Austin, TX – Thousands of workers at technology giant Oracle are facing job losses as the company moves forward with a major global restructuring tied to artificial intelligence and data center growth.
According to employee reports shared across industry forums and workforce tracking platforms Tuesday, workers in several departments allegedly received same-day termination notices via email, with little or no prior warning. The cuts are reportedly affecting teams across the United States, India and other international regions as Oracle reshapes operations to prioritize AI infrastructure and cloud expansion.
Multiple divisions are believed to be impacted. Workforce tracking posts indicate that Oracle’s Revenue & Health Sciences division may see cuts approaching roughly 30 percent of staff. Similar reductions are reportedly occurring within the company’s SaaS and Virtual Operations Services teams, where some workers say layoffs could exceed 30 percent in certain groups.
Employees connected to Oracle’s NetSuite India Development Centre have also reported job losses across several roles and experience levels, suggesting the restructuring may extend through engineering, product and operational positions.
Oracle has invested heavily in artificial intelligence and data center expansion as cloud computing competition intensifies among major technology companies. Industry analysts say companies including Oracle are racing to build infrastructure capable of supporting large-scale AI workloads, which require massive computing power and energy resources.
The restructuring appears to reflect a broader shift across the technology sector, where companies are redirecting budgets toward AI development while streamlining traditional business units.
Oracle has not publicly confirmed the exact number of positions affected by the reported layoffs. However, employee accounts and workforce monitoring platforms indicate the cuts could reach several thousand roles globally.
The company previously emphasized investments in AI-enabled cloud services and expanding its global data center footprint, signaling a long-term strategy focused on enterprise AI platforms and high-performance computing.
Additional details about the scope of the layoffs and affected teams are expected to emerge as employees continue reporting workforce changes across regions.


