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Cloudflare Cuts 1,100 Jobs as Internal AI Usage Surges 600%

Cloudflare Layoffs 2026

Cloudflare Cuts 1,100 Jobs as Internal AI Usage Surges 600%

Cloudflare is laying off 1,100 employees — roughly 20% of its workforce — as the company reorganizes around what it calls an "agentic AI‑first operating model." The cuts come even as Q1 revenue grew 34% to $639.8M, with executives saying internal AI usage jumped 600% in three months.

The Numbers: 1,100 Jobs, 20% of Staff

Cloudflare announced on May 7, 2026 that it will eliminate more than 1,100 positions globally — approximately 21% of its 5,156‑person workforce, according to Business Insider. The layoffs span engineering, HR, finance, and marketing — essentially every function across the company.

The internal memo, co‑signed by co‑founders Matthew Prince and Michelle Zatlyn, framed the cuts as a structural reorganization rather than a cost‑cutting exercise. "Today's actions are not a cost‑cutting exercise or an assessment of individuals' performance," the memo stated, according to Business Insider. "They are about Cloudflare defining how a world‑class, high‑growth company operates and creates value in the agentic AI era."

Q1 Earnings: Strong Results, Weak Reaction

The layoffs landed hours after Cloudflare reported Q1 2026 results that beat Wall Street expectations. Revenue hit $639.8 million, up 34% year‑over‑year, per the company's 8‑K filing. Non‑GAAP net income came in at $94 million, with free cash flow of $84.1 million.

Despite the beat, shares fell 13‑18% in after‑hours trading. Barron's reported the initial 13% drop, while CNBC tracked the decline deepening to 18% later in the session. The stock was already up 30% year‑to‑date, creating a high‑expectations setup. The company expects $140–150 million in restructuring charges, mostly hitting Q2, per the SEC filing.

Full‑year guidance was raised slightly above consensus: Cloudflare now projects approximately $2.81 billion in 2026 revenue and adjusted EPS of $1.19–$1.20, according to Barron's.

The AI Trigger: 600% Spike in Internal Usage

The internal memo cited a staggering statistic: Cloudflare's internal AI usage increased by more than 600% in the last three months alone. Employees across engineering, HR, finance, and marketing are now reportedly running thousands of AI agent sessions per day, according to Business Insider.

CEO Matthew Prince said in the earnings release: "At Cloudflare, we don't just build and sell AI tools and platforms — we're our own most demanding customer. With AI and agents now core parts of our workforce, the way we work at Cloudflare has fundamentally changed," per the 8‑K filing.

Severance: Full Pay Through End of 2026

Departing employees are receiving a generous exit package: full base pay through the end of 2026, US healthcare support through year‑end, and equity vesting through August 15 with waived one‑year cliffs. The company said it intends this to be a one‑time action and does not want further layoffs "for the foreseeable future," according to Business Insider.

The restructuring charges of $140–150 million break down into $105–$110 million in cash (severance, benefits, notice periods) and $35–$40 million in non‑cash share‑based award vesting expenses, per the 8‑K filing.

What Cloudflare Builders Should Watch

Cloudflare has been steadily building out its AI infrastructure for developers. The company recently announced general availability of Sandboxes — persistent Linux environments where AI agents can clone repositories and run code — as well as expanding its Workers platform as an end‑to‑end AI deployment surface, according to Investing.com.

For builders, the layoffs signal that Cloudflare is betting its future on agentic workflows — AI systems that can plan, execute, and complete multi‑step tasks autonomously. The company is positioning Workers and its edge network as the runtime for these agents. If you build on Cloudflare, expect faster iteration on AI tooling at the cost of a leaner support and engineering organization.

Broader Trend: Tech Layoffs Accelerating

Cloudflare joins a growing list of tech companies cutting jobs while posting strong financials. According to Layoffs.fyi, cited by Barron's, 98,689 tech employees have been laid off in 2026 — already more than half of 2025's full‑year total of 124,201.

The Challenger report found AI was the top cited reason for layoffs for the second straight month, accounting for 26% of April 2026 job cuts according to CBS News. The money is shifting from headcount to compute.

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