Weekly report

Tech Layoffs Weekly Report: 2026-W20

Weekly tech layoffs report for 2026-W20: 5,929 reported layoffs across 13 public events and 13 companies.

Data range: 2026-05-11 to 2026-05-15 Status: final Updated: 2026-06-16
Total layoffs5,929
Events13
Companies13
High intensity1

Summary

During 2026-W20, the dataset recorded 5,929 reported tech layoffs across 13 public events. The report covers 13 companies, 10 industries, and 9 countries or regions.

Comparisons

Compared with 2026-W19, reported layoffs changed by -4,092 (-40.8%). Compared with 2025-W20, reported layoffs changed by -876 (-12.9%).

Comparison Period Layoff delta Layoff % change Event delta
Previous period 2026-W19 -4,092 -40.8% -8
Same period last year 2025-W20 -876 -12.9% 7

Breakdowns

Largest Events

Sorted by reported headcount. Events where no headcount was publicly disclosed are not shown.

Date Company Laid off Industry Country Source
2026-05-13 Cisco 4,000 Infrastructure United States Source
2026-05-13 LinkedIn 875 Recruiting United States Source
2026-05-14 Innovaccer 340 Healthcare United States Source
2026-05-13 Jumia 200 Retail Nigeria Source
2026-05-11 MRI Software 200 Real Estate United States Source
2026-05-15 Kraken 150 Crypto United States Source
2026-05-12 Breadfast 58 Food Egypt Source
2026-05-12 Trend Micro 45 Security Australia Source
2026-05-11 One Identity 41 Security Germany Source
2026-05-13 Guesty 20 Travel Israel Source

Methodology

Rows with invalid dates are excluded from period reports.

Rows without num_laid_off count as events but are excluded from headcount totals.

Layoff percentage, funding stage, and funds raised fields are incomplete in source data.

FAQ

How many tech layoffs were reported in 2026-W20?

The weekly report for 2026-W20 includes 5,929 reported layoffs across 13 public events.

Which company had the most layoffs in 2026-W20?

Cisco had the highest reported layoff total in 2026-W20, with 4,000 layoffs.

Which industry was most affected in 2026-W20?

The leading named industry in 2026-W20 is Infrastructure, with 4,000 reported layoffs.

How should this report be interpreted?

This report is generated from public layoff records. Rows without reported headcount can count as events but are excluded from headcount totals, and the dataset should not be treated as proof of causal claims.