Cloudflare Slashes 1,100 Jobs in Major AI Overhaul, Shares Dive Despite Strong Q1
Breaking News — Cloudflare announced today it is cutting approximately 1,100 employees—about 15% of its workforce—as part of a sweeping restructuring aimed at accelerating its artificial intelligence initiatives. The layoffs come despite the company beating revenue and earnings expectations for the first quarter of fiscal 2026.
Shares of Cloudflare tumbled more than 20% in after-hours trading following the announcement, as investors reacted to the abrupt downsizing and uncertainty around the company’s AI-driven transformation.
The Layoffs
In a regulatory filing, Cloudflare said it will eliminate roles across marketing, sales, and engineering departments. Affected employees will receive severance, health coverage, and career transition support, according to an internal memo.

CEO Matthew Prince stated that the restructuring is “a necessary step to invest more aggressively in AI infrastructure and product development.” He added, “We are doubling down on building the network for the next generation of AI applications.”
Market Reaction
Despite reporting Q1 revenue of $356 million—up 27% year-over-year and above analyst estimates of $348 million—the market focused on the layoffs and the company’s revised outlook for the year. Cloudflare now expects full-year revenue in the range of $1.42–$1.43 billion, slightly below consensus.
“The market is punishing Cloudflare for the optics of slashing 1,100 workers while delivering a top-line beat,” said tech analyst Amy Rogers of Signal Research. “It raises questions about internal mismanagement and whether the AI pivot is as smooth as management claims.”
Background
Cloudflare has been repositioning itself from a content delivery network into a leading edge-AI platform. In 2025, it launched Workers AI, a serverless inference service, and announced a $1 billion investment in GPU clusters worldwide.
However, the transition has come at a cost. The company acknowledged it had over-hired in non-AI roles and needs to reallocate resources. This is the second major workforce reduction in three years—Cloudflare cut 500 roles in late 2023.

Expert Reaction
“Cloudflare is trying to avoid the ‘growth trap’ where headcount balloons faster than revenue per employee,” said James Chen, a workforce strategist at TechLayoffsTracker. “But cutting 15% of staff is a blunt instrument that risks losing institutional knowledge and morale.”
Another analyst, Priya Mehta of CloudWatch Capital, noted: “The AI opportunity is real, but investors want to see a clear path to margin improvement. Right now, the layoffs feel reactive rather than strategic.”
What This Means
The restructuring signals that even well-performing tech firms are making painful cuts to chase the AI boom. Cloudflare is betting that its edge network will be essential for real-time AI inference, but it must prove it can execute without the talent it just let go.
For the broader industry, this move could accelerate a trend: companies prioritizing AI R&D over traditional roles. “We’ll likely see more of these ‘good news, bad news’ announcements—strong earnings, large layoffs—as firms reshape their workforces around AI,” said Chen.
Cloudflare’s stock may remain volatile until the company reports Q2 results, which will be the first full quarter of this restructuring.
This is a developing story. Check back for updates.
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