Meta cuts ~8,000 jobs in AI restructuring, leaked Zuckerberg and Gale memos warn 'success isn't a given'
Meta began cutting roughly 8,000 jobs — about 10% of its global workforce — on May 20, 2026, executing reductions first flagged in an internal memo from Chief People Officer Janelle Gale that Bloomberg published on April.
VERDICT — CONFIRMED
Meta began cutting roughly 8,000 jobs — about 10% of its global workforce — on May 20, 2026, executing reductions first flagged in an internal memo from Chief People Officer Janelle Gale that Bloomberg published on April 23, 2026. Terminations were rolled out in waves, with reports of 4 a.m. local-time emails. Gale framed the cuts as part of an effort 'to run the company more efficiently and to allow us to offset the other investments we're making,' while CEO Mark Zuckerberg told staff the decision was necessary because 'success isn't a given' in the competitive AI race.
Alongside the layoffs, Meta canceled roughly 6,000 open requisitions, bringing the effective headcount impact to about 14,000 roles, and said it would redirect thousands of workers into new AI-focused teams (reported names include Applied AI Engineering and reorganized AI 'pods'). Affected groups included integrity/content-moderation, cybersecurity, and content-design staff. US workers were offered 16 weeks of base pay plus two additional weeks per year of service and roughly 18 months of health coverage.
The cuts are set against Meta's sharply rising AI capital expenditure; outlets cited 2026 capex guidance in the range of roughly $115 billion to $145 billion, more than the company's 2025 outlay, tied to its Superintelligence buildout. Reporting noted internal friction, including a worker petition against an AI data-collection program and concerns that employees were 'being used to train the AI models that will replace them.' Meta's stock was little changed on the day.

