Meta is preparing for what could be its most aggressive workforce reduction in years, with internal discussions pointing to cuts that may eliminate 20 percent or more of its nearly 79,000 employees worldwide, according to people familiar with the planning.
The move, first reported by Reuters, is driven by a dual imperative: absorbing the soaring costs of artificial intelligence infrastructure while positioning the company for a future in which AI-assisted workers dramatically shrink the need for large human teams.
No final decision has been made on the exact number of jobs to be cut or when the layoffs will begin, but senior executives have already instructed some division leaders to start mapping out reductions, sources said.
In a terse response to the report, Meta spokesperson Andy Stone dismissed the story as premature. “This is speculative reporting about theoretical approaches,” he said. Yet the scale under consideration would dwarf the company’s previous rounds of belt-tightening and mark the biggest single-wave cut since CEO Mark Zuckerberg branded 2022 and 2023 the “year of efficiency.”
Meta’s headcount stood at just under 79,000 at the end of December, according to its latest regulatory filing. That figure already reflects several earlier purges. In November 2022, the company axed roughly 11,000 jobs, about 13 percent of its workforce then.
Four months later, another 10,000 positions vanished. And as recently as January 2025, Zuckerberg told staff in an internal memo that Meta would shed about 5 percent of its global payroll, explicitly targeting what he called the lowest-performing employees. Those cuts rolled out in phases across Africa, Europe, and Asia, with severance packages in line with prior rounds.
Now the stakes are higher. The company is pouring tens of billions of dollars annually into AI, including a staggering $600 billion commitment to data center infrastructure by 2028. At the same time, Zuckerberg has been on a talent-shopping spree, dangling compensation packages worth hundreds of millions of dollars over four years to lure top AI researchers for a new “superintelligence” team.
Earlier this week, Meta acquired Moltbook, a social networking platform built specifically for AI agents, and is said to be spending at least $2 billion to buy the Chinese startup, Manus.
In a January 2025 address to employees, Zuckerberg openly previewed the coming shift. Projects that once required large teams, he said, can now be completed by a single highly skilled individual armed with the right AI tools. The message was clear: the same technology driving Meta’s massive capital expenditures is also expected to deliver unprecedented productivity gains that, in the blunt language of corporate cost-cutting, translate into fewer bodies on the payroll.
If the latest round proceeds, it would represent more than just another trim. It would signal that the AI arms race has reached the point where even one of the world’s most valuable companies believes its future workforce can and must be dramatically smaller. Severance terms are expected to mirror those of previous cuts, but the human toll would be far larger.
For now, the planning remains internal and fluid. Whether the cuts land at 15 percent, 20 percent, or beyond is still being debated in the executive suites of Menlo Park.
What is no longer in doubt is the direction: Meta is betting that the same artificial intelligence it is spending billions to build will soon do much of the work its human employees once did. The question facing thousands of staffers is whether they will still have a seat when the new, leaner era arrives.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Meta is systematically replacing human labor with AI. The company is planning its largest-ever layoffs, potentially cutting 20%+ of its ~79,000 workforce—not out of financial distress, but as a direct consequence of its AI strategy.
As AI tools reduce the need for large teams, Meta is spending billions to build the very technology that will displace its own employees. Simply put, the AI boom isn’t just creating jobs elsewhere; it’s actively eliminating them at the companies leading the charge.























