×
Microsoft cuts 15K jobs while investing $80B in AI infrastructure
Written by
Published on
Join our daily newsletter for breaking news, product launches and deals, research breakdowns, and other industry-leading AI coverage
Join Now

Microsoft has eliminated approximately 15,300 employees—7% of its global workforce—in the first half of 2025 while simultaneously investing $80 billion in AI infrastructure. The dramatic workforce reduction coincides with CEO Satya Nadella’s revelation that up to 30% of Microsoft’s code is now written by AI, signaling a fundamental shift toward replacing human labor with artificial intelligence across the tech industry.

The numbers tell the story: Microsoft’s 2025 layoffs have been systematic and extensive, with software engineering bearing the brunt of cuts.

  • The company announced 9,000 layoffs on July 2, following 6,000 cuts in May, 300+ cuts in June, and smaller performance-based reductions in January.
  • Software engineering made up more than 40% of the roughly 2,000 positions cut in Washington state during the May round.
  • Despite eliminating 7% of its workforce, Microsoft projects 14%+ revenue growth this year, demonstrating that revenue growth has become decoupled from headcount growth.

The $80 billion AI bet: Microsoft’s massive infrastructure investment reflects the computational requirements of modern AI systems and competitive pressures.

  • More than half of the $80 billion investment will be in the United States, positioning the company for what Microsoft president Brad Smith calls a “golden opportunity” for American economic competitiveness.
  • The investment represents a significant increase from Microsoft’s $53 billion capex spend in 2023.
  • Microsoft’s Azure cloud services revenue increased 33% in the fiscal first quarter, with 12 percentage points stemming from AI services.

Industry-wide pattern: Microsoft isn’t alone in reducing human workforces while increasing AI investments.

  • Meta announced 5% workforce cuts (about 3,600 employees) in January, with Mark Zuckerberg stating: “This is going to be an intense year, and I want to make sure we have the best people on our teams.”
  • Google implemented a 10% reduction in managerial roles as part of its yearlong efficiency push.
  • Amazon’s Andy Jassy was most direct about AI’s impact, telling employees: “we will need fewer people doing some of the jobs that are being done today.”

Beyond cost-cutting: Industry observers see these layoffs as “quiet AI layoffs”—cuts driven by the belief that AI can replace human labor rather than simple cost reduction.

  • Technical roles bore the brunt of cuts while customer-facing positions were largely untouched, suggesting companies view AI as most capable of replacing technical rather than interpersonal work.
  • Microsoft has mandated AI use across its workforce, making it part of employees’ daily workflow and performance evaluations.
  • Microsoft CTO Kevin Scott predicts that AI-generated code could reach 95% by 2030, up from the current 30%.

What this means for workers: The implications for Microsoft’s workforce and knowledge workers broadly are profound.

  • Paul Roetzer of the Marketing AI Institute calls it “quiet AI layoffs”—job cuts ostensibly about restructuring but actually driven by AI substitution.
  • Employees can no longer assume strong performance will protect them from AI-driven displacement.
  • Analyst Gil Luria told Reuters that Microsoft may continue laying off 10,000 workers annually to “make up for the higher depreciation levels due to their capital expenditures.”

The future workforce: Microsoft’s transformation represents one of the most aggressive restructuring campaigns in the company’s 50-year history.

  • The 2025 workforce reduction surpasses all cuts since 2014’s elimination of 18,000 employees following the Nokia acquisition.
  • Microsoft executives have reduced management layers between individual contributors and top executives.
  • As Smith noted, the company sees AI infrastructure as “the essential foundation of AI innovation and use”—a foundation that increasingly doesn’t require as many human builders.
Microsoft: We Need A Lot Less Employees. And a Lot More AI Infrastructure.

Recent News

Microsoft cuts 15K jobs while investing $80B in AI infrastructure

Industry observers call them "quiet AI layoffs" driven by automation, not cost-cutting.

Crunchyroll accidentally exposes AI subtitle use with “ChatGPT said:” error

Quality control failures suggest either poor oversight or continued AI reliance despite denials.

Amazon CEO says AI will replace some jobs while creating new ones

Amazon has cut 27,000 workers since 2022 while investing billions in AI.