervention. Associates will work in the project, build or do the intermediary steps, or maybe a simple task here or there (build the step in the pipeline, deploy an ec2 with an alb / waf, etc) in terraform, and do maintenance work such as iam permission and all. Associates does small snippets of projects to get exposure and understand why things are done a certain way, understand the logic of certain architectures, and ultimately be the one responsible for maintenance and upkeep for simple small task. Then as they slowly get more work they'll take on lower-resource intensive work and have a senior overlook their project at various points to make sure they do it right, until associates can handle small-case projects by themselves. 3. Salary expectation Slightly overhype but not by much, the pay is lucrative nice. I'm at 150k right now in a non-HCOL area (6 YOE in IT) for reference. Because of the current issue of the job market, there are wage stagnation and decline (I've personally noticed as recruiters has been reaching out to me for 160-180k instead of 180-220k like they did last year), but if you can get into cloud you'll make a good sum. Just keep in mind as I want to clarify because this should be important to you. entry level can go up to 110k+ , Cloud is not entry-level, entry level Cloud can make up to 110k or more, but Cloud is a mid-level IT role.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/itcareerquestions › has anyone heard from amazon for associate solutions architect intern role
r/ITCareerQuestions on Reddit: Has anyone heard from amazon for Associate Solutions Architect Intern role
June 30, 2022 -

I applied for Associate Solutions Architect Intern - Summer 2022 a while ago and i have still not heard from amazon and my status is still in processing. it does not say no longer under consideration. Please if there is someone with a connection i really want to know what is going on in my application and the wait is killing me and I was wondering if there was someone who got an update about their application.

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/aws › tech u solutions architect
r/aws on Reddit: Tech U Solutions Architect
December 22, 2024 -

Hi,

Does anyone know any information about the technical interview portion of this role?

Solutions Architect Intern

Also more information in particular about the salary progression, what concepts one should know and general thoughts on this positions

Thank you in advance!

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I had two Tech U interns. Neither of them knew anything about anything. We hired them because they were passionate about the space. Like every other employee, they demonstrated the LPs. It’s a cult; you must drink that Leadership Principal Kool-Aid to thrive here. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B-xdfQv3I1k Roll forward a year. My introvert couldn’t get out of their shells and drowned. They tried to solve everything independently, which is not how AWS operates internally. The other got over the imposter syndrome and actually talked to people. I’d recommend meeting people, but they actually did. It turns out all those mentor connections were actually willing to help. The last I heard, the latter was promoted to L5, making 200k… Assuming they continue forward (3-5 years), L6 pays up to 348k. Being in NYC/bay gets a 15% boost. Canada or other US discounted by 15-30% Who knows? They get to L7, which is up to 450k. Really, it's all about scaling, which is all about writing. Never forget that you're joining a bookstore. It's a great company, and you should do it once — once. It definitely elevated my career and showed me the world.
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Tech U program is a great way to learn AWS technologies and get started with customer conversations. The program is very detailed, and pretty mature. The interview process is similar to any other SA role, except the bar is not as high. The expectation is that you will talk more of university projects than real world. I know several people that have gone through the TechU program in SA and other tech roles. They have progressed to get promotions and do well on their career path.
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Glassdoor
glassdoor.com › amazon interviews › amazon solutions architect intern interviews
Amazon Solutions Architect Intern Interview Experience & Questions | Glassdoor
2 weeks ago - How long does it take to get hired as a Solutions Architect Intern at Amazon?Candidates applying for Solutions Architect Intern roles take an average of 54 days to get hired, when considering 19 user submitted interviews for this role.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/aws › solution architect intern in nyc
r/aws on Reddit: Solution Architect Intern in NYC
March 23, 2025 - News, articles and tools covering Amazon Web Services (AWS), including S3, EC2, SQS, RDS, DynamoDB, IAM, CloudFormation, AWS-CDK, Route 53, CloudFront, Lambda, VPC, Cloudwatch, Glacier and more. ... Hey, I got accepted as a TECH U Solutions Architect intern at the NYC location.