Crypto.com laid off a significant chunk of its global workforce this week, and the timing makes it stranger than most layoff announcements – the company just posted a 15% revenue increase for Q1 2026.
This wasn’t a rescue operation. It was a deliberate structural choice, and AI is the reason behind it.
CEO Kris Marszalek put it bluntly: the company has hit a “tipping point” where AI agents now handle high-volume work in customer support, compliance, and coding more effectively than human teams. So the human teams got smaller. The company’s new backend reportedly automates up to 70% of routine KYC and AML checks, the kind of repetitive, rules-based compliance work that used to require large operations departments to run. When a system does that at scale without headcount, the staffing math changes fast.
The cuts didn’t come out of nowhere. They landed the day after Visa launched its Crypto Labs CLI tool on March 18, and Crypto.com has been actively positioning itself as the leading platform for what the industry is calling “agentic commerce” – essentially a world where AI bots trade, transact, and pay on behalf of users with no human input required at each step.
That future needs a different kind of team. Not necessarily a smaller one in every sense, but a fundamentally different one. Traditional support and compliance roles are going out. AI prompt engineers and data scientists are coming in. That swap has been happening quietly across fintech for months – Crypto.com is just the latest and most visible example of it breaking into the open.
Several other major fintech firms made near-identical moves earlier in March, all leaning on the same efficiency and AI integration framing. When enough companies make the same call in the same window using the same language, it stops looking like individual strategy and starts looking like an industry turning a corner.
According to Coindesk report, affected employees got the news through an internal memo on March 18. The severance package includes three months of pay, extended health benefits, and career transition support – notably including help for those moving into sectors outside crypto entirely.
That last part says something. When a company builds transition support specifically for people leaving the industry altogether, it’s acknowledging that some of these roles don’t have a natural next stop inside crypto anymore. The positions aren’t being filled somewhere else. They’re being retired.
For everyone else watching, other platforms, other executives running the same internal numbers, a company growing revenue by 15% while cutting 12% of staff is a proof of concept that’s hard to argue with. The AI efficiency case just got a real example attached to it. Decisions elsewhere will follow.
The post Crypto.com Cuts 12% of Its Workforce Even as Revenue Climbs 15% appeared first on ETHNews.

