Tech layoffs in 2026 have already surpassed 92,000 jobs across 98 companies, making it the worst year for tech employment since the post-pandemic bust. Meta, Amazon, Microsoft, Snap, Oracle, and Block are among the biggest names cutting staff, with AI infrastructure spending cited as the primary driver. But beneath the efficiency narrative lies a more complicated story—one of overhiring, debt, and a workforce reckoning that’s far from over. Tech layoffs in 2026 have already surpassed 92,000 jobs across 98 companies, making it the worst year for tech employment since the post-pandemic bust. Meta, Amazon, Microsoft, Snap, Oracle, and Block are among the biggest names cutting staff, with AI infrastructure spending cited as the primary driver. But beneath the efficiency narrative lies a more complicated story—one of overhiring, debt, and a workforce reckoning that’s far from over.
Trending
- The Parmigiano vault: How Italy’s ‘cheese banks’ power a 4 billion euro industry
- ‘Manuvadi, anti-women’: Rahul rips into BJP over ‘pallu’ remark on Congress MP
- ‘Save me’: Delhi woman’s last video call before MP cruise boat tragedy that killed 3
- Assam assembly election results 2026: 10 key constituencies to watch out for
- ‘MS Dhoni can surprise’: Ashwin gives major update before CSK vs MI
- Woman, 70, jailed for life for killing sister and stealing Rolex watch in North London
- Kerala assembly election results 2026: 20 key constituencies that will shape LDF vs UDF vs NDA battle
- Venezuela’s crude exports hit highest since 2018 — India, US and other buyers line up