Coinbase Cuts 700 Jobs as AI‑Driven Restructuring Accelerates Across Tech Sector

An illustration showing a dejected Coinbase employee carrying a box of personal items while a glowing Coinbase logo and robotic hands type on a keyboard in the background. A futuristic AI robot with a blue eye faces forward beside falling dollar signs, coins, and a red downward arrow symbolizing layoffs and automation. The composition uses cool blue tones contrasted with warm reds to depict the tension between human job loss and AI‑driven efficiency.

Coinbase’s decision to cut 700 employees or about 14% of its global workforce, as the cryptocurrency exchange restructures operations around artificial intelligence and responds to a prolonged downturn in digital‑asset markets. Chief Executive Brian Armstrong told on a X post that the company is ā€œadjusting early and deliberatelyā€ to become a leaner, faster, AI‑native organization capable of operating with smaller teams and accelerated product cycles.

The announcement comes as the broader crypto market continues to contract. Total digital‑asset capitalization has fallen from about $4.3 trillion in late 2025 to roughly $2.8 trillion this week, with Bitcoin trading near $80,149 after reaching a record high of $126,000 last year. Armstrong said the company must reduce its cost structure to remain competitive while integrating AI systems that can automate internal workflows and reduce reliance on large operational teams.

Major Tech Firms Cite AI in Workforce Reductions

Coinbase’s restructuring follows a series of high‑profile job cuts across the technology sector, many of which have been linked directly to AI‑driven efficiencies. According to data from Usearch, Google eliminated 12,000 roles after stating that AI tools would allow teams to operate with fewer people. Meta continued its multiyear efficiency campaign by cutting 21,000 positions across 2023 and 2024, shifting moderation, advertising, and internal operations toward automated systems.

Amazon has also reduced headcount, announcing 16,000 job cuts in January as it reallocates resources toward automation and large‑scale AI initiatives. IBM paused hiring for nearly 7,800 back‑office roles, saying many of those functions would be replaced by AI. Microsoft consolidated thousands of positions as AI copilots expanded across Office, Azure, and GitHub, reducing the need for junior analysts and support staff. Tesla and Salesforce have each implemented significant reductions tied to automation and AI‑enabled restructuring.

Industry analysts say the trend reflects a broader shift in corporate strategy, with companies using AI to streamline operations, reduce payroll costs, and accelerate product development cycles.

AI‑Related Layoffs Rise Across the U.S. Labor Market

AI has been cited in tens of thousands of job cuts across the U.S. economy. Challenger, Gray & Christmas reported that artificial intelligence was responsible for nearly 55,000 layoffs in 2025, contributing to more than 1.17 million job losses that year. Business Insider data shows that AI has been referenced in roughly 8% of all job‑cut announcements so far in 2026, though some analysts note that companies may also be using AI as a convenient explanation for broader cost‑reduction measures.

A World Economic Forum survey found that 41% of companies globally expect to reduce their workforces over the next five years due to AI adoption. The Economic Times reported that Oracle, Salesforce, Intel, Block, and Google have all implemented restructuring plans that cite AI as a central factor.

Coinbase Plans to Rebuild Around AI‑Native Skill Sets

Coinbase said it will focus on retaining and hiring employees with AI‑native skill sets as it restructures its internal model. Armstrong described the company’s next phase as a return to ā€œthe speed and focus of our startup founding,ā€ with AI positioned at the center of engineering, compliance, customer support, and operational workflows.

The company said severance packages will be provided to affected employees, with U.S. staff receiving at least 16 weeks of base pay and additional compensation based on tenure.

AI Reshapes Corporate Workforce Models

Analysts expect AI‑driven restructuring to continue across the technology sector as companies seek to balance rising automation investments with declining revenue in several markets. While firms say AI will improve productivity and reduce operational friction, labor economists warn that the technology is reshaping entry‑level and mid‑career job pathways at a pace that could outstrip workforce adaptation.

Coinbase said it expects the restructuring to position the company for long‑term growth as AI becomes more deeply embedded in financial‑technology infrastructure.