Total AI-linked job losses
U.S. + Global Monitor
AI-Linked Job Losses
Newly reported layoffs where AI is either explicitly cited or credibly blamed as a material factor. Reporting window starts January 1, 2025.
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Reported layoffs
| Company | Jobs lost | Industry | Running total | Workforce % |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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Counting methodology
Included: First-time layoffs where AI was a material factor — either explicitly cited by the company, or identified by credible reporting as a primary driver. Excluded: Restated totals, duplicate announcements, and layoffs attributed solely to non-AI factors.
Data dictionary
EXPLICIT — The company publicly cited AI, automation, or machine learning as a reason for the workforce reduction in an official statement, SEC filing, or on-the-record comment.
BLAMED — At least one credible news outlet (AP, Reuters, major business press, or industry publication) identified AI as a primary driver, based on reporting, internal sources, or pattern analysis — even if the company did not say so directly.
MIXED — AI is cited alongside other material factors (restructuring, market conditions, cost reduction). The layoff is partially but not solely attributable to AI.
Jobs lost — The number of positions eliminated in the announced action. Where companies give a range, we use the midpoint. Figures marked with ~ are estimates based on reporting rather than official numbers.
Running total — Cumulative job losses at that company across all tracked reports since January 1, 2025.
Workforce % — Running total as a percentage of the company's most recently reported total workforce. "n/a" indicates workforce size is unavailable or not applicable.
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Cite this data
The Alliance for Secure AI, AI Job Loss Tracker, accessed . Available at jobloss.ai.