
Developer Platform GitLab has confirmed it will lay off roughly 350 employees and pull out of operations in 22 countries, a restructuring move the company tied directly to its push into AI agent driven software development.
The lay-off represents about 14% of GitLab’s full-time workforce. This news was disclosed alongside the company’s first quarter fiscal 2027 earnings, even as the business reported stronger revenue growth and improved profit guidance.
Why GitLab Says This Isn’t a Cost-Cutting Drive
CEO Bill Staples has repeatedly framed the plan as something other than a simple savings exercise. He has told investors that agentic workloads, software agents operating autonomously and committing code at machine scale, are putting pressure on developer infrastructure that was never built for that kind of volume. “Agents work at machine scale, and they’re pushing competitors to the brink,” Staples said.
And so, rebuilding Git in the age of AI agents remains the goal for the company. Staples said the company began what he called a generational rebuild this quarter that is meant to support the scale and features needed for massive growth.
GitLab has also partnered with an outside AI lab to redesign its infrastructure for AI workloads, including building APIs designed specifically for agents to store and retrieve context, including code. The company is also building orchestration tools meant to coordinate work between human developers and AI agents.
While the exit from 22 countries will shrink GitLab’s international footprint by about 37, the company says it will continue serving customers in those markets through partners. GitLab also expects to incur $30 million to $35 million in restructuring charges as part of the process.
What It Signals for the Wider Industry
Staples has pointed out that the strain is not unique to GitLab, noting that competitor GitHub has also struggled with uptime issues tied to a flood of AI generated submissions. “The agentic era affords GitLab the largest opportunity in our history as a company,” Staples wrote in a letter to customers and investors.
GitLab’s stock rose in after hours trading following the announcement, pushing its market value above $5 billion.
For now, GitLab is betting that a smaller, more focused workforce, paired with infrastructure built for AI agents rather than humans alone, will carry the company further than a larger team spread across dozens of countries. Whether that bet pays off will likely shape how other software companies handle the same AI pressure in the months ahead.