Oracle Lays Off Hundreds in Cloud Division as AI Spending Rises

On August 13, 2025, Bloomberg reported that Oracle began layoffs inside Oracle Cloud Infrastructure. The company did not disclose totals. The cuts arrive amid massive investments in artificial intelligence infrastructure.
Oracle offered no official explanation, but early reports framed this move as part of a broader shift in priorities tied to AI expansion and cost management.
What Happened?
Employees in OCI were told this week that their roles were eliminated. Some reductions were tied to performance while hiring continues in priority areas, as per company insiders.
In Seattle, 161 jobs are being cut, per a filing with Washington state. The local move sits within broader cloud cuts reported this week. Industry reporting points to additional impacts in India and Canada.
The stock fell more than 4 percent on August 13 as news spread about OCI cuts and as investors assessed sector-wide AI spending and capacity trends.
Which Departments are Hit?
According to Data Center Dynamics and state filings, the layoffs primarily hit Oracle Cloud Infrastructure's:
1. Enterprise Engineering team
2. Fusion ERP unit
3. Data center operations technicians
4. Technical project managers working on AI and machine learning projects
The OCI AI division itself saw role eliminations, signaling that not all AI-related work is expanding. Oracle appears to be refocusing on specific high-value AI initiatives while winding down others.
Seattle's affected workforce (161) included Software engineers, Cloud support engineers and Program managers. This information comes from the Washington Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) notice.
Why is Oracle Laying Off?
The cuts come as Oracle channels more capital to AI infrastructure and large cloud projects. Bloomberg linked the workforce moves to cost control during heavy AI spending. Oracle's June results showed strong cloud momentum, underscoring why resources are shifting.
Pivoting towards AI, Oracle is funding massive expansions, including a $500 billion joint venture with OpenAI and SoftBank for the "Stargate" project (involving 4.5 gigawatts of US data center capacity)
Deals with TikTok and Temu are also in place for cloud services, and overall AI infrastructure demands.
Oracle has spent more than it earned in the fiscal year ending May 2025, highlighting financial strain from these expansions.
Oracle has not tied the cuts to policy.
The Buildup to the Layoffs
There were signs in the SEC filings. Oracle's Form 10-K for the year ended May 31, 2025 was posted on June 18, 2025.
It warned that the company periodically reshapes its workforce due to strategy changes, reorganizations, or performance considerations, which can raise restructuring costs and temporarily reduce productivity.
There was no official pre-announcement of the August layoffs.
Data Center Dynamics also noted employees in other regions were told to expect manager meetings later in the week, a sign the action could extend beyond first-day locations.
The August action follows a pattern of prior rounds. OCI saw several hundred cuts in November 2024.
In March 2025, reports described around 11,000 employees laid off globally (approximately 7% of Oracle's workforce) as Oracle realigned for cloud and AI priorities.
This week's move continues that trend of reshaping teams while investing in infrastructure.
No Official Statement from Oracle
As news of the layoffs spread, affected Oracle employees turned to LinkedIn to share their experiences.
A Consulting Member of Technical Staff posted about his departure after six years, reflecting on his growth and role in shaping Oracle Cloud's architecture. Another employee with 10 years at OCI shared their recent work developing AI solutions for content teams.

As of August 14, 2025, Oracle has NOT issued a public statement detailing headcount, severance, or redeployment for affected workers.
The layoffs align with a wider tech industry trend where companies like Microsoft (which cut over 15,000 jobs globally), Amazon, and Meta Platforms are reducing staff to offset escalating costs from AI development and data center expansions.
Table of Contents
Related articles

January Layoffs in the US Hit Highest Level Since 2009
January 2026 saw the highest U.S. layoffs since the Great Recession, signaling rising caution among employers and employees.

Nvidia CEO says AI will change Every Job and Make Workers Busier than Ever
AI won’t give workers more free time warns Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang Instead it will transform every job and make survivors busier than ever.

Amazon launches AI Agent Connect Talent for Job Interviews
Amazon has launched Connect Talent, an AI agent that conducts real voice interviews, scores candidates, and helps companies hire without delays.

9 Entry-Level Jobs Are Disappearing Fast Because of AI
AI is eliminating entry-level jobs at record speed. Discover which 9 fields are most at risk and how to protect your career from automation in 2025.


.avif)

