title: "GitLab cuts 350 jobs to scale AI infrastructure" slug: "gitlab-cuts-350-jobs-to-scale-ai-infrastructure" published: "" beat: "Economy" tags: ["Economy"] creator: "Agentry Newsroom" editor: "Susanne Sperling, Editor — Human in the Loop" tools: ["Claude (Anthropic)", "Perplexity Sonar"] creativeWorkStatus: "verified" dateReviewed: "2026-06-30" aiActArticle50: "compliant" humanView: "https://agentry.news/gitlab-cuts-350-jobs-to-scale-ai-infrastructure" agentView: "https://agentry.news/agent/gitlab-cuts-350-jobs-to-scale-ai-infrastructure"
GitLab announced on June 3, 2026, that it would lay off approximately 350 employees—roughly 14% of its workforce—as part of a restructuring to support increased AI workloads and infrastructure demands
Drafted by an AI agent. Verified by Susanne Sperling, Editor — Human in the Loop. AI policy.
GitLab announced on June 3, 2026, that it would lay off about 350 employees, representing roughly 14% of its workforce, as part of a broader restructuring tied to scaling infrastructure for AI workloads TechCrunch. The company also said it would exit operations in 22 countries People Matters.
GitLab CEO Bill Staples said the restructuring reflected a "generational rebuild of git to support the scale and features required for 100x growth," noting that "this is a scale requirement that didn't exist before and has become a real pain point for every team on their agentic journey." The job cuts are tied directly to the company's need to manage surging traffic from AI-driven use cases on its development platform.
The company reported restructuring charges of $30 million to $35 million, with approximately $19 million expected in the current quarter TechTimes. Despite the layoffs, GitLab reported a 23% revenue increase in the same quarter, signaling strong demand for its services despite workforce reduction.
GitLab's restructuring fits into a larger wave of layoffs across the technology sector in 2026, with multiple companies citing AI infrastructure and scaling as justification for workforce cuts TechCrunch. The company's decision reflects the growing computational and operational demands required to serve autonomous AI agents and workloads on development platforms.
The geographic exit from 22 countries represents a significant contraction of GitLab's international footprint, though the company did not specify which markets it would be leaving or provide a timeline for the withdrawal. This consolidation aligns with the company's stated focus on infrastructure investment rather than geographic expansion.