Oracle sheds 21,000 jobs in a year as AI rewrites the payroll


Oracle has cut around 21,000 roles worldwide over the past year, a stark sign of how quickly artificial intelligence is reshaping the cost base of the world’s largest technology firms, the US software and cloud computing giant’s latest annual report shows.

The company employed roughly 141,000 full-time staff as of 31 May 2026, down from about 162,000 a year earlier, according to Reuters. The reduction amounts to roughly 13 per cent of its global workforce.

In unusually candid language, Oracle told investors that the “deployment of AI technologies across our operations have resulted, and may continue to result, in reductions to our workforce”. The admission, buried in the firm’s annual filing, makes Oracle one of the few blue-chip employers to explicitly link headcount cuts to automation rather than the usual corporate shorthand of “efficiency” or “streamlining”.

The cuts have not come cheap. Oracle said it booked about $1.8bn (£1.36bn) in severance and other restructuring costs over the year, nearly five times the $374m it spent the year before. The figures are set out in the company’s annual report filed with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.

The bulk of the reductions appear to have landed in April, when senior employees began posting online about “significant” job losses, though the full scale only became clear once the annual report was published.

Oracle was careful to flag the risks. It acknowledged that the reorganisation “can be disruptive” and warned that thinning out certain teams could leave it short of skilled workers in particular roles, denting productivity and, ultimately, earnings.

The pattern at Oracle, cutting people while pouring money into machines, is becoming the defining trade-off of the AI era. The company has been racing to build data centres for the likes of OpenAI and Meta, and plans to spend at least $50bn on infrastructure this year alone. Co-founder Larry Ellison, one of the world’s richest people and the group’s chief technology officer, has staked Oracle’s future on becoming the plumbing behind the AI boom.

For a sector where staff are typically the single biggest expense, the maths is increasingly hard to ignore. Across the industry, more than 100,000 technology workers have lost their jobs in the past year, according to employment trackers, even as the giants commit eye-watering sums to the technology. Google, Amazon and Meta alone plan to invest some $650bn between them this year.

Oracle is far from alone. Facebook-owner Meta has been cutting roles while ramping up its AI budget, as Business Matters reported when Meta moved to axe 8,000 jobs to fund its $145bn AI push. Amazon, meanwhile, has signalled the deepest cuts of all, with plans to shed around 30,000 corporate roles in several rounds, detailed when the retailer axed 16,000 jobs to “remove bureaucracy”. Amazon, which employs more than 1.5 million people globally, intends to spend $200bn on AI over the next year, the largest commitment of any big technology company.

A senior Amazon executive captured the prevailing mood in an internal note last October, arguing that the company needed to be organised “more leanly” because AI was “enabling companies to innovate much faster than ever before”.

For all the talk of innovation, the human cost is mounting, and it is being felt well beyond Silicon Valley boardrooms. The squeeze is now reaching the bottom of the career ladder too, with entry-level vacancies in the UK down by almost a third since ChatGPT launched. Oracle’s frank acknowledgement that AI is directly displacing workers may prove a watershed: where one of the world’s most powerful software firms leads in its disclosures, others may feel obliged to follow.

The question for businesses watching from the sidelines is no longer whether AI will reshape their workforces, but how openly they are prepared to say so.


Amy Ingham

Amy is a newly qualified journalist specialising in business journalism at Business Matters with responsibility for news content for what is now the UK’s largest print and online source of current business news.