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The Cisco layoffs are becoming more frequent. See how this indicates the company’s shift toward AI and cybersecurity, and what’s next for its workforce.
If you’re Googling “Cisco layoffs,” you’re usually looking for two things at once. It is about what the latest cuts are and why Cisco keeps restructuring even while talking about AI-driven demand.
The clearest picture comes from combining Cisco’s own filings for the global “plan” level with WARN notices for location-specific headcounts and effective dates.
Below is an updated breakdown of what’s confirmed with an analysis of the strategy behind these job cuts.
Latest Update on Cisco Layoffs
The most recent publicly documented Cisco job cuts with explicit headcount and location details remain the Bay Area WARN-related reductions effective October 13, 2025 of 221 roles total, including 157 in Milpitas (Santa Clara County) and 64 in San Francisco.
That same split appears in California’s EDD WARN report file covering 07/01/2025 to 02/25/2026 by processed date; listing Cisco Systems, Inc. notices for 157 (Milpitas) and 64 (San Francisco), effective 10/13/2025.
On the corporate restructuring side, Cisco’s Q2 FY2026 10-Q states that the restructuring plan it announced in fiscal 2025 was completed in Q2 FY2026, with cumulative charges of $927 million.
Why Is Cisco Laying Off Employees?
Cisco’s layoffs are best understood as part of an ongoing “shape-shift” in how the company operates. It moves away from slower-growth segments and toward areas Cisco expects to grow faster over the next cycle.
1) Cisco Is Reallocating Resources Toward AI-Era Networking, Security, and Software
In Cisco’s own language, its restructuring plans have been positioned as a way to realign the organization and enable further investment in key priorities. In February 2024, Cisco described its plan as a realignment to invest in priority areas.
When Cisco announced its second major 2024 plan (August 2024), it again framed the move as investing in “key growth opportunities” while driving efficiencies.
This “reallocation” framing matters: it’s not only about reducing costs. It is also about moving budget and headcount toward the products Cisco believes will define its next wave of growth.
2) The Company Has Emphasized “Efficiency” Alongside Investment
Even in strong demand environments, Cisco, like most large tech firms, still manages margins and operating leverage. Reuters reported that in early 2026, Cisco faced margin pressure tied to rising memory chip prices amid AI infrastructure demand, even while raising its revenue forecast and describing strong demand for data center networking used in AI.
In other words: growth doesn’t automatically mean stable headcount. Companies often “fund the future” such as new R&D, acquisitions, product bets by simplifying teams elsewhere.
3) Cisco Reorganized Leadership and Product Groups to Move Faster
A major element of the August 2024 restructuring coverage wasn’t just “job cuts,” but an organisational redesign. NetworkWorld reported Cisco’s move to combine networking, security, and collaboration groups into one unit led by Jeetu Patel, with commentary tied to accelerating focus in AI networking and security.
This is a common reason layoffs show up alongside restructuring. When reporting lines and product groups change, roles are often consolidated or eliminated even if overall strategic investment continues.
4) Cisco’s Leadership Described the Move as Reallocation Rather Than Pure Cost Cutting
Cisco’s CFO described the restructuring emphasis as more about reallocating than simply chasing cost savings, according to CFO Dive’s reporting of the earnings call.
Summary on Key Events of Cisco Layoffs
Here is a concise overview of key Cisco layoffs events, including dates, affected workforce percentages, and locations.
Date
Event
Impact
Details
Feb 14, 2024
Cisco announces first restructuring plan
~5% of global workforce (~4,000 jobs)
Estimated pre-tax charges of ~$800 million.
April 2024
Bay Area WARN reporting for first plan
~729 roles
San Jose, Milpitas, San Francisco affected.
Aug 14, 2024
Cisco announces second restructuring plan
~7% of global workforce (~6,000 jobs)
Estimated pre-tax charges up to $1 billion.
Nov 2024
Bay Area WARN reporting for second plan
~842 roles
San Jose, Milpitas, San Francisco impacted.
Aug 2025
Additional Bay Area WARN reporting
~221 roles
Milpitas and San Francisco cuts (effective Oct 13, 2025).
Nov 2025
Cisco Israel layoffs
Dozens of roles
Mostly in Netanya development center.
What Cisco’s Filings Reveal
In Cisco’s Q2 FY2026 10-Q, the company states:
It incurred $36 million of restructuring charges in Q2 FY2026 and $183 million in the first six months of fiscal 2026, and
It incurred cumulative charges of $927 million related to the fiscal 2025 restructuring plan and completed the plan in Q2 FY2026.
This indicates that Cisco’s Fiscal 2025 restructuring plan was not an open-ended process. The company has provided concrete details on the charges incurred and reported its completion in Q2 FY2026, giving clarity on the full financial impact and the timeline.
How to Interpret WARN Numbers vs “Cisco Layoffs” Headlines
There is often confusion between the global restructuring percentage and the local WARN figures. Cisco’s filings provide details on the global plan, including the total size and cost of the restructuring.
Here are the details:
Cisco filings like earnings releases, 8-Ks, and 10-Qs tell you the global plan. It shows big the restructuring is meant to be and what it costs.
WARN notices tell you site-specific impacts in places where WARN applies and thresholds are met. They can be incredibly detailed, but they are not a full global census of layoffs.
California’s EDD notes that WARN reports are published on a regular schedule (twice weekly except holidays), which is why they’re useful for tracking location-specific changes over time.
Is Cisco Still Doing Layoffs in 2026?
Based on the sources above, here’s the most accurate way to frame it:
Cisco’s Q2 FY2026 10-Q states the fiscal 2025 restructuring plan was completed in Q2 FY2026.
The most recent California WARN entries for Cisco in the EDD WARN report file covering 07/01/25 to 02/25/2026 reflect the Oct 13, 2025 Bay Area cuts (157 Milpitas + 64 San Francisco).
That does not prove there are zero changes elsewhere. Smaller reductions can occur without triggering WARN thresholds or without appearing in California data. So the safest phrasing is: no newer mass-layoff event with comparable public documentation appears in these specific sources as of March 3, 2026.
What to Watch Next if You’re Tracking Cisco Layoffs
To stay updated on Cisco layoffs, keep an eye on the following sources:
Cisco Investor Relations + SEC filings New restructuring plans, changes in estimated charges, or plan completion updates typically show up in official filings and earnings materials.
California (and other states’) WARN reporting WARN data is one of the fastest ways to confirm location-specific cuts when they meet notice requirements.
Earnings context tied to AI and margins Even without new layoff announcements, signals like margin pressure, pricing actions, and AI infrastructure forecasts help explain why companies keep reorganizing. Reuters reported Cisco’s raised FY2026 revenue forecast and AI infrastructure expectations alongside cost pressures in early 2026.
FAQs
How many people did Cisco lay off?
Cisco laid off ~5% in February 2024 and ~7% in August 2024, with cuts totaling over 4,000 jobs globally.
What were the latest Cisco layoffs?
The latest layoffs were in the Bay Area, affecting 221 roles (157 in Milpitas and 64 in San Francisco) effective October 13, 2025.
Why would Cisco do layoffs while growing AI-related business?
Cisco’s layoffs are part of a restructuring to focus on high-growth areas like AI, cybersecurity, and software, while also managing efficiency and costs.
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