
Lufthansa Group announced plans to eliminate 4,000 administrative jobs worldwide by 2030, with most cuts happening in Germany. The airline says AI and automation will handle much of the work these employees currently do.
The German airline made the announcement on September 29, 2025, during a meeting with investors in Munich. The cuts will affect positions across Lufthansa's workforce of 101,709 employees.
Which Jobs Are Being Cut and Why?
Lufthansa is targeting administrative jobs, not operational roles. Pilots, flight attendants, ground crew, and maintenance workers are safe. The cuts will focus on back-office administrative positions rather than customer-facing or operational staff.
Most of the job cuts will happen in Germany. The company hasn't specified which exact departments or functions will be affected.
Lufthansa gave three main reasons for the cuts:
1) AI and digitalization: "The profound changes brought about by digitalization and the increased use of artificial intelligence will lead to greater efficiency in many areas and processes," the company stated.
2) Duplicate work elimination: As Lufthansa integrates its different airlines (SWISS, Austrian Airlines, Brussels Airlines), the company is "reviewing which activities will no longer be necessary in the future, for example due to duplication of work."
3) Process consolidation: The airline is streamlining operations across the company through closer cooperation between group functions and airlines.
CEO Carsten Spohr told employees at an internal company meeting that the company needs to cut administrative costs by 20%. "If we do not return to the margins we need for essential investments, we will not be able to finance them," he said.
The job cuts will save Lufthansa €300 million per year once fully implemented.
When Will This Happen?
Lufthansa hasn't announced a specific timeline. The company only confirmed all 4,000 jobs will be eliminated by 2030, with cuts happening gradually over the next several years.
Lufthansa said it will carry out cuts "in consultation with social partners," meaning negotiations with unions and workers' councils.
The Verdi union, which represents administrative staff, called the job cuts "drastic." Union leaders say the airline's problems come from rising costs outside the company's control - like airport fees and environmental regulations - and are calling for German government support.
Lufthansa's Expansion Plans
Despite cutting 4,000 administrative jobs, Lufthansa plans to add more than 230 new aircraft by 2030, including 100 long-haul planes. More planes typically mean more pilots, flight attendants, maintenance workers, and ground crew.
Lufthansa is eliminating office workers while hiring more people who work directly with planes and customers.
What This Means for Workers
Lufthansa's announcement reveals a shift happening across industries. Companies are using AI to eliminate routine administrative work while maintaining customer-facing operations.
For administrative workers and job seekers, back-office positions involving routine and repetitive tasks are disappearing. The jobs that remain require complex problem-solving, relationship management, and human judgment that AI can't replicate.
The 4,000 administrative workers at Lufthansa join a growing list of employees being replaced by automation. Airlines worldwide are following the same pattern, along with companies in banking, insurance, tech, and manufacturing.
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