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Recent national employment data might be showing some stabilization in the job market, but 2026 has still been pockmarked by numerous high-profile announcements of widespread layoffs at some of the country’s largest employers.

Artificial intelligence (AI) has been one of the most commonly cited culprits as of late. According to a 2026 white paper by the World Economic Forum, globally, about 54% of business executives expect AI to displace a large number of existing jobs.ย 

But there’s some skepticism behind the announcements. While some companies are clearly spending more on AI investment, a few experts say that some of the companies are making up for sloppy overhiring from the past couple of yearsโ€”that CEOs are pointing the finger at technology instead of themselves.

And it’s not all AI, either. In some cases, mass layoffs are being tied to limping financial results, operational pivots, and mergers-and-acquisitions (M&A) events.

Today, I’m going to shine a light on some of the most noteworthy mass layoffs announced in 2026.

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13 Recent Mass Layoff Announcements


Some of the companies in this roundup have announced job cuts in the hundreds, while others are executing mass layoffs by the thousands and even tens of thousands of roles.

I’ve ordered this list by order of jobs affected, from least to most.

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13. Coinbase


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  • Total jobs affected: 700

In a May 5 staff letter, Coinbase Global (COIN) CEO Brian Armstrong announced 14% of its staff would be cut, citing AI as well as a volatile crypto market. That will result in about 700 jobs being removed.

However, just as noteworthy is the massive organizational change the company is pushing through. Rather than “pure managers,” the company is emphasizing “player-coaches”โ€”employees who themselves are strong individual contributors but will also oversee other employees.

It also will try out “reduced pod sizes,” including taking some of their most AI-experienced employees and having them work as single-person teams.

Related: What Should I Do After a Layoff?

12. LinkedIn


  • Total jobs affected: 875

Professional social media platform LinkedIn sent out an internal memo in mid-May 2026 that confirmed it was laying off 5% of its 17,500 employees:

“As part of our usual business planning, we’ve implemented organizational changes to position ourselves in the best way possible into the future.”

LinkedIn, which was acquired by Microsoft (MSFT) in 2026, announced the layoffs not too far removed from announcing a 12% year-over-year improvement in quarterly revenues.

Part of the strength in LinkedIn’s most recent results? AI-powered hiring products.

Related: Financial Prep If You’re Worried About Being Laid Off

11. Walmart


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  • Total jobs affected: 1,000

Trillion-dollar Walmart (WMT), the world’s largest retailer, announced in May 2026 that it would cut or relocate around 1,000 corporate jobs to fix duplicate roles and redundancies.ย 

Here’s what Daniel Danker, Walmart’s Head of Global AI Acceleration, and Suresh Kumar, Head of Global Technology, said in a May 12 memo to employees:

“In the past year, within Global Tech and Product + Design, we’ve gone from organizing separately for Walmart U.S., Sam’s Club, and our international markets to building in a unified way on a single, shared platform. This has enabled us to create once and scale globally, accelerate innovation, and reduce duplication. โ€ฆ

“That’s why today we’ve made changes to simplify how the work is organized, make ownership clearer, and better align roles to the work and skills we need going forward. That includes updating some roles to better match the work being done, bringing teams together where it makes sense, and aligning some roles to key locations where related work is already happening. In a few cases, these changes also create opportunities for associates to get promoted into broader roles.”

Last year, Walmart laid off about 1,500 corporate employees, citing similar reasons.ย 

Related: Budgeting Priorities If You’re Laid Off

10. Goodyear Tire & Rubber


  • Total jobs affected: 1,700

Goodyear Tire & Rubber (GT) in May announced it planned on closing a Fayetteville, North Carolina factory, which would result in 1,700 job losses when the facility shutters, likely in late 2027.

“After extensive efforts to make the Fayetteville, North Carolina facility competitive, Goodyear is in discussions with the United Steelworkers to close the facility by the end of 2027,” the company said in a statement. “This difficult decision is necessary to strengthen Goodyear’s ability to compete in today’s marketplace and support the long-term health of the business.”

The news came amid a difficult operating environment for Goodyear. “”Conditions in the Americas were challenging,” CEO Mark Streward told investors during the company’s first-quarter earnings conference call in early May. “Weak consumer and commercial demand, retailer and distributor de-stocking and increased manufacturer promotion weighed on the results.”

Related: Tax Implications of Getting Laid Off

9. Nike


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  • Total jobs affected: 2,175

Nike (NKE) has already announced two rounds of layoffs in 2026.ย 

The first came late January, when the athletic footwear and apparel company stated it planned to lay off 775 employees across Mississippi and Tennessee.ย 

The second was announced in a staff memo on April 23. In it, Nike said it’s cutting about 1,400 jobs, mainly from the technology department. However, this layoff will affect not just the U.S., but other parts of North America, as well as Asia and Europe.ย 

Related: What Is Dynamic Pricing [And How Can You Beat It?]

8. PayPal


  • Total jobs affected: 4,760

In May, financial technology giant PayPal Holdings (PYPL) announced it was going to cut roughly 20% of its workforce, or about 4,760 roles.

The move, which would take place over the next two to three years, was announced alongside a broader reorganization in the hopes of saving $1.5 billion in gross run-rate savings over that time period.ย 

In addition to saving costs, the company also said it wanted to accelerate its adoption of AI. Indeed, in the same release, the company announced the appointment of Anshu Bhardwaj as Chief AI Transformation & Simplification Officer.

Related: 11 Best Ways to Protect Yourself From Financial Fraud

7. Dell


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  • Total jobs affected: 4,760

Dell Technologies (DELL) is something of a special situationโ€”rather than announcing large layoffs like many of the other companies on this list, it has been quietly but drastically reducing its workforce over the past few years.

A federal filing in 2026 showed the company has reduced its headcount by 27%, or 36,000 roles, since 2023. That includes 11,000 jobs (or a roughly 10% reduction) in the company’s fiscal 2026, which ended Jan. 30, 2026. It has done so through hiring freezes, return-to-work policies, and attrition.

The savings from its employees are believed to be helping to fund a massive buildout of its AI infrastructure.

Related: 10 Useful iPhone Tips for Seniors

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6. Meta Platforms


  • Total jobs affected: 8,000

Facebook and Instagram parent Meta Platforms (META) announced it would be laying off roughly 10% of its workforce, with the stated goal of offsetting “other investments we’re making,” specifically in artificial intelligence.

The cuts, which are expected to take effect in May, come as the company plans to spend between $125 billion to $145 billion, much of which is earmarked for AI. Meta is drastically shrinking its teams; in some cases, the company claims just one or two people using AI are reproducing what previously required dozens of engineers.

Morale at the company appears to be plummeting, according to a New York Times report:

“Some employees have since shared layoff guides and nihilistic memes. ‘It do not matter,’ read one meme shared internally. Employees have created at least three websites counting down to the May 20 layoffs, with one website’s header reading: ‘Big Beautiful Layoff,’ a play on the 2025 domestic policy law that President Trump called the ‘One Big Beautiful Bill.'”

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Related: 14 Interesting Millennial Retirement Statistics

5. Estรฉe Lauder


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  • Total jobs affected: 10,000

Estรฉe Lauder Companies (EL) was already targeting around 7,000 jobs cuts heading into 2026, but in May, the beauty company announced it was expecting to slash at least an additional 3,000 jobs globally โ€ฆ and also raised its annual earnings forecast.

The reductions would represent more than 17% of its global workforce and comes amid the makeup company’s reported interest in a mega-deal to merge with Spanish beauty firm Puig.ย 

Related: Should You Tap Into Retirement Savings After a Layoff?

4. Amazon


  • Total jobs affected: 16,000

This January, Amazon (AMZN) announced it was eliminating 16,000 corporate jobs around the world.ย 

That comes a mere three months after a 14,000-role round of cuts in October. The company also made smaller cuts across different parts of the organization in 2024, but it laid off more than 27,000 employees across 2022 and 2023.

This year’s cuts were chalked up to “removing bureaucracy,” but they also come alongside a push to invest even more heavily in AI.ย 

Related: 10 High-Paying Jobs You Can Get With ‘Vanity Degrees’

3. Citibank


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  • Total jobs affected: 20,000

In the case of Citigroup (C), the company is actually in the midst of a multi-year initiative to eliminate 20,000 roles by the end of 2026โ€”so many of the company’s layoffs have already occurred.

But the company has made several announcements so far in 2026, and more should be expected.

Roughly 1,000 roles were shed earlier in 2026, and the company was reportedly prepping for more job cuts in March, though an official announcement never came.ย 

CEO Jane Fraser said that as the company completes its “Transformation” program, technology and simplification will result in some roles revolving, some appearing, and “others will no longer be required.”

Figures from the company’s investor presentations suggest that the layoffs are affecting more highly paid employees than in previous rounds of cuts.

Related: Career Compensation Is More Than Salary: 10 Other Financial Perks to Consider

2. Oracle


  • Total jobs affected: 20,000 to 30,000

Database and cloud firm Oracle (ORCL) delivered one of the highest-profile job cuts of the year, not via a traditional announcement, but a 6 a.m. email to affected employees that started:

“We are sharing some difficult news regarding your position.

After careful consideration of Oracle’s current business needs, we have made the decision to eliminate your role as part of a broader organizational change. As a result, today is your last working day.

We are grateful for your dedication, hard work, and the impact you have made during your time with us.”

The company didn’t make an official announcement with a concrete headcount number, but TD Cowen estimated the layoffs at about 20,000 and 30,000 positions, which would represent between 12% to 18% of its global workforce.

The announcement came just weeks after the company announced a 95% year-over-year jump in quarterly income, to $6.1 billion. It also comes amid the company’s heavy capital expenditures on artificial intelligence infrastructure.

Related: “No Tax on Tips”: The New Tip Deduction Explained

1. UPS


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  • Total jobs affected: 30,000

United Parcel Service (UPS) CEO Brian Dykes announced in January that the shipping company plans to cut its operational workforce by 30,000 jobs in 2026, following the cut of 48,000 roles in 2025.

The company is shrinking its headcount in large part because its partnership with Amazon (AMZN) is coming to an end. Dykes said the cuts will come through a combination of attrition and a second voluntary separation program for full-time drivers.

UPS also expects to close 24 buildings during the first half of the year, with the possibility of closing additional buildings later on.

Related: What Is FIRE? A Beginner’s Guide to the Early Retirement Movement

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About the Author

Riley Adams is the Founder and CEO of WealthUpdate and Young and the Invested. He is a licensed CPA who worked at Google as a Senior Financial Analyst overseeing advertising incentive programs for the company’s largest advertising partners and agencies. Previously, he worked as a utility regulatory strategy analyst at Entergy Corporation for six years in New Orleans.

His work has appeared in major publications like Kiplinger, MarketWatch, MSN, TurboTax, Nasdaq, Yahoo! Finance, The Globe and Mail, and CNBC’s Acorns. Riley currently holds areas of expertise in investing, taxes, real estate, cryptocurrencies and personal finance where he has been cited as an authoritative source in outlets like CNBC, Time, NBC News, APM’s Marketplace, HuffPost, Business Insider, Slate, NerdWallet, Investopedia, The Balance and Fast Company.

Riley holds a Masters of Science in Applied Economics and Demography from Pennsylvania State University and a Bachelor of Arts in Economics and Bachelor of Science in Business Administration and Finance from Centenary College of Louisiana.