Reports are circulating this week that Meta is cutting approximately 600 positions from its AI division, a move that seems paradoxical given the company’s aggressive recruitment campaign over recent months. The contradiction raises important questions about Meta’s AI strategy and what it signals for the broader tech industry.
For those following Meta AI job cuts, the timing is striking. Just months after the company went on a highly publicised hiring spree – offering compensation packages reportedly reaching up to hundreds of millions of dollars to lure top researchers from OpenAI, Google, and other competitors – Meta is now scaling back parts of its AI workforce.
The numbers behind Meta AI job cuts
The cuts will affect Meta’sFAIR AI research, product-related AI, and AI infrastructure units in the company’s Superintelligence Labs, which employs several thousand people, according to a report byAxios. However, the newly-formed TBD Lab unit will be spared from cuts.
Following the layoffs, Meta’s Superintelligence Labs’ workforce now sits at just under 3,000, CNBC stated. The company has offered affected employees 16 weeks of severance plus two weeks for every completed year of service, and is encouraging them to apply for other positions in Meta.
Why is Meta making these cuts?
According to Axios, an internal memo from Meta Chief AI Officer Alexandr Wang indicated that the restructuring aims to address what the company concluded was an overly bureaucratic structure. “By reducing the size of our team, fewer conversations will be required to make a decision, and each person will be more load-bearing and have more scope and impact,” Wang wrote.
The backstory reveals deeper concerns. CEO Mark Zuckerberg grew concerned several months ago that the company’s existing AI efforts weren’t leading to needed breakthroughs or improved performance. The dissatisfaction reportedly stemmed from the lukewarm response to Meta’s Llama 4 models released in April.
The expensive hiring spree
To understand the current Meta AI job cuts, we need to examine what came before. In June 2025, Meta made a US$14.3 billion investment in Scale AI and brought on the startup’s CEO, Alexandr Wang, as Meta’s first-ever Chief AI Officer.
The company then embarked on an aggressive talent acquisition campaign. Meta hired multiple researchers from OpenAI, including Shengjia Zhao, Jiahui Yu, Shuchao Bi, and Hongyu Ren. Meta reportedly also poached more than 50 researchers from competitors, with OpenAI CEO Sam Altman claiming Meta was offering “US$100 million signing bonuses.”
Zuckerberg stated he was focused on “building the most elite and talent-dense team in the industry” for Meta’s new Superintelligence Labs. The company also hired prominent executives, including former GitHub CEO Nat Friedman and Safe Superintelligence co-founder Daniel Gross.
Then, unexpectedly, Meta paused hiring for its AI division in August 2025, just weeks after the massive recruitment push.
The new guard vs. the old guard
What makes these Meta AI job cuts particularly revealing is who’s being affected – and who isn’t. The cuts did not impact employees in TBD Labs, which includes many of the top-tier AI hires brought into Meta this summer, CNBC stated.
In Meta, the AI unit was considered bloated, with teams like FAIR and product-oriented groups often vying for computing resources. The restructuring appears to be a calculated bet on the new talent over legacy teams.
Timing that raises eyebrows
The timing of these Meta AI job cuts is particularly noteworthy. Just a day before the layoffs were announced, Meta secured a US$27 billion financing deal with Blue Owl Capital to fund the Hyperion data centre in Louisiana.
The juxtaposition is stark: Meta is simultaneously cutting AI personnel while investing tens of billions in AI infrastructure. This suggests the company isn’t pulling back from AI – it’s redirecting resources toward specific initiatives it deems more promising.
What this means for the AI industry
The Meta AI job cuts may signal a broader shift in the tech industry’s approach to AI talent. This raises questions in Silicon Valley about whether AI layoffs are beginning to surface just as the hype cycle peaks.
After months of frenzied hiring and astronomical compensation packages, Meta’s restructuring suggests that simply accumulating AI talent isn’t enough. The company appears to be learning that organisational structure, decision-making speed, and team coherence matter as much as individual brilliance.
Tech analyst Dan Ives of Wedbush Securities described Meta as being in “digestion mode” after a spending spree, while Daniel Newman, CEO of Futurum Group, called the hiring freeze “a natural resting point for Meta,” as per CNBC‘s report.
The bigger picture
Despite the layoffs, Meta insists its commitment to AI remains unwavering. The company continues to actively recruit and hire for its TBD Lab unit, and Zuckerberg has said Meta’s AI initiatives will result in a 2026 year-over-year expense growth rate above 2025’s growth.
What we’re witnessing isn’t a retreat from AI but a strategic realignment. Meta is consolidating its AI efforts around a smaller, more agile core team led by Wang and populated by the expensive talent acquisitions from earlier this year. The company is betting that this leaner structure will deliver the breakthroughs that eluded its larger, more established teams.
The bottom line
The contradiction of Meta AI job cuts alongside continued hiring isn’t contradictory at all – it’s a deliberate strategy. Meta is cutting the old to make room for the new, streamlining bureaucracy, and betting that its expensive new hires will succeed where legacy teams struggled.
Whether this gamble pays off remains to be seen. The company is creating a startup-in-a-giant, protecting its prized recruits yet trimming the organisational fat.
As Wang noted in his memo, “This is a talented group of individuals, and we need their skills in other parts of the company.” Whether Meta can successfully redeploy this talent internally – or whether they’ll join competitors – will be another chapter in the ongoing AI talent wars.
Meta’s approach reflects a broader truth about the AI industry: throwing money and people at the problem isn’t enough. Success requires the right structure, the right strategy, and increasingly, the courage to make difficult decisions about what – and who – to prioritise.
See also: Zuckerberg outlines Meta’s AI vision for ‘personal superintelligence’

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