The Atlassian layoffs hit on the 11th of March 2026 and 1,600 people lost their jobs that day. CEO Mike Cannon-Brookes sent a memo to every staff member. “We are doing this to self-fund further investment in AI and enterprise sales, while strengthening our financial profile,” he wrote. 

Then, each employee received an email within 20 minutes telling them whether they still had a job. Cannon-Brookes called it the right decision for Atlassian’s long-term health but not everyone agreed.

What the Atlassian Layoffs Actually Look Like

Starting with the numbers, more than 900 of the 1,600 roles cut were in research and development. 

To put it simply, North America lost 640 jobs, Australia lost 480, and India lost 250. The total restructuring bill landed between $225 million and $236 million, split between severance costs and office space reductions. 

Additionally, CTO Rajeev Rajan announced he would leave on March 31 after nearly four years in the role. Two executives have already been assigned to take on his responsibilities. 

The AI Argument and Its Contradictions

Even so, Cannon-Brookes was careful about how he framed the reasoning. “Our approach is not ‘AI replaces people’. But it would be disingenuous to pretend AI doesn’t change the mix of skills we need or the number of roles required in certain areas,” he told staff.

However, that statement directly contradicts what he said five months prior. In October 2025, Cannon-Brookes appeared on the 20VC podcast and argued that Atlassian would employ more engineers in five years, not fewer. 

Furthermore, he pledged to bring on more graduates in 2025 and 2026 to fill R&D teams. Those were the exact teams cut in March 2026. 

Moreover, Atlassian’s Rovo AI assistant had already passed five million monthly active users before a single person was let go. The AI pivot was already working. The cuts came anyway.

The Real Financial Pressures Behind the Atlassian Layoffs

Check their finances and it all begins to make sense. Atlassian has been unprofitable every fiscal year going back to 2017. Its stock is down 84% from its 2021 peak. 

Then, things got worse earlier in the year. Atlassian lost more than half its value because investors feared that AI tools like Anthropic’s Claude Cowork would make conventional software products like Jira useless. 

Notably, Atlassian’s stock rose 2% in after-hours trading the moment the layoffs were announced. This means the cuts were made to reassure investors. 

What This Means Going Forward

Right now, Atlassian has one job to do. They must prove that cutting 1,600 people actually produces better AI products. Rovo already serves 5 million monthly users, but investors need to see that usage translate into larger paid commitments from customers. That’s the only thing that can justify this decision. 

Atlassian said the cuts will be fully complete by the end of June 2026. After that, there are no more restructuring moves to hide behind. The company will either ship better AI products faster, or things will remain the same. 

Additionally, other companies like Oracle, WiseTech Global, and Pinterest have all made similar bets, cutting staff to redirect money into AI.

Eventually, some of these bets will pay off and some will not. But for Atlassian, they have to spend the rest of the year proving what category they fall into. 

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