Microsoft has spent 51 years building a reputation as the place tech careers go to stay, and that reputation just shifted. The company confirmed Thursday that it will offer voluntary buyouts to roughly 7% of its US workforce - the first program of its kind in Microsoft's history.
It comes as Microsoft pours tens of billions into AI infrastructure and reshapes its payroll to match.
Who Qualifies And What They Get
The program is open to US workers at the senior director level and below whose age combined with years of service adds up to 70 or more. That formula lets a 40-year-old with 30 years at Microsoft qualify, along with a 55-year-old with 15 years on the job.
Microsoft says about 7% of its 125,000 US employees - roughly 8,750 people - fit the bill. The package leans generous.
Eligible employees who opt in keep healthcare coverage, which matters most for anyone not yet at Medicare age. And there are no rules blocking them from taking future jobs at other tech firms.
That's unusual in Big Tech, where non-compete clauses often follow senior staff out the door. Specific financial terms have not been disclosed.
Eligible employees and their managers get the full details May 7, with the actual exits taking effect in Microsoft's fiscal fourth quarter, which runs through June 30.
The AI Math Driving The Move
Microsoft isn't framing this as cost-cutting, but the dollars tell a clearer story. The company is on pace to spend more than $80 billion on AI infrastructure this fiscal year, and that capital has to come from somewhere on the income statement.
Voluntary retirement gives Microsoft a softer way to rebalance its workforce than layoffs do. Employees who take the offer leave on their own terms with benefits intact, which lowers the morale hit and the PR damage a traditional round of cuts would bring.
At the same time, Microsoft gets to free up payroll to reinvest in AI teams, cloud engineering, and data center operations. The bigger picture: This is the kind of move companies make when they're trying to shift weight across the balance sheet without signaling distress.
Microsoft isn't shrinking. It's rearranging.
What To Watch
Meta announced a 10% workforce cut the same day, and its reasoning rhymes with Microsoft's. Both companies are pouring record amounts into AI while trimming headcount in the parts of the business that don't serve that push.
For investors, the throughline is clear: the biggest names in tech are moving money from people to machines at the same time. The open question is how quickly uptake lands.
If 8,750 Microsoft employees accept, the payroll impact would be meaningful. If only a fraction does, Microsoft may need a second, less voluntary round to hit its spending goals.
May 7 starts the clock.
