AI layoffs, explained
A sourced, honest look at where AI-cited job cuts are happening in 2026 — and what it means for your role. Every figure below links to its source.
The big picture (2026)
AI has been the most-cited reason for U.S. job cuts for four straight months (Mar–Jun 2026).
— Challenger, Gray & Christmas, 2026Employers cited AI in roughly 40% of May 2026's announced cuts — up from about 7% in January.
— Challenger via Outlook Business, 2026AI-cited U.S. job cuts in the first half of 2026 already exceeded 2024 and 2025 combined.
— CNBC, 2026Technology led with about 139,000 H1-2026 cuts (+83% year-over-year), roughly a third of all U.S. cuts.
— Challenger via HR Dive, 2026Some of these cuts are AI directly changing the work; others are companies redirecting budget toward AI. Either way, the roles that hold up pair durable human judgment with AI-augmented skills — and the workers who build those earliest fare best.
Recent layoffs where the employer cited AI
A curated, sourced feed — each row links to reporting so you can verify it.
Official mass-layoff filings (WARN)
1,195 government WARN notices (127,996 workers), current through Jun 2026. Employers must file these before mass layoffs — authoritative, but they don't state a cause (so not AI-specific).
Broader tech layoffs — all causes, not just AI
3,292 tracked layoffs (568,324 roles) via layoffs.fyi, data through Feb 2024. These are all tech layoffs — cause not attributed — shown for scale next to the AI-cited cuts above.
What does this mean for your job?
Get your free AI-exposure score, a task-by-task breakdown, and the safer, more durable moves for your role — in seconds, no signup.
Method: events are curated from public reporting (every
row is sourced); aggregate figures are from Challenger, Gray & Christmas and major outlets. Exposure
scores blend O*NET, the Anthropic Economic Index, the Penn/OpenAI study, and BLS data —
full methodology →
Note: This is an estimate of AI exposure, not a prediction that your job will disappear. It is designed to help you understand how your role may change and improve your career resilience.