Using an AI Interview Assistant on Zoom

By Aaron Cao · Updated 2026-05-20

An AI interview assistant for Zoom listens to both your microphone and the interviewer's audio on your device, transcribes the conversation in real time, and shows suggested answers in a local overlay — it does not join the Zoom call as a participant.

How an AI assistant fits into a Zoom interview

Zoom interviews run as a normal video call between you and the interviewer. An AI interview assistant like SubcueAI sits next to Zoom on your computer, not inside it. It does not join the meeting as a bot, does not request access to your Zoom account, and does not appear in the participant list.

Instead, a native desktop app captures two audio streams locally on your machine: your microphone (your voice) and the system audio coming out of Zoom (the interviewer's voice). It transcribes both, then generates context-aware answer suggestions that appear in a floating overlay only you can see.

What the interviewer sees on Zoom

From the interviewer's side, a Zoom call looks the same whether or not you are using an AI assistant:

  • No extra participant, bot, or notetaker in the room
  • No "recording" indicator triggered by the assistant
  • No browser extension visible in your Zoom window

However, this is only true when you are not sharing your screen. If Zoom screen sharing is active, anything visible on the shared display — including a floating overlay — can be seen by the interviewer. See how SubcueAI handles privacy for more detail.

Honest limits for Zoom interviews

No AI assistant is universally "safe" or invisible. Before using one on a Zoom interview, understand where it does not help:

  • Screen sharing: if you have to share your full screen, the overlay is visible
  • Recorded interviews: a human can review the recording later and notice unusual pacing
  • Proctored or company-managed devices: employer software may block third-party apps or flag activity
  • Coding platforms with their own screen monitor: CoderPad, HackerRank, and similar tools have their own rules

For interviews where you control your own device and are not screen sharing, an assistant can act as a real-time co-pilot. For everything else, treat it as a study aid, not a live tool.

Getting set up before a Zoom call

Practical steps that apply to most AI interview assistants on Zoom:

  • Install the native desktop app on macOS or Windows ahead of time
  • Grant microphone and system-audio permissions, then do a test call
  • Position the overlay on a second monitor if you have one
  • Practice once with a friend so you get used to reading suggestions without long pauses

SubcueAI has a step-by-step setup tutorial that covers Zoom, Google Meet, and Microsoft Teams.

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Does the AI join my Zoom meeting as a participant?

No. SubcueAI is a native desktop app, not a meeting bot. It captures audio locally on your computer and does not appear in the Zoom participant list.

Can the interviewer see the AI overlay on Zoom?

Only if you are sharing your screen. When you are on camera only, the floating overlay is rendered locally and is not part of your Zoom video feed.

Will Zoom's recording capture the AI's suggestions?

Zoom records the video and audio of the call. It does not record your local overlay unless you are sharing your screen. Your spoken answers, of course, are recorded normally.

Does it work on both macOS and Windows for Zoom?

Yes. SubcueAI ships native desktop apps for macOS and Windows, both of which support dual audio capture from Zoom calls.

Is using an AI assistant on a Zoom interview allowed?

That depends on the employer and the role. Many companies prohibit outside assistance during live interviews. Check the rules for your specific interview before deciding how to use any tool.

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