Tech layoffs surge again in 2025 — this time, AI is the stated cause
More than 205,000 roles are eliminated across the year, and for the first time automation, not interest rates, is the dominant reason cited.
The technology industry eliminated more than 205,000 jobs in 2025, according to layoff trackers cited in the research audit underpinning this report — a sharp resurgence after a comparatively calmer 2024.
The character of the cuts had changed. The 2022-2023 layoffs were fundamentally interest-rate corrections, unwinding over-hiring from the ZIRP boom. The 2025 wave was different: for the first time, automation and AI were the leading stated rationale, with reductions concentrated in customer support, content moderation, QA testing, and even traditional software engineering.
The pattern complicated the industry's optimistic story about AI as a pure job creator. The super-cycle was generating enormous value and enormous capital expenditure — but its early labor effect was reallocation and displacement, not broad-based hiring.
The trend would intensify into 2026, culminating in some of the largest single-company reductions the sector had ever seen.