Coinbase is making one of its biggest workforce cuts yet, as the crypto exchange leans into AI and braces for a shaky market.
The crypto exchange said it will lay off about 14% of its global workforce, affecting roughly 700 employees, as it responds to weaker trading conditions and a broader shift toward AI-driven work. CEO Brian Armstrong framed the restructuring as part of an effort to make Coinbase “lean, fast, and AI-native.”
The cuts put Coinbase in line with a growing tech-industry pattern: fewer management layers, smaller teams, and a bet that AI tools can replace some of the coordination and headcount that companies once considered necessary.
Why the layoffs are happening now
Armstrong pointed to two major pressures shaping the decision. First is the crypto market itself, which remains volatile. Trading activity has slowed since earlier peaks, leaving exchanges like Coinbase with reduced transaction-fee revenue.
Second is a faster, more disruptive change: artificial intelligence. Armstrong said AI tools are now allowing both technical and non-technical staff to complete work faster, including writing and shipping code that previously required larger teams. He described this shift as an “inflection point” for how the company operates.
In his words, Coinbase must “adjust early and deliberately” to stay competitive in what he called the next phase of growth.
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A leaner company built around AI
Beyond job cuts, Coinbase is changing how teams are structured.
The company plans to flatten its management system to no more than five layers below top leadership. Managers will also take on more direct responsibility, often acting as what Armstrong calls “player-coaches,” both leading and contributing to hands-on work.
Coinbase also wants to build smaller, AI-focused teams. In some cases, these could be extremely small “pods,” even as small as one person working with AI tools and automated systems. The goal, according to Armstrong, is to create teams that move faster with fewer coordination delays and greater use of AI systems.
Employees impacted by the layoffs will receive direct notification and access to transition support. In the United States, Coinbase says departing staff will receive at least 16 weeks of base pay, additional pay based on years of service, health coverage support, and their next equity vesting. Similar packages will apply in other regions, subject to local laws.
Market reaction and industry context
Coinbase shares dipped slightly following the announcement, as investors weighed cost cuts against weak market conditions. Analysts say the move reflects broader pressure across the crypto sector, where trading volumes have fallen, and sentiment remains cautious. The company expects the restructuring to be completed by the second quarter of 2026.
Other tech firms, including Block and Meta, have also recently cut jobs while increasing investment in AI systems and automation tools. Analysts say this reflects a wider shift in Silicon Valley, where companies are redesigning teams to be smaller but more productive with AI assistance.
For more on how AI is reshaping tech headcount, see TechRepublic’s coverage of Amazon’s latest workforce cuts.