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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe tech job market is a bloodbath. It's likely going to get even worse.
https://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/tech-layoffs-2026-22259249.phpThe tech job market is a bloodbath. Its likely going to get even worse.
This 2026 surge almost rivals the first significant wave of layoffs of 2023
During the past several years, tech companies across the world have slashed thousands of jobs, and now, data suggests that the current bloodbath is about to get even worse.
According to a May 12 report from Statista, which gathered data from Layoffs.fyi, a site that publicly tracks mass firings, there have already been over 100,000 layoffs in tech this year almost equaling the total number of tech layoffs in 2025, and over two-thirds of the ones in 2024. As our chart shows, layoffs totaled around 81,700 in the first quarter alone, the highest quarterly figure since early 2023, before adding about 20,000 more in the first six weeks of the second quarter, the report says, attributing the major restructuring to investment in artificial intelligence. Overall, its a sharp reversal from 2025, when layoffs stayed lower at around 27,000 to 37,000 per quarter, the report continues.
This 2026 surge almost rivals the first significant wave of layoffs of 2023, according to Statista, when more than 160,000 people were let go in the first quarter alone. And its likely going to get even worse: The current trajectory suggests the sector may be entering another period of restructuring, with 2026 already on track to rival the scale of layoffs seen in previous downturns, the May Statista report says.
For years now, the tech world has been hemorrhaging skilled workers at major companies like Meta, Salesforce and Oracle, many of whom now face the possibility of long-term unemployment. With some CEOs treating layoffs as a scarlet letter, its becoming even more difficult for workers to get ahead in an increasingly brutal job market rife with ghost jobs.
Tim S
(296 posts)I worked in Silicon Valley during the DotCom era and was a victim of layoffs when that bubble burst. This AI will better everything thinking with investors mirrors the Internet-based companies will all make money thinking of the venture capitalists in the DotCom times. I remember the difficulty in booking a moving van in the Bay Area in the Spring of 2001 because everyone laid off could no longer afford to live there.
It seems like history will be repeating itself again.
TheProle
(4,091 posts)The changing landscapes within game development have contributed a lot of blood to the bath.
Amishman
(5,944 posts)Companies are abusing the system so they can have indentured servants.
The H1B program needs to be reduced by 95% or more.
Twenty years in tech and off the top of my head I can think of one person on an H1B who genuinely had unique skills that couldn't be found domestically. One in dozens - perhaps over one hundred - coworkers here on those visas.
(yes, there are a lot more factors in the tech job squeeze than just this, but it's the easiest one to fix and the most stupidly self inflected one).
Passages
(4,484 posts)Buns_of_Fire
(19,215 posts)I emphasize with them. Luckily, I only had to survive 10 years before I could collect SS - I suspect many of them will have to rely on the "gig economy" longer than that.