Amazon CEO Andy Jassy in Sun Valley, Idaho, on July 9, 2025. David Paul Morris/Bloomberg/Getty ImagesTwo weeks ago
it was looking like Amazon was planning a fresh wave of layoffs.
It’s now happening,
according to a new Reuters report—to the tune of about 30,000 people, or 10% of its corporate staff.
Amazon has about 350,000 corporate employees and 1.55 million total employees, by far the largest of the Magnificent 7 tech companies.
Affected employees will be notified beginning today, according to the report.
Amazon’s last major cut came in late 2022, when it eliminated about 27,000 employees. It has since nipped and tucked in certain departments, e.g. podcasting.
This latest cut will reportedly affect many departments—among them HR, operations, devices, and even Amazon’s lucrative cloud computing unit, AWS.
CEO Andy Jassy said in June that he expected further cuts at the company thanks to AI-driven automation efforts and an allergy to middle management who seek to “put their fingerprint on everything.”
In truth, it’s just the latest cut in a broader Big Tech culling as leadership teams ride pressures to go big on AI and reduce their reliance on humans who don’t scale.
—AN