- Oracle reduced its workforce by 13% over the past 12 months and cited AI deployment in an annual filing on Monday.
- The company currently employs 141,000 full-time workers, down from 162,000 the previous year.
- It joins several tech firms that are slashing jobs to offset massive capex spending on AI buildouts.
Oracle shed 21,000 jobs, almost 13% of its workforce, in the past year, as tech giants carry out sweeping layoffs as a result of the technology.
The company's total workforce stands at 141,000 full-time employees as of May 2026, it said in its annual regulatory filing on Monday. That's down from 162,000 employees at the same time the previous year. This represents an almost 13% cut in its total workforce.
Oracle's stock was last seen down 3% in premarket trading and is down 15.4% since the beginning of the year. The move lower came amid a
global tech selloff.
"The adoption and deployment of AI technologies across our operations have resulted, and may continue to result, in reductions to our workforce," Oracle said in the filing.
The company spent $1.8 billion on restructuring costs, including severance payments and other exit costs, a jump from the $374 million it spent on restructuring the previous year.
Oracle noted that the workforce changes can be "disruptive," including the increased restructuring costs and reduced productivity.
"These types of restructurings may also lead to shortages of sufficiently skilled employees in certain roles, loss of valuable institutional knowledge, and damage to employee morale and retention," it said.
Oracle told employees in March that it was
cutting thousands of jobs as it faced investor pressure over raising huge amounts of debt for its AI infrastructure buildout.
In January, Oracle announced plans to raise $50 billion in debt and equity. Meanwhile, its free cash flow in the last fiscal year came in at
negative $23.7 billion, while capital expenditure jumped 162% to $55.7 billion.
Meta laid off 8,000 employees, or 10% of its workforce in May, with
CEO Mark Zuckerberg telling employees that "success isn't a given" in the age of AI. Meanwhile, Microsoft started offering voluntary buyouts to 7% of U.S. employees in April.
CNBC has reached out to Oracle for comment.<small>Source: CNBC</small>
Business
Oracle sheds 21,000 roles over the past year amid wave of AI layoffs from tech giants
CNBC
June 23, 2026
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