Microsoft Offers First-Ever Buyouts to 8,750 US Employees for AI Focus[1][2][4]

Published
Score
14

Why it matters

Microsoft offered voluntary buyouts to approximately 8,750 US employees on April 23, 2026—roughly 7 percent of its domestic workforce—marking the company's largest severance program in five decades. The packages target employees at senior director level and below who meet the "rule of 70" (age plus years of service equaling 70 or more), with certain sales and executive roles excluded. Chief People Officer Amy Coleman outlined the offer in an internal memo, positioning it as a one-time retirement flexibility measure while the company leaves approximately 6,000 positions unfilled.

The buyout announcement accompanied a compensation restructuring that decouples stock awards from cash bonuses, giving managers discretion to mix equity and cash when rewarding top performers. Microsoft intends to redirect the savings toward artificial intelligence investments and new hires in that sector. The specifics of individual package valuations and the formal application process have not been disclosed.

For employment counsel, this signals Microsoft's strategic pivot toward AI infrastructure at the expense of headcount in other areas. The move mirrors Meta's simultaneous announcement of 8,000 layoffs and 6,000 unfilled roles for similar purposes. Attorneys should monitor whether other tech firms follow suit and watch for potential litigation around eligibility determinations, particularly regarding the rule of 70 calculation and the exclusion of sales incentive plan participants. The compensation restructuring may also trigger questions about equity award practices and bonus calculations for remaining staff.

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