The numbers circulating about 2026 tech layoffs are striking. They’re also worth reading carefully before repeating.
According to a community-curated layoff tracker on Kaggle, approximately 85,146 tech jobs had been cut as of March 18, 2026, with 61% of those cuts explicitly attributed to AI as the primary cause. That figure has been widely picked up across technology media. What those reports rarely note is that the tracker is a community dataset, its methodology for determining “AI-attributed” cuts has not been independently validated.
Set that caveat aside, and the company-level picture is clearer. Multiple sources confirm Amazon cut approximately 16,000 corporate jobs in early 2026, a reduction the company framed around operational efficiency rather than direct AI replacement. Block laid off approximately 4,000 employees, roughly 40% of its workforce, with leadership explicitly citing AI tools enabling smaller teams to do more. Oracle is reportedly evaluating reductions of between 20,000 and 30,000 positions in the context of AI infrastructure investment, though the company has not confirmed specific figures. Meta is reportedly planning layoffs affecting approximately 16,000 employees, around 20% of its staff, while simultaneously planning approximately $115 billion in AI investment.
Not every “AI layoff” is the same thing. Block’s rationale is explicit and direct. Amazon’s is not. That distinction matters for anyone trying to understand whether AI is restructuring the labor market or simply providing cover for cuts made for other reasons.
Methodology note: Different sources report different AI layoff totals for the same period. For a reconciled breakdown of why the numbers diverge and what the Hub’s Job Displacement Tracker confirms at the company level, see AI Layoffs 2026: A Reconciled Count.