TikTok is considering cutting about 300 jobs at its European hub in Dublin, according to an email to staff seen by Bloomberg. For the people affected, that number is not abstract.
The proposed redundancies would fall on roughly a tenth of the company’s local workforce of around 3,000, and they follow a similarly sized round of cuts last year.
Dublin has long been the anchor of TikTok’s European operations, home to content moderation, trust and safety, and much of its regulatory work for the continent.
The video app, owned by China’s ByteDance, told staff on Wednesday it may restructure its AI data service and operations team in Ireland. It also plans to consolidate quality assurance work into other regional hubs, per Bloomberg.
Roles judged to sit better elsewhere would move out of the city. The company says it intends to create new positions at the same time, though it has not spelled out how many or in which teams. That leaves the net effect on Dublin’s tech headcount unclear.
Ireland’s Communications Workers’ Union has stepped in to support affected members, a role it played through the previous round of TikTok redundancies.
This is not the first time the number 300 has attached itself to the Dublin office. In March 2025, the Irish Times reported that the company had told the government it planned to cut up to 300 roles as part of a global restructuring. The fresh proposal lands on top of that earlier reduction rather than replacing it.
TikTok’s training and content quality teams in the city had already absorbed hundreds of losses in previous rounds, as the company leaned harder on automated moderation. The pattern points to a workforce being reshaped rather than simply shrunk.
Trust and safety roles have been among the most affected, a sensitive area given the scrutiny TikTok faces over how it polices its platform.
Automated systems now handle a growing share of the moderation once done by people in Dublin, and each round of cuts tends to fall hardest on the teams that machine tools can partly replace.
The timing is awkward for a company that has spent heavily to present Dublin as central to its future in Europe.
ByteDance has poured money into Irish data infrastructure, and TikTok recently pledged a €12bn European investment tied to its regional data-centre build-out. Capital spending and payroll are moving in opposite directions.
That divergence is increasingly common across the sector. Firms are funnelling budgets into AI systems and physical infrastructure while thinning the human teams those systems are meant to augment or replace.
TikTok’s restructuring echoes a wider wave of tech redundancies through 2026, with Meta cutting 8,000 roles in May as it redirected spending toward artificial intelligence. The rationale differs company to company, but the direction of travel does not.
Dublin’s status as a European base for US and Chinese tech firms has made it unusually exposed to these swings. The same tax and talent draw that filled the city’s offices leaves it sensitive when those companies reorganise.
For TikTok specifically, the pressure is compounded by a hostile regulatory climate on both sides of the Atlantic.
The company faces continued scrutiny in Europe over data transfers and content moderation, including an Irish court order telling regulators to reconsider a ban on China data transfers. Compliance costs sit awkwardly beside cost-cutting.
For now, the 300 figure remains a proposal rather than a confirmed cut, subject to consultation with staff and their union. What is clear is that Dublin, once a symbol of TikTok’s European ambition, is now bearing the strain of the company’s attempt to run leaner while spending big elsewhere.
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