US social media company Snap, which owns the Snapchat platform, announced on Wednesday that it is reducing its global headcount by about 16% of full-time employees and closing more than 300 open positions as part of what it described as a strategic reprioritization aimed at streamlining operations and refocusing resources on higher-priority initiatives.
In a note to employees attached to the company’s Form 8-K filing, CEO Evan Spiegel said the changes will affect about 1,000 team members and called the move “an incredibly difficult decision,” adding that he is “deeply sorry” to colleagues leaving the company.
Spiegel said Snap had spent the past several months reviewing the work needed to best serve its community and partners and had made “tough choices” to prioritize investments most likely to create long-term value.
He said the changes are expected to reduce Snap’s annualized cost base by more than $500 million by the second half of 2026, helping establish a clearer path to net-income profitability.
The company said the workforce reduction is intended to further streamline operations and reallocate resources to its highest-priority initiatives, while also leveraging greater operational efficiencies. Snap expects to incur pre-tax charges of $95 million to $130 million, primarily for severance, contract termination costs, and other impairment charges, with the majority of those costs expected in the second quarter of 2026.
Spiegel also linked the restructuring to advances in artificial intelligence, saying AI is enabling teams to reduce repetitive work, increase velocity, and better support Snap’s community, partners, and advertisers.
He said smaller teams were already using AI tools to make progress across initiatives, including Snapchat+, ad platform performance, and Snap Lite infrastructure efficiency.
Snap said affected US-based employees will receive four months of severance, health care coverage, equity vesting, and career transition support, while employees outside the US will go through local processes with support aligned to local norms.