how to improve your body language in interviews
12 july 2026 · 6 min read
an interviewer forms an impression of you in seconds — long before they've weighed a single answer. most of that first read is body language: how you sit, what your hands do, where your eyes go. the good news is that these are habits, and habits can be practised.
you don't need to become a different person or memorise a list of "power poses." you need a small number of calm, open signals that you can repeat under pressure. below are the ones that matter most, and how to build them.
why body language carries so much weight
in an interview the other person is trying to answer one quiet question: can i trust this person and picture them here? your words handle the content, but your body handles the confidence. when the two disagree — a strong answer delivered with a slumped posture and darting eyes — people believe the body. closing that gap is what makes you look, and feel, more convincing.
1. fix your posture first
posture is the fastest win because it changes how you look and how you breathe. sit back into the chair rather than perching on the edge, stack your shoulders over your hips, and keep your chest open instead of caving inward over your notes.
- ground yourself — both feet flat, weight even. it stops the nervous swivel and bounce.
- lengthen, don't stiffen — imagine a string lifting the crown of your head. relaxed and tall, not rigid and military.
- lean in slightly when you're listening — a small forward tilt reads as interest and engagement.
2. give your hands a job
hidden hands (in your lap, in your pockets, gripping a pen) read as guarded. flying hands read as frantic. the middle ground is purposeful gesture: hands visible, roughly between your waist and chest, moving to punctuate your points rather than to burn off nerves.
- rest your hands loosely on the table between gestures so you have a home base to return to.
- use open palms when you explain — it's a small, universal signal of honesty and ease.
- match the size of the gesture to the room. on a video call, keep them inside the frame.
3. make eye contact feel natural
eye contact says "i'm present and i'm not hiding." the trick is to hold it in comfortable stretches — a sentence or a thought at a time — then look away briefly as you gather the next point. constant staring is as unsettling as constant avoidance. with a panel, share your gaze: answer to the person who asked, but bring the others in.
on video, look at the camera, not the little picture of yourself. it's the only way the person on the other end feels looked at.
4. slow down your movement
nerves speed everything up — nodding, fidgeting, shifting in the seat. deliberately slowing your movements makes you look composed and, oddly, helps you feel it too. let a nod be a single, unhurried nod. let a pause be still. stillness is not emptiness; it reads as calm authority.
5. practise where you can see yourself
here's the catch with body language: you can't feel most of it from the inside. you think you're making eye contact; the recording shows you looking down. you feel expressive; the video shows one repeated chop of the hand. the only reliable fix is to watch yourself back.
- record a two-minute answer to a common question on your phone.
- watch it once with the sound off — just the body. what's your posture doing? your hands? your eyes?
- pick one thing to change, record again, and compare. one habit at a time sticks; ten at once doesn't.
a simple weekly routine
you don't need hours. three short reps beat one long cram:
- day 1 — record a baseline answer. note your one biggest tell.
- day 3 — re-record focusing only on that fix (say, keeping your hands up and open).
- day 5 — full mock answer, then watch for whether the fix held under pressure.
see it, name it, change one thing, repeat. that loop is the whole game — and it's exactly what turns awkward into natural before the day that counts.
acespeak does this loop for you — film a clip and it scores your gestures and posture (and your voice), then shows you what to fix. join the waitlist. next up: how to sound more confident when you speak and how to stop being nervous before a presentation.