Key Takeaways
- Dell reduced headcount by about 10% in a year, according to its latest federal filing.
- The tech giant cut costs through “employee reorganizations” and “limitation of external hiring.”
- By limiting hiring, the company was able to let natural attrition do more of the work and not hire replacements for employees who left voluntarily.
Dell has methodically reduced its headcount by about 10% over the past year, relying on hiring freezes and reorganizations rather than mass layoffs.
In its latest federal filing, published this week and viewed by Business Insider, Dell reported that it had about 97,000 employees as of January 31. The headcount indicates an 11,000-person decrease in the company’s workforce from 2025.
Dell now has 36,000 fewer employees than it did in February 2023, marking a nearly 30% reduction over three years. Dell has not had a major layoff announcement since August 2024, when it downsized by 12,500 employees.
The tech giant indicated in the filing that it had cut costs this past year through “employee reorganizations, limitation of external hiring and other actions to align our investments with our announced strategic and customer priorities.”
“We are always assessing our business to remain competitive and ensure we are set up to deliver the best innovation, value, and service to our customers and partners,” Dell said in a statement to Business Insider.
How Dell shrunk headcount
Dell repeatedly highlighted “restriction on external hiring” as a core cost-cutting strategy in the filing. By limiting hiring, the company was able to let natural attrition do more of the work and not hire replacements for employees who left voluntarily, shrinking overall headcount.
Dell also implemented a five-day return-to-the-office policy last year, ordering all employees back to the office starting in March 2025. The policy resulted in attrition, as many workers looked elsewhere for more flexible work structures instead of staying at the tech giant — and the company did not replace those workers.
The federal filing also acknowledged that the company had conducted “employee reorganizations” or reshuffles to consolidate roles and remove layers that cut roles. Dell did not, however, conduct a round of mass layoffs in 2025.
Mass layoffs have surged in recent years. In 2026 alone, Amazon laid off 16,000 workers, Jack Dorsey’s Block reduced its workforce by 40% and software startup Atlassian cut the size of its team by 10%.
CEOs are pointing to AI as the main culprit for these layoffs. For example, Dorsey wrote in a letter to shareholders that “intelligence tools have changed what it means to build and run a company… A significantly smaller team, using the tools we’re building, can do more and do it better.”
Layoffs in Silicon Valley don’t seem to be slowing down anytime soon — Meta is reportedly planning to cut 20% of its workforce, or about 16,000 jobs, this year to offset AI expenses.
Dell isn’t making a big show of job cuts, but it is still quietly reshaping itself to get ready for an AI-powered future. The company is not overtly blaming AI for shrinking its workforce, and is not downsizing teams due to AI. However, in the federal filing, Dell wrote that it was committed to “cost management in coordination with our ongoing business modernization initiatives.”
Inside the company, Dell is gearing up to streamline how it works. In May, the company is preparing to introduce a single enterprise platform called One Dell Way to consolidate workflows. In a January memo, Dell leaders described the systems overhaul as the “biggest transformation in company history.”
Key Takeaways
- Dell reduced headcount by about 10% in a year, according to its latest federal filing.
- The tech giant cut costs through “employee reorganizations” and “limitation of external hiring.”
- By limiting hiring, the company was able to let natural attrition do more of the work and not hire replacements for employees who left voluntarily.
Dell has methodically reduced its headcount by about 10% over the past year, relying on hiring freezes and reorganizations rather than mass layoffs.
In its latest federal filing, published this week and viewed by Business Insider, Dell reported that it had about 97,000 employees as of January 31. The headcount indicates an 11,000-person decrease in the company’s workforce from 2025.
Dell now has 36,000 fewer employees than it did in February 2023, marking a nearly 30% reduction over three years. Dell has not had a major layoff announcement since August 2024, when it downsized by 12,500 employees.