WOLFSBURG, GERMANY / RankWire.AI / – Volkswagen is reviewing up to 50,000 additional job reductions across its global operations. The review brings the total under consideration to as many as 100,000 positions worldwide. Chief Executive Oliver Blume informed employees about the additional figure in an internal message. About 50,000 cuts already fall within approved programs in Germany. Volkswagen has not approved a final global program covering all 100,000 jobs. It also has not released a regional breakdown or implementation schedule.

Existing agreements cover about 50,000 positions through 2030 at Volkswagen, Audi, Porsche and software unit CARIAD. The Volkswagen passenger car brand accounts for more than 35,000 of those reductions. Other group companies have announced separate workforce programs that add to the total. The measures include voluntary departures, partial retirement and other negotiated arrangements. The programs run across several years and business units. Volkswagen has not described the German plan as an immediate round of compulsory layoffs.
Volkswagen employed 662,942 people worldwide at the end of 2025, including workers at its Chinese joint ventures. Germany accounted for 284,032 employees, while 378,910 worked in other countries. The global headcount fell 2.4% from a year earlier. Active employees totaled 628,893 at the end of the reporting period. Other workers participated in partial retirement or training programs. The 100,000 figure combines approved German reductions with a separate global workforce review. It does not represent a completed dismissal plan.
Approved German programs cover half of total
The workforce review accompanies a restructuring package presented to Volkswagen’s supervisory board on July 9. The plan contains 12 initiatives covering products, factories, technology, regions, investments and management structures. Volkswagen will streamline its model lineup by up to 50%. It will also cut available equipment choices by up to 75%. The group set annual production capacity at about 9 million vehicles. Before the pandemic, Volkswagen maintained capacity for about 12 million vehicles. It has already removed capacity for roughly 2 million vehicles.
Volkswagen said digital tools, artificial intelligence and shared services will support changes in development and administration. The company also plans to reduce overlapping work across brands and technical platforms. Its published restructuring plan did not assign job numbers to individual factories, countries or business units. The document also did not announce plant closures. IG Metall and employee representatives have opposed compulsory layoffs and factory closures in Germany. Employee representatives hold half the seats on Volkswagen’s 20-member supervisory board.
Capacity and product range reductions advance
Workforce measures and collective bargaining agreements generated about 1 billion euros in cost savings during 2025. Volkswagen targets more than 6 billion euros in annual net savings by 2030. The group also reported lower factory costs at its German sites. Those costs fell by more than 20% on average during 2025. The figures reflect programs already under way. They do not confirm the size, timing or location of the additional workforce review. Volkswagen has not published implementation details for another 50,000 positions.
Volkswagen delivered 4.13 million vehicles worldwide during the first half of 2026, down 6.3% from a year earlier. Deliveries rose in Europe and South America but fell sharply in China. The group’s European electric vehicle order book increased more than 50% from the end of 2025. Existing agreements still cover about 50,000 German job reductions through 2030. Another 50,000 positions remain under review across the global business. Volkswagen has not released a final location list, implementation schedule or worldwide headcount target.
