In a major organizational shift, Dell Technologies has confirmed that its global workforce has declined by approximately 11,000 employees over the past fiscal year. According to the company’s latest annual report, Dell’s total headcount now stands at roughly 97,000, down from 108,000 in January 2025.
While the reduction is significant—representing about 10% of its staff—the company has characterized the decline as a result of “disciplined cost management” rather than a single, massive layoff event.
1. Three Years of “Rightsizing”
The 11,000 jobs lost in fiscal 2026 are part of a multi-year trend of contraction at the PC giant. Since 2023, Dell has reduced its total workforce by a staggering 27%.
| Fiscal Year | Total Headcount | Net Reduction |
| FY 2023 | 133,000 | — |
| FY 2024 | 120,000 | 13,000 |
| FY 2025 | 108,000 | 12,000 |
| FY 2026 | 97,000 | 11,000 |
This steady decline has been driven by a combination of limited external hiring, internal reorganizations, and “natural attrition” through stricter policies.
2. The Shift to “AI-First” Infrastructure
The job cuts coincide with Dell’s aggressive pivot toward the AI server market. The company is effectively reallocating capital away from its traditional PC and sales operations toward high-growth computing platforms.
- Project Maverick: Internally, Dell is reportedly executing “Project Maverick,” a massive systems overhaul aimed at creating an AI-first operating model.
- AI Revenue Surge: The strategy appears to be paying off for shareholders; Dell reported record revenue of $113.5 billion for FY26, with revenue from AI-optimized servers doubling to over $25 billion.
- One Dell Way: A January 2026 memo detailed “One Dell Way,” a push to standardize and automate internal processes across the company’s global operations.
3. Impact on Sales and Remote Work
The “silent” nature of the 11,000 cuts has been felt acutely by current staff, particularly in the sales and support divisions.
- Sales Restructuring: Reports indicate that key customer acquisition teams were heavily hit as Dell moves toward more automated, digital-first sales channels.
- Return-to-Office (RTO) Mandate: Employees have described a mandatory five-day RTO policy implemented earlier this year as a “soft layoff” tool, intended to encourage voluntary departures without the high cost of severance.
- Lower Severance Costs: Dell spent $569 million on severance in FY26, down from $693 million the year prior, suggesting a more “measured” and gradual approach to downsizing.
4. Market and Analyst Reaction
Despite the human cost, Wall Street has rewarded Dell’s efficiency drive. The company’s stock has risen more than 24% year-to-date, trading near $175 as of April 2026.
- The Efficiency Moat: Analysts at Barchart and Reuters noted that Dell is successfully “hollowing out” its legacy bureaucracy to fund the capital-intensive race for AI dominance.
- Dividend Boost: Bolstered by the cost savings, Dell recently increased its cash dividend by 20% and added $10 billion to its share repurchase program.
5. Part of the “Tech 2026” Trend
Dell’s 11,000 cuts contribute to a broader wave of tech industry layoffs in early 2026.
- Q1 Totals: Over 52,000 tech jobs were cut in the first quarter of 2026 globally.
- The AI Displacement: Roughly 25% of all tech layoffs this year have been directly attributed to AI-driven automation and the strategic shift toward AI infrastructure.
“Dell’s story is the tech industry’s story in 2026,” noted one market observer. “Record profits, record revenue, and a 10% smaller workforce. It’s an AI-driven trade-off.”