Coinbase announced a restructuring plan on May 5, 2026, cutting about 700 employees, or 14% of its workforce. CEO Brian Armstrong attributed the move to cryptocurrency market volatility and artificial intelligence-driven productivity gains. The changes aim to create a leaner, AI-native organization ahead of Q1 earnings on May 7.
Coinbase revealed plans to reduce its headcount by approximately 700 employees under a restructuring announced on May 5. The cuts, representing 14% of the workforce, are expected to incur charges of $50 million to $60 million. Armstrong explained in an internal note that the company faces a down market with volatile trading activity, asset prices, and user engagement, necessitating a lower cost base for future growth in areas like stablecoins and tokenization. He also highlighted AI's role, noting that engineers now ship products in days using AI, what once took weeks, while non-technical teams automate workflows and produce code. Coinbase told the SEC the plan manages expenses amid current conditions and optimizes for the AI era, including flattening the structure to five layers below the CEO and COO, eliminating pure management roles, and forming AI-native pods with experiments in one-person teams handling engineering, design, and product duties. Affected US employees will receive at least 16 weeks of base pay, plus two weeks per year of service, their next equity vest, and six months of COBRA coverage. System access was immediately revoked to protect customer data. The layoffs follow a period of expansion, with full-year 2025 operating expenses up 35% to $5.7 billion and headcount rising 31% to 4,951, amid softer Q4 metrics and a Q1 outlook showing lower subscription revenue. Coinbase's Q1 2026 results are scheduled for May 7.