Microsoft is laying off some 3% of its workforce, or around 6 000 employees, as the technology giant looks to rein in costs while funnelling billions of dollars into its ambitious bet on artificial intelligence. The cuts will be across all levels and geographies and are likely the largest since Microsoft laid off 10 000 employees in 2023. The company let a small number of staff go in January over performance-related issues, but the new cuts are not related to that, according to CNBC, which first reported the news. Big Tech has been spending heavily on AI as they see the new technology as a major growth engine, while slashing costs elsewhere to safeguard profit margins. Google has also laid off hundreds of employees in the past year, as it looks to control costs and prioritise AI, media reports have said. The company, which had 228 000 workers as of June last year, regularly uses layoffs to prioritise staffing “We continue to implement organisational changes necessary to best position the company for success in a dynamic marketplace,” a Microsoft spokesman said via e-mail. The company, which had 228 000 workers as of June last year, regularly uses layoffs to prioritise staffing in its main focus areas. Tuesday’s move comes weeks after Microsoft posted stronger-than-expected growth in its cloud computing business, Azure, and blowout results in the latest quarter, calming investor worries in an uncertain economy. But the cost of scaling its AI infrastructure has weighed on profitability, with Microsoft Cloud margins narrowing to 69% in the March quarter from 72% a year ago. Capex Microsoft has earmarked US$80-billion in capital spending this financial year, with most of it aimed at expanding data centres to ease capacity bottlenecks for AI services. DA Davidson analyst Gil Luria said the layoffs showed Microsoft was “very closely” managing the margin pressure created by its heightened AI investments. Read: Microsoft data centre leases slowing, analysts say “We believe that every year Microsoft invests at the current levels, it would need to reduce headcount by at least 10 000 in order to make up for the higher depreciation levels due to their capital expenditure,” he said. — Aditya Soni and Akash Sriram, (c) 2025 Reuters Get breaking news from TechCentral on WhatsApp. Sign up here . Don’t miss: Microsoft turns 50