Oracle Cuts 500 More Jobs In Romania As AI-Driven Restructuring Continues To Reshape Its Global Workforce

Oracle’s restructuring effort has crossed into European operations. Oracle Romania has launched a new restructuring process and will lay off another 500 employees, according to the latest data from layoff tracking platform TrueUp, with the announcement made on June 25, 2026. The Romania cuts are the latest chapter in what has become one of the most extensive workforce reductions in enterprise technology history and they arrive just days after Oracle disclosed in its annual regulatory filing that it has shed 21,000 jobs globally in the past twelve months alone.

Oracle shed 21,000 jobs, almost 13% of its workforce, in the past year as tech giants carry out sweeping layoffs as a result of AI. The company’s total workforce stands at 141,000 full-time employees as of May 2026, down from 162,000 at the same time the previous year. “The adoption and deployment of AI technologies across our operations have resulted, and may continue to result, in reductions to our workforce,” Oracle said in the filing. The company spent $1.8 billion on restructuring costs, including severance payments and other exit costs, a jump from the $374 million it spent on restructuring the previous year.

“Oracle shed 21,000 jobs — almost 13% of its workforce — in the past year as the company deploys AI across its operations. The company spent $1.8 billion on restructuring costs in FY26, up from $374 million the previous year.”~CNBC (@CNBC)

Cerner Legacy Teams Suffer the Most in the Healthcare Division:

While the Romania announcement covers a broad range of functions, the most significant departmental impact across Oracle’s global restructuring has fallen on its healthcare division. Two divisions absorbed the worst of the broader cuts. Revenue and Health Sciences, the unit that houses what used to be Cerner, lost an estimated 30% of its headcount. SaaS and Virtual Operations Services took similar cuts. In Kansas City alone, where Cerner’s legacy campus sits, Healthcare IT News confirmed 539 layoffs through WARN Act filings, with effective dates of May 26 and June 1.

The absence of a clear leader is also telling. Suhas Uliyar, SVP of Product Management for Clinical and Healthcare AI, and Sanga Viswanathan, EVP of Health, have both quit. Five executives who were called in to fix the Cerner integration have left. Oracle paid $28 billion for Cerner in 2022, with the expectation that the acquisition will change the company’s healthcare ambitions. The scope of the layoffs inside that segment raises serious doubts about Oracle Health’s future strategic orientation.

The talent coming out of this isn’t entry-level help desk. These are mid-career and senior professionals who built and maintained clinical IT infrastructure at enterprise scale. Healthcare organisations running Cerner Millennium and other Oracle Health platforms are watching the situation closely, given that the people being let go are often the same individuals who managed their implementations and supported their clinical systems.

“Oracle Health layoffs confirmed via WARN Act filings in Kansas City — 539 jobs cut with effective dates of May 26 and June 1. Senior leadership including Suhas Uliyar SVP Clinical AI and Sanga Viswanathan EVP Health have also departed the company.”~Healthcare IT News

Database Admins, Legacy Teams, And Sales: The Departments AI Is Replacing

Across Oracle’s global operations, the pattern of cuts has been consistent enough to reveal a structural logic. Teams working on older legacy systems saw more cuts. Roles related to cloud products were mostly safer. Some sales teams were reduced, especially in regions with lower performance or slower growth. There were major HR department cuts and reductions in internal support roles due to automation and team consolidation.

Database administrators have been the most vulnerable. AI bots currently undertake the majority of DBAs’ manual maintenance, monitoring, and incident response activities. Previously, this was one of Oracle’s largest departments. One of the most apparent ironies of Oracle’s AI shift is the automation of database operations, which was once its primary expertise.

Oracle leads all companies in total tech layoffs in 2026, with 25,254 cuts, followed by Amazon at 16,000 and Block at 4,000, according to third-party data compiled by RationalFX. A total of 78,557 tech layoffs have been recorded globally so far in 2026, with US companies accounting for roughly 77% of that total.

On severance, Oracle offered four weeks of base salary plus one additional week per year of tenure, capped at 26 weeks. For senior employees who have spent a decade or more at the company, that cap creates a meaningful ceiling on what they receive relative to what comparable severance packages at peer companies have offered.

“Oracle workforce shrinks by 21,000 employees amid AI adoption — the largest tech layoff of 2026 so far. Persistent rumours suggest another round targeting managers is planned for end of calendar year, with planning expected to begin in September.”~The Layoff

$50 Billion AI Investment Running In Parallel And More Cuts Potentially Ahead:

The Romania announcement does not appear to be the end of Oracle’s restructuring cycle. There are persistent rumours circulating that another round of layoffs is planned for the end of the calendar year, with planning expected to begin in September. According to these reports, managers will be the primary target this time around.

Oracle has tied the restructuring to a larger push to reallocate resources toward AI infrastructure and data center development. The corporation has allocated around $50 billion in capital expenditures for fiscal 2026, with a large part going into AI infrastructure. The jobs being lost are essentially being transformed into compute capacity, with human labor being replaced by AI systems and the physical infrastructure that supports them.

Enterprise software companies across the industry are evaluating the same automation capabilities. If AI systems can handle 94% of database issues autonomously and compress six-week implementation projects into six hours, the business case for maintaining large technical operations teams disappears. The Oracle layoffs reflect a structural shift: AI is moving into experienced, mid-to-senior technical roles in a way that previous waves of automation never reached. The Romania announcement of 500 more jobs is, in that context, less a standalone headline and more the latest data point in a transformation that is far from finished.

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