Microsoft will absorb a $900 million charge in its current quarter to cover the cost of its newly announced voluntary retirement programme, the company disclosed in its earnings report Wednesday, as the Redmond-based tech giant reshapes its global workforce while simultaneously ramping up spending on artificial intelligence infrastructure to record levels.
The charge, split between $350 million in cost of revenue and $550 million in operating expenses, reflects the company’s internal estimate of what the programme will cost, including assumptions about how many eligible employees will choose to accept the offer. To put the figure in context, it is roughly equivalent to one day of revenue for Microsoft at its current pace. The company brought in $82.9 billion in its most recent quarter ended 31 March.
The voluntary retirement programme, announced last week, is open to US employees at the senior director level and below whose combined age and years of service total 70 or more. Of Microsoft’s approximately 125,000 US employees, the company has said roughly 7% are eligible, translating to around 8,750 people. Eligible employees are expected to receive full details on 7 May and will have 30 days to decide whether to accept. The programme includes a financial payout and extended healthcare coverage, though Microsoft has not yet disclosed the specific terms.
Microsoft said Wednesday that its total headcount declined year-over-year in the most recent quarter and will decline again in fiscal year 2027, which begins in July, without providing specific numbers. The company’s global workforce stood at 228,000 employees as of mid-2025, the most recent publicly available count. Chief Financial Officer Amy Hood said on the earnings conference call that the company is focused on “building high performing teams that operate with pace and agility.”
The workforce reduction is unfolding alongside a massive increase in capital spending. Microsoft plans to spend more than $40 billion on capital expenditures in the current quarter, a new record, directed primarily toward data centres and AI infrastructure as the company accelerates its bet on artificial intelligence.
The retirement programme has generated a range of reactions among employees and HR professionals on LinkedIn and other platforms. Some have praised it as a more humane alternative to traditional layoffs, arguing that giving long-tenured employees a choice is more respectful than a sudden termination. Others have raised concerns that Microsoft risks losing experienced engineers and leaders who built the systems the company still depends on. Some eligible employees have also pushed back on the framing of the offer itself, noting that being told they qualify for retirement while still in their late 40s does not feel like a benefit.



