Stunning new data reveals 140% layoff spike in July, with almost half connected to AI and ‘technological updates’
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Stunning new data reveals 140% layoff spike in July, with almost half connected to AI and ‘technological updates’

August 7, 2025
04:13 PM
5 min read
AI Enhanced
technologygovernmentmarket cyclesseasonal analysiseconomic

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The summer of layoffs is real, according to the July monthly "job cut" report from employment consultancy Challenger, Gray & Christmas.

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personal finance

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August 7, 2025

04:13 PM

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technologygovernmentmarket cyclesseasonal analysiseconomic

AI·Fortune IntelligenceStunning new data reveals 140% layoff spike in July, with almost half connected to AI and ‘nological ’By Nick LichtenbergBy Nick LichtenbergFortune Intelligence EditorNick LichtenbergFortune Intelligence EditorNick Lichtenberg is Fortune Intelligence editor and was formerly Fortune's executive editor of global news.SEE FULL BIO The summer of layoffs?Getty ImagesThe jobs market is kind of going through it right now

The July jobs report stunned Wall Street with a massive downward revision of payrolls in May and June, mpting President Donald Trump’s controversial firing of Erika McEntarfer, the public servant responsible for the data

Not only did payrolls grow by just 73,000 in July, below Wall Street estimates, but the revisions also showed that the spring had two consecutive months of growth below 20,000

The unemployment rate edged up to 4.2% from 4.1%, as the labor force shrank

Added to this sluggish cocktail is new data showing a remarkable surge in layoffs in July as well

Employment consultancy Challenger, Gray & Christmas publishes a monthly “job cut” report and the July edition makes for some reading

According to the data, employers across the U.S. announced 62,075 job cuts last month—a 29% increase from June but a stunning 140% surge over July 2024 and a decisive end to the typical midsummer lull in workforce reductions

And nearly half of these cuts—49%—were related to artificial intelligence (AI) and “nological .” The report says these cuts are “well above average for this month since the pandemic,” and one of the highest July pullbacks in the past decade, evidence that deep, nology-driven changes are rippling through the labor market

For perspective, the average number of job cuts announced in July from 2021 to 2024 was just 23,584

Even against the broader decade’s average of 60,398, this year’s total is notably higher

Headlines, including in Fortune, have linked surging layoffs to increasing adoption of artificial intelligence (AI) in the enterprise, and Challenger Gray agrees, partially

A bigger impact is cutbacks in government employment as a result of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), previously with Elon Musk in an ambiguous advisory role

A big part of the DOGE cuts, of course, is to encourage increasing AI adoption within the government. “We are seeing the Federal budget cuts implemented by DOGE impact non-fits and healthcare in addition to the government,” said Andrew Challenger, Senior Vice President and labor expert for Challenger, Gray & Christmas. “AI was cited for over 10,000 cuts last month, and tariff concerns have impacted nearly 6,000 jobs this year.” The AI effect Beyond the more than 10,000 jobs in July that were eliminated specifically due to AI adoption, an additional 20,219 cuts were attributed to “nological ” including automation and new software workflows

Challenger Gray said this suggests “a significant acceleration in AI-related restructuring.” While AI’s influence dominates headlines, federal budget cuts—known as the “DOGE Impact”—are another pillar driving this year’s wave of layoffs

The government sector has announced 292,294 job cuts this year, most at the federal level, as courts greenlight sweeping reductions

These have affected not just direct government roles, but also non-fits and healthcare through down funding losses, totaling an additional 13,056 layoffs

Other economic stressors remain ever-present: Market and economic conditions have accounted for 171,083 cuts year-to-date, inflation and weaker demand have shuttered stores and plants (120,226 layoffs), while restructurings and bankruptcies contributed 66,879 and 35,641 cuts, respectively

Where the layoff storm is hitting Job cuts are distributed unevenly across the U.S

The East Coast has seen the most dramatic year-over-year increase, rising 219%, spurred by federal agency reductions in Washington, D.C., as well as steep jumps in states New Jersey (+362%) and New York (+43%)

Out West, California has also been roiled by 114,676 layoffs (+50%)

In the South, job cuts climbed 34% overall, with Georgia and Florida seeing spikes of over 70%

The sector tops private-sector losses, with 89,251 cuts year-to-date—a 36% jump from last year—reflecting AI’s disruptive role and work visa uncertainty

Retail has announced 80,487 layoffs so far in 2025, up 249% from a year ago, as inflation and tariffs push more stores to downsize or close their doors

Non-fit job cuts are up 413%, with mounting operational costs compounded by lost federal support

While the automotive sector’s year-to-date layoffs fell 31% from 2024, July alone saw nearly 5,000 jobs lost due to new tariffs, its most affected month since late last year

Announced hiring plans vide little relief: just 86,132 new jobs have been planned by U.S. employers through July; this has consistently remained well below pre-pandemic levels. nology hiring continues to slump, down 58% year-over-year with only 5,510 positions announced so far in 2025

For this story, Fortune used generative AI to help with an initial draft

An editor verified the accuracy of the information before publishing

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