Munich Re online assessment: SHL, Talent Q and SJT practice guide
Munich Re candidates should prepare for numerical and verbal reasoning, possible Talent Q-style formats and insurance-focused judgement tasks. This page is narrower than the main Munich Re assessments guide: it focuses on the exact test format candidates search for when they receive an assessment invite. For broader stages, compare the employer assessment hub.
Source note: forge checks these company-test pages against official provider guidance from SHL, Aon, and HireVue, then treats employer-provider links as provisional. Use the guide to choose the right transferable drill, but let your invitation email override any public report on provider, timing or section order. If the invite is vague, prepare the named skill first, then add one adjacent format so you are not surprised by a mixed battery.
- Munich Re candidates should prepare around SHL-style reasoning and SJT.
- Reported provider signal: SHL-style reasoning, Korn Ferry/Talent Q-style reasoning and interview case tasks.
- Timing varies by role and country; trust your invitation email over any guide.
- Practise the underlying format first, then add company-specific interview preparation.
- forge has representative drills for the main reasoning and scenario formats.
Munich Re SHL-style reasoning and SJT: quick summary
- Main signal: SHL-style reasoning, Korn Ferry/Talent Q-style reasoning and interview case tasks.
- Likely timing: varies by country and role; provider sections are normally timed individually.
- Numerical reasoning may use risk, claims, actuarial or financial data.
- Verbal reasoning tests careful reading of policy or business information.
- SJT tasks may focus on stakeholder, risk and escalation judgement.
Munich Re assessment route map
Use the table below to turn the wording in your invitation into a practice route. The employer name is useful context, but the test label is what should decide your first drill.
| Invite wording | What it usually means | Best first practice |
|---|---|---|
| SHL-style reasoning, Korn Ferry/Talent Q-style reasoning and interview case tasks | Closest reported provider or format signal for this page. | SHL-style reasoning and SJT |
| Ratios, percentages and base selection | The first question family most candidates should make familiar. | Practise SHL numerical free on forge |
| Insurance table interpretation | A second likely skill area, especially in mixed online batteries. | Practise SJT scenarios |
| Recorded interview, video interview or final stage | The assessment has moved from speeded testing into evidence and motivation. | Prepare concise examples for why Munich Re, why this role and one tested strength. |
Question types to practise first
Do not practise every psychometric topic equally. For this page, start with the question types below because they are closest to the reported Munich Re format.
- Ratios, percentages and base selection
- Insurance table interpretation
- Evidence-only verbal reasoning
- Risk escalation SJT scenarios
Do not stop at reading the format. Build speed with a timed drill. Practise SHL numerical free on forge
If your invite includes a second format, practise that separately. Practise SJT scenarios
Representative sample question
The exact test may use a different scenario, but the underlying arithmetic and reading traps are usually familiar: percentages, ratios, base selection, inference from a passage, or judgement under constraints.
Percentage change = (100 - 80) / 80 x 100 = 25%.
The trap is the base. Dividing by the new figure gives 20%, which is a common distractor in provider-style numerical tests. Always divide the change by the original value.
How to use this guide with your invite
Before you start practising, compare the words in your invitation with the provider signal above. If it names SHL, AON, HireVue, Cappfinity, Pymetrics or another platform, follow that provider route first. If it only names the skill, such as numerical reasoning or situational judgement, practise the closest transferable format and keep one session for the adjacent skill most likely to appear next. That keeps your prep specific without betting everything on a provider claim that may be outdated.
What forge sees candidates confuse
The common mistake is treating the company page as proof of one fixed test stack. In practice, candidates often remember the employer name and forget the assessment label in the portal. That leads to broad prep when the invite has already narrowed the work. ForMunich Re, start from the phrase closest to SHL-style reasoning, Korn Ferry/Talent Q-style reasoning and interview case tasks, then check whether the task is asking for speeded reasoning, workplace judgement, game-style behaviour or recorded answers.
A useful review rule is to tag every practice miss by cause: wrong data, wrong base, over-reading, pattern guess, judgement mismatch or slow correct answer. That turns a generic SHL-style reasoning and SJT session into a short list of fixes before the real assessment.
How to prepare
- Practise numerical data with insurance and financial scenarios.
- For SJT, prioritise risk control, evidence and transparent escalation.
- Prepare interview examples around analytical judgement and collaboration.
- Read the invitation email. Confirm whether Munich Re names SHL-style reasoning, Korn Ferry/Talent Q-style reasoning and interview case tasks or another provider for your exact role.
- Baseline the main format. Take one timed drill for SHL-style reasoning and SJT, then review every miss by trap type.
- Practise weak question types. Prioritise Ratios, percentages and base selection, Insurance table interpretation, Evidence-only verbal reasoning before doing full mocks.
- Prepare the next stage. Build concise interview stories and rehearse any video interview answers on camera.
Practise for Munich Re on forge
Use forge for representative SHL-style reasoning and SJT practice, timed drills, worked explanations and provider-style question formats.
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Frequently asked questions
Does Munich Re use SHL?+
Some candidate reports point to SHL-style reasoning, while others mention Talent Q or Korn Ferry-style formats.
What skills matter most?+
Numerical accuracy, risk judgement and careful verbal reasoning are the most transferable skills.
Is Munich Re's process the same everywhere?+
No. Insurance hiring processes vary by country, business line and seniority.
Note on accuracy: the test providers named in this guide reflect candidate reports and publicly available information as of 2026, and are provided for preparation guidance only. Employers do not usually publish which assessment provider they use, and these relationships change over time — Munich Re may switch providers, run different tests for different roles, regions or intakes, or use a provider not listed here. Nothing on this page is confirmed or endorsed by Munich Re or any test publisher, and it should not be relied on as a definitive statement of Munich Re’s current process. Always confirm the exact test and provider from your official invitation email before you prepare.
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