Amazon’s sweeping corporate layoffs have taken a major toll on New York City. According to filings from the New York State Department of Labor, the company has eliminated 660 positions across nine office locations in Manhattan, part of a broader corporate downsizing initiative that took effect in late October.
The layoffs impacted corporate and tech teams rather than warehouse or delivery workers, the company confirmed. The move follows a global restructuring effort designed to simplify Amazon’s internal hierarchy, reduce bureaucracy, and redirect investment toward high-growth areas like cloud computing and artificial intelligence.
Part of a Global Reorganization
The job cuts come as part of a major restructuring plan announced by Beth Galetti, Amazon’s Senior Vice President of People Experience and Technology. In a late-October blog post, Galetti revealed that roughly 14,000 corporate roles would be phased out worldwide.
Galetti explained that Amazon is “reducing bureaucracy, removing layers, and shifting resources to invest in our biggest bets and what matters most to our customers’ current and future needs.” The overhaul reflects Amazon’s drive to become leaner and more adaptable as it invests heavily in automation and AI innovation.
Two Manhattan Offices Take the Hardest Hit
According to DOL filings cited by the New York Post, most of the job losses in New York were concentrated in two key locations:
- 233 employees were laid off at Amazon’s office at 450 West 33rd Street, near Hudson Yards.
- 182 roles were eliminated at 424 Fifth Avenue, the historic Lord & Taylor building, which Amazon acquired for $1 billion in 2020 to establish its New York Tech Hub.
Combined, these two offices accounted for over half of the total corporate layoffs in the city.
The Fifth Avenue Tech Hub remains home to around 2,000 employees, serving as one of Amazon’s main technology centers on the East Coast. Despite the losses, Amazon confirmed that none of its offices are closing, describing the cuts as part of a “streamlining process” rather than a retreat from New York.
Layoffs Extend Across Several Manhattan Sites
The rest of the layoffs were distributed among multiple corporate offices, including:
- 91 positions at 410 Tenth Avenue
- 58 at 7 West 34th Street
- 41 at 330 West 34th Street
- 38 at 237 Park Avenue
- 9 at 315 Park Avenue South
- 7 at 215 Park Avenue South
- 1 at 6 West 35th Street
Each of these offices remains operational, signaling that the restructuring is aimed at reducing costs and redundancies rather than cutting entire divisions.
Tech Analysts Weigh In
The timing and scope of the layoffs have surprised some analysts, given the current demand for skilled tech professionals. Dan Ives, Senior Analyst at Wedbush Securities, noted that the layoffs in New York reflect broader corporate trends affecting Amazon’s technology workforce. He described the move as “a surprising decision,” considering the ongoing AI-driven talent race across the tech industry.
Amazon’s workforce reductions have raised questions about how the company intends to balance its push for AI innovation while cutting human resources that support those same goals.
A Strategic Shift Under CEO Andy Jassy
Since Andy Jassy succeeded Jeff Bezos as CEO in 2021, Amazon has undergone multiple rounds of restructuring to refocus its priorities after years of aggressive expansion. Jassy’s strategy centers on making the company more efficient and profitable, while channeling investment toward emerging technologies like artificial intelligence, AWS, and logistics automation.
Reports cited by Reuters suggest Amazon could ultimately eliminate up to 30,000 corporate roles globally—around 9% of its office-based workforce. If realized, this would mark one of the company’s largest workforce reductions to date.
Globally, Amazon employs about 1.55 million people, meaning the cuts primarily affect its white-collar divisions rather than front-line operations.
Preparing for the Next Phase
Industry analysts say the restructuring may reflect growing confidence in AI-driven efficiency gains, allowing Amazon to operate with fewer employees in certain administrative areas. Sky Canaves, an analyst with eMarketer, told reporters that these moves likely show “AI productivity improvements beginning to reshape Amazon’s corporate structure.”
Amazon’s leadership has signaled that this is just the beginning. More layoffs are reportedly expected in early 2026, after the holiday shopping season, as the company continues refining its workforce to adapt to technological transformation and shifting consumer behavior.




