Oracle Corporation has reduced its global workforce by about 21,000 roles in the last year, a cut that equals nearly 13% of the company's previous staff levels. The firm's most recent annual regulatory filing, released Monday, shows total full-time headcount stood at 141,000 as of May 2026, down from 162,000 at the same point a year earlier.
The filing links these reductions directly to the company's adoption of artificial intelligence technologies. In describing the impact of AI on operations, Oracle said: "The adoption and deployment of AI technologies across our operations have resulted, and may continue to result, in reductions to our workforce."
To manage the transition, Oracle has recorded $1.8 billion in restructuring expenses tied to severance and other exit costs for the year, a marked increase from $374 million in such charges in the prior fiscal year. The company also highlighted potential negative side effects that can accompany workforce reorganizations.
"These types of restructurings may also lead to shortages of sufficiently skilled employees in certain roles, loss of valuable institutional knowledge, and damage to employee morale and retention," Oracle said in the filing.
Employees were notified in March that thousands of positions would be eliminated, a step the company took while facing investor pressure related to borrowing to expand its AI infrastructure. Oracle disclosed plans in January to seek up to $50 billion through a combination of debt and equity.
Oracle's financial footing during this period shows significant capital deployment in support of its AI strategy. The company reported free cash flow of negative $23.7 billion for the last fiscal year, while capital expenditures rose 162% to $55.7 billion.
The company's actions mirror broader industry moves by major technology firms that are expanding data center capacity for AI. Oracle noted peers that have also announced large capital expenditure programs this year, which industry estimates suggest could total as much as $700 billion across several firms.
Other large tech firms have also taken workforce actions this year. Meta reduced its staff by 8,000 employees in May, equivalent to about 10% of its workforce, and Microsoft began offering voluntary buyouts covering around 7% of its U.S. workforce in April.
Market reaction to Oracle's disclosures has been negative. Shares were trading 1.5% lower on Tuesday and remained more than 10% below their level at the start of the year.
This filing and the associated disclosures underscore the trade-offs companies face as they scale AI infrastructure - balancing significant capital spending and borrowing against the operational and human costs of restructuring. Oracle's figures show a company actively reallocating resources to support AI while acknowledging the short-term disruptions such moves can produce.