Amazon cuts more jobs; this time in robotics unit


Amazon logo outside an Amazon warehouse in Manchester, Britain, October 28, 2025. REUTERS/Phil Noble

SAN FRANCISCO, ⁠March 4 (Reuters) - Amazon on Tuesday confirmed it laid off staff ⁠across its robotics unit, with at least 100 white-collar ‌jobs affected, two people familiar with the matter told Reuters.

This comes after a January cut of about 16,000 jobs with the company at the time hinting layoffs ​would continue.

The division axed on Tuesday is ⁠responsible for designing robots ⁠and other conveyances for automation, primarily in warehouses.

"We regularly review our ⁠organizations to ‌make sure teams are best set up to innovate and deliver for our customers," Amazon said in the ⁠statement, without specifying the number of jobs cut. ​Business Insider earlier ‌reported the robotics cuts.

Starting with a round of some 14,000 ⁠white-collar employees in ​October, Amazon has trimmed 30,000 corporate employees, tying them to efficiency gains from artificial intelligence, as well as revising company culture. The layoffs ⁠represented nearly 10% of white-collar workers, though ​the bulk of Amazon's 1.5 million workers are hourly staff, particularly in warehouses known as fulfillment centers.

The latest job cuts come after Amazon ⁠in January halted development of a robotic arm known as Blue Jay that it demonstrated at an event in October. Blue Jay featured multiple robotic arms that could grab several items at once ​and was designed to help workers in ⁠smaller spaces.

In addition to the broader cuts in October and January, ​Amazon over the past year has pared ‌a smaller number of jobs in ​its devices and services, books, podcasts and public relations units, among others.

(Reporting by Greg Bensinger; Editing by Aurora Ellis)

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