---
title: How to Answer 'Are You a Team Player?' (2026 + Examples)
description: How to answer 'are you a team player?' so it's more than a yes — the formula, an example that proves collaboration, and how to show you also work well independently.
url: https://usegreenroom.app/blog/are-you-a-team-player-interview
last_updated: 2026-06-20
---

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Answers

# How to answer 'are you a team player?'

June 20, 2026 · 7 min read

![How to answer are you a team player — cover from Greenroom, the AI mock interviewer](/assets/blog/are-you-a-team-player-interview-hero.webp)

"Are you a team player?" is a question where the obvious answer — "yes" — is worthless on its own. Everyone says yes. The interviewer wants **evidence** that you actually collaborate well, plus reassurance that you can also work independently. Here's how to answer with proof.

## The formula

- **1. Affirm it briefly** — yes, and here's what that means to you.
- **2. Prove it with an example** — a real time you collaborated, supported a teammate, or put the team's success first.
- **3. Balance it** — show you also work well independently, so you're not someone who can't function alone.

## Example answer

> "Yes — for me, being a team player means the team's outcome matters more than individual credit. On my last project, a teammate was drowning before a release, so I picked up two of his tickets even though they weren't mine, and we shipped on time. I also flag blockers early so nobody's stuck. That said, I'm comfortable owning work independently too — I don't need hand-holding to deliver."

It defines what teamwork means, proves it with a specific act, and shows independence.

![Answer scaffold for 'are you a team player' — prove it with an example](/assets/blog/pool-star-structure.webp)

Don't just say yes — prove collaboration with a specific team example.

## What good teamwork examples show

- Helping a struggling teammate.
- Putting the team's goal above personal credit.
- Resolving a disagreement constructively.
- Communicating proactively to keep everyone aligned.

## Answers that fall flat

- Just "Yes, I'm a great team player." — No proof.
- A generic statement with no example.
- Over-indexing on teamwork so you sound like you can't work alone.
- An example where you actually did all the work yourself.

**The core truth:** "Yes" is meaningless here — proof is everything. A specific example of putting the team first, balanced with evidence you can also operate independently, is the answer that actually lands.

## How to deliver it

The example is what makes this answer land, and stories flow best when rehearsed. Greenroom asks this in a real voice interview, follows up for specifics, and tells you whether your answer had proof. Pair it with our guides on behavioral questions and handling conflict.

## Frequently asked questions

### How do I answer 'are you a team player?'

Don't just say yes — briefly affirm it and define what teamwork means to you, prove it with a specific example of collaborating, helping a teammate or putting the team's success above personal credit, and balance it by showing you also work well independently. Evidence is what makes this answer land, since everyone simply claims to be a team player.

### Should I only talk about teamwork?

No. While the question asks about teamwork, you should balance your answer by also showing you can work independently and own deliverables without hand-holding. Over-indexing entirely on teamwork can make you sound like you can't function alone, so demonstrate both collaboration and self-sufficiency.

### What's a good example of being a team player?

Strong examples include helping a struggling teammate meet a deadline, putting the team's goal above your personal credit, resolving a disagreement constructively, or communicating proactively to keep everyone aligned. Choose a real, specific situation where your collaboration produced a positive outcome, rather than a vague claim.

### How do I prove I'm a team player in an interview?

Tell a specific story with a clear action you took for the team and a positive result, rather than asserting the trait. Pair it with brief evidence you also deliver independently. Rehearsing the example out loud with a voice-based mock interview that follows up for specifics ensures your answer has concrete proof.

'Yes' means nothing here — proof is everything. Greenroom asks this out loud, follows up for specifics, and tells you if your answer landed. Free to start.