TL;DR:
Coinbase announced a 14% workforce reduction, equivalent to approximately 660 employees out of the more than 4,700 who make up the company. CEO Brian Armstrong communicated the decision through an internal email addressed to the entire team and replicated it on his X account, where he explained the reasons behind the decision.
Armstrong identified two factors that triggered the adjustment. The first is market conditions: although the company is well capitalized and has diverse revenue streams, the current bearish environment demands a restructuring of its cost structure. “We need to adjust our cost structure now to come out of this period leaner, faster and more efficient for our next phase of growth,” he wrote in the statement.
This is an email I sent earlier today to all employees at Coinbase:
Team,
Today I’ve made the difficult decision to reduce the size of Coinbase by ~14%. I want to walk you through why we're doing this now, what it means for those affected, and how this positions us for the…
— Brian Armstrong (@brian_armstrong) May 5, 2026
The second force is artificial intelligence. Armstrong noted that over the past year he observed how engineering teams use AI tools to complete in days what used to take entire groups weeks. According to the CEO, non-technical teams are now generating production code and multiple workflows are being automated. This led Coinbase to rethink not only its headcount, but its complete operating model.
The plan involves flattening the organizational structure to a maximum of five layers below the CEO and COO, eliminating pure management roles and concentrating work in smaller teams with native artificial intelligence orientation. Armstrong described this model as “an intelligence with humans.”

Affected Coinbase employees in the United States will receive a minimum of 16 weeks of base salary, plus two additional weeks for each year worked, their next equity vesting and six months of COBRA coverage. Employees on work visas will receive additional support for their transition.
Coinbase is not the only crypto firm to resort to a wave of layoffs so far this year. Algorand cut 25% of its staff in March, Gemini eliminated nearly 30% of its employees around mid-month and Crypto.com announced a 12% reduction in its workforce, around 180 positions.