Coinbase Lays Off 14% of Staff as CEO Says AI Is Reshaping Work
The artificial intelligence wave is no longer just disrupting startups. It is now directly reshaping some of the biggest companies in crypto and technology.
Coinbase announced it is reducing its workforce by approximately 14%, impacting around 700 employees, as CEO Brian Armstrong says the company is restructuring itself around an “AI-native” future.
The move places Coinbase alongside companies like Snap Inc., Block, Inc., and Atlassian, all of which have recently pointed to AI-driven efficiency gains as a reason for reducing headcount.
In a public letter shared on X, Armstrong described the layoffs as a strategic reset designed to make Coinbase “leaner, faster, and more efficient” during a volatile period for the cryptocurrency industry.
At the end of 2025, Coinbase employed 4,951 people, meaning the cuts affect roughly one out of every seven employees.
AI Is Replacing Traditional Team Structures
What makes this announcement different from many previous tech layoffs is how openly Coinbase tied the cuts to artificial intelligence.
According to Armstrong, AI tools are dramatically increasing productivity inside the company.
“Over the past year, I’ve watched engineers use AI to ship in days what used to take a team weeks.”
He also said non-technical teams are now building production-level code and automating workflows that once required significantly larger departments.
That shift is pushing Coinbase toward a radically different organizational structure.
The company says it plans to:
- Flatten management layers to a maximum of five below the CEO and COO
- Increase the number of direct reports leaders manage
- Eliminate “pure managers”
- Build smaller, highly specialized AI-driven teams
- Experiment with “one person teams” where a single employee may handle engineering, design, and product responsibilities simultaneously
Armstrong described the future of Coinbase as an “intelligence with humans around the edge aligning it,” a statement that highlights just how aggressively AI is changing Silicon Valley thinking.
Crypto Volatility Still Playing a Role
While AI was a major focus of the letter, Armstrong also acknowledged the continued volatility of the cryptocurrency market.
He said Coinbase remains financially strong and believes crypto adoption is still accelerating thanks to areas like:
- Stablecoins
- Prediction markets
- Tokenization
- Blockchain-based financial systems
However, he admitted the company still experiences dramatic quarter-to-quarter swings, forcing leadership to tighten costs before the next growth phase.
Despite the layoffs, investors appeared optimistic. Coinbase shares rose roughly 4% in premarket trading following the announcement.
The Rise of the “AI-Native” Company
The Coinbase announcement reflects a broader shift happening across corporate America.
For years, executives talked about AI as a tool that would “assist” workers. Now, companies are increasingly talking about restructuring entire organizations around AI productivity.
That means:
- Smaller teams
- Faster development cycles
- Fewer middle managers
- More automation
- Higher expectations for individual employees
In many ways, Coinbase’s letter may become one of the defining corporate memos of the AI era because it openly says what many executives have quietly been thinking: AI allows companies to operate with fewer people.
The idea of “one person teams” would have sounded unrealistic just two years ago. Today, companies are actively testing it.
Employees Receiving Severance Packages
Armstrong acknowledged the emotional impact of the layoffs and thanked affected employees for helping build Coinbase into one of the world’s largest crypto platforms.
Impacted U.S. employees will receive:
- A minimum of 16 weeks base pay
- An additional 2 weeks for every year worked
- Their next equity vest
- Six months of COBRA coverage
Employees outside the United States will receive localized support packages based on regional laws and consultation requirements.
A Glimpse Into the Future of Work
Whether people agree with the decision or not, the Coinbase layoffs may represent a major turning point in how technology companies operate moving forward.
The conversation is no longer about whether AI will impact jobs.
It already is.
Companies are now openly redesigning themselves around artificial intelligence, automation, and ultra-lean teams. For workers across technology, finance, media, and even creative industries, the message is becoming impossible to ignore:
Adapt to AI — or risk being replaced by those who do.