UPS says it is cutting 20,000 staff and shutting over 70 facilities

UPS will cut 20,000 jobs in 2025 amid cost-cutting and facility closures, responding to soft demand and aiming to strengthen operations.

Apr 29, 2025 - 13:30
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UPS says it is cutting 20,000 staff and shutting over 70 facilities
UPS Driver in truck
UPS will slash 20,000 roles over the course of 2025.
  • UPS will cut 20,000 jobs in 2025 as it overhauls its US network to cut costs and boost efficiency.
  • The shipping giant plans to shutter 73 facilities and save $3.5 billion as demand remains soft.
  • The cuts are linked to the "changing trade environment," CEO Carol Tomé said.

UPS plans to slash 20,000 jobs in 2025 as part of a cost-cutting drive amid the shifting global trade landscape triggered by Trump's tariffs.

The move comes as the shipping giant grapples with soft demand, especially from its largest customers. UPS said it will also look to close 73 facilities by the end of June.

"With our action, we will emerge as an even stronger, more nimble UPS," CEO Carol Tomé said in a statement on Tuesday.

Tomé said that the transformation will help UPS adapt to "a changing trade environment" and better position it for long-term growth.

The company said it will save $3.5 billion in 2025 through the cuts.

UPS made the announcement alongside its Q1 2025 earnings report, which showed a slight revenue dip to $21.5 billion down 0.7% from the same period last year — while adjusted operating profit inched up 0.9% to $1.7 billion.

The parcel giant also pulled its financial guidance for the year, saying that uncertainty around the impact of President Donald Trump's tariffs meant it could not provide forecasts.

"Given the current macro-economic uncertainty, the company is not providing any updates to its previously issued consolidated full-year outlook," the company said.

Its supply chain business suffered the most last quarter, with revenue plunging nearly 15%, primarily due to the divestiture of Coyote Logistics.

The cost-cutting drive comes after UPS told investors earlier this year it would reduce its Amazon business by 50% by mid-2026, citing profitability reasons.

"This was not their ask," Tomé said on an investor call in January. "This was us. This was UPS taking control of our destiny."

On Tuesday, UPS said the restructuring could expand depending on further network review. As of March 31, it had made $80 million in savings and booked $23 million in related costs.

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