
In July 2026, the figure of 100,000 jobs began circulating in connection with Volkswagen. It is not fabricated: Volkswagen Group CEO Oliver Blume did tell employees that, in theory, around 50,000 additional positions could be added to the approximately 50,000 cuts already agreed. However, no final decision has been made on the second half of that figure.
As of 17.07.2026, the accurate wording is: Volkswagen is considering cutting up to 100,000 jobs, but only part of the program has been approved. A reduction in positions does not always mean the immediate dismissal of a specific employee. In its 2024 agreement, Volkswagen described the workforce reduction as socially responsible, while the implementation of any additional program has not yet been disclosed.
What is confirmed and what is still under discussion
Figure or measure | Status as of 17.07.2026 | What it means |
More than 35,000 jobs at Volkswagen AG | Agreed | Socially responsible workforce reduction at Volkswagen AG sites in Germany by 2030 |
Around 50,000 jobs across the group | Agreed programs are already being implemented | The combined scope of Volkswagen, Audi, Porsche, and CARIAD programs in Germany by 2030 |
Around 50,000 additional jobs | Being assessed but not approved | A theoretical estimate of additional cuts across brands, companies, and regions |
Up to 100,000 jobs | Possible overall scenario | The sum of programs already in effect and potential additional cuts |
Up to 140,000 jobs at risk | Works council estimate | Around 40,000 positions have been added to the 100,000 that could depend on the future of four plants |
How the 100,000 figure emerged
The first major stage was formalized on 20.12.2024. Volkswagen AG and employee representatives concluded the Zukunft Volkswagen agreement. It provides for the reduction of more than 35,000 jobs at Volkswagen AG sites in Germany by 2030. At the same time, the company secured employment guarantees through the end of 2030 and stated that the changes should be implemented in a socially responsible manner.
At the annual shareholders' meeting on 18.06.2026, Oliver Blume said that the combined programs at Volkswagen, Audi, Porsche, and software company CARIAD called for approximately 50,000 positions to be cut. Of these, 35,000 concerned Volkswagen AG. At that point, binding agreements had been signed covering more than 28,000 departures by 2030. These figures are contained in the official Volkswagen Group announcement of 18.06.2026.
On 26.06.2026, Reuters, citing sources familiar with the discussions, reported that management was considering increasing the total reduction to 100,000 jobs and closing four German plants. Volkswagen did not publicly confirm the figure at the time and declined to comment on confidential documents.
The situation changed on 13.07.2026, when Reuters obtained an internal message from Blume to employees. The group CEO explained that a cost gap compared with comparable companies created a theoretical need for approximately 50,000 additional cuts worldwide. He also stressed that Volkswagen was still assessing how many changes would actually be necessary and feasible in each brand, division, and region.
In other words, 100,000 is a real figure as an upper scenario under consideration, but not a signed plan to dismiss 100,000 people.

Why Volkswagen is intensifying its cost-cutting efforts
On 09.07.2026, Volkswagen Group's management board presented a new transformation plan through 2030 to the supervisory board. The company linked it to rising costs, tariffs, geopolitical tensions, regulatory burdens, and stronger global competition.
The official Volkswagen Group plan sets out specific structural measures:
gradually reducing the group's model lineup by 50%;
cutting the number of variants and options by 75%;
reducing production capacity to approximately 9 million vehicles per year;
reducing the number of parallel platforms, electronic architectures, and software solutions;
reviewing the production network in Europe and China.
Before the pandemic, the group had invested in capacity for approximately 12 million vehicles per year. By July 2026, this figure had already been reduced by around 2 million, and the new target was set at 9 million. This means Volkswagen intends to align its plant network with lower expected demand.
The Chinese market is creating additional pressure. According to the group's official statistics, Volkswagen Group deliveries in China fell by 25.9% in the first half of 2026. At the same time, Chinese manufacturers are expanding their presence in Europe and competing with Volkswagen not only on price but also on the speed of developing new models.

Which plants are at the center of the discussion
Reuters reports mention four sites for which Volkswagen has not yet secured confirmed competitive production plans for the 2030s:
the Volkswagen Commercial Vehicles plant in Hanover;
the Volkswagen plant in Emden;
Volkswagen's electric-vehicle plant in Zwickau;
the Audi plant in Neckarsulm.
The closure of these sites has not been approved. In his message to employees, Blume spoke about finding more practical solutions instead of closures. Options discussed previously included transferring part of the capacity to other industries and producing models developed jointly with Chinese partners in Germany.
On 17.07.2026, Volkswagen's works council announced extraordinary employee meetings. Meetings with Oliver Blume are scheduled for 25.08.2026 in Wolfsburg and 26.08.2026 in Emden and Zwickau. The council estimated that the possible closure of the four sites after 2030 could put around 40,000 additional jobs at risk.

This is how the larger figure of 140,000 emerged: around 50,000 planned cuts, up to 50,000 additional positions, and approximately 40,000 jobs at plants whose future remains uncertain. This is a risk estimate from the works council, not a new official Volkswagen plan.
Does a reduction in jobs mean mass layoffs?
Not necessarily. In the December 2024 agreement, Volkswagen referred to a socially responsible reduction in the workforce and also secured employment guarantees through the end of 2030 for Volkswagen AG employees covered by the collective agreement.
This distinction separates the program already agreed from the potential additional reduction. Specific mechanisms, locations, and timelines for the new 50,000 positions have not yet been published. It is also unclear what share of the potential reduction would affect Germany and what share would concern other countries.
For now, it therefore cannot be said that Volkswagen is preparing to dismiss 100,000 people at once. A reduction in the number of positions has been confirmed, but the format and pace of the additional scenario still need to be negotiated.

How the changes could affect Volkswagen Group vehicles
For buyers, the confirmed decision to reduce model and production complexity matters more than the workforce figure itself. The group intends to focus investment on the most in-demand segments and build more vehicles on fewer technical platforms.
This could lead to the disappearance of low-volume models, engines, and rarely selected equipment combinations. However, Volkswagen has not yet published a complete list of the vehicles and trim levels that will be discontinued. Naming specific models would therefore be premature.
There is also no confirmation that the current restructuring will result in immediate changes to warranties, servicing, or spare-parts supplies for vehicles already sold. Existing obligations to owners remain in effect.
What can already be stated with certainty
Volkswagen Group is already implementing agreed programs to reduce approximately 50,000 jobs by 2030.
On 13.07.2026, Oliver Blume told employees that there was a theoretical need to cut approximately 50,000 more positions worldwide.
The additional program has not yet been agreed with employee representatives and has not been broken down by brand, country, or plant.
The closure of plants in Hanover, Emden, Zwickau, and Neckarsulm is being discussed but has not been approved.
The figure of 140,000 is a worst-case estimate from the works council, not a management decision.
That is why the statement “Volkswagen will fire 100,000 employees” misrepresents the situation. It is more accurate to say that the group is already cutting around 50,000 jobs and is assessing whether to eliminate approximately the same number again. The final scale of the program will become clearer after negotiations with employee representatives and discussions about the future of individual plants.










