Why Recruiters Can’t Always Give You Feedback

Hearing “there’s no feedback” after an interview is frustrating.
It feels dismissive, but it’s often misunderstood.

Here’s why it happens.

1. Recruiters Can Only Share What They Receive

Recruiters don’t create feedback.
They relay it.

Many employers provide feedback that is:

  • Vague
  • Non-specific
  • Focused on “fit”
  • Or not provided at all

2. Legal and HR Constraints Are Real

Companies are cautious about feedback that could be:

  • Interpreted as discriminatory
  • Poorly worded
  • Inconsistent

Silence often feels safer to them than specificity.

3. Not All Feedback Is Actionable

“I liked another candidate better” may be honest, but it’s not helpful.

Good recruiters aim to share feedback that is:

  • Constructive
  • Relevant
  • Fair

Not speculative or harmful.

4. Silence Isn’t Always a Reflection of Performance

Lack of feedback usually reflects:

  • Process limitations
  • Internal indecision
  • Risk aversion

Not candidate quality.

Final Thought

Good recruiters push for feedback whenever possible.
But they can’t invent it.

Absence of feedback isn’t a verdict on your value, it’s a limitation of the system.