The morning after receiving a layoff email, a tech worker experiences a certain kind of silence. You can practically picture it: the partner questioning what’s going on, the laptop still logged into Slack until IT reshifts access, and the half-empty coffee. Updating the resume, messaging a recruiter, and preparing for six months of pipeline calls was the standard response for a long time. Something different is taking place in 2026. Surprisingly, many of these engineers don’t open LinkedIn. Stripe Atlas is being opened.
A portion of the story is revealed by the numbers. Layoffs by the finish of April.FYI was tracking 92,272 tech workers across 98 companies; in the first quarter, Amazon alone cut about 16,000 corporate roles, while Oracle was cutting between 20,000 and 30,000. What appeared to be a one-time adjustment has begun to resemble a structural reorganization, with money subtly relocating from headcount budreceives to GPU clusters.
| Snapshot | Detail |
|---|---|
| Story focus | The post-layoff founder boom of 2026 |
| Total tech layoffs YTD (Apr 23) | 92,272 across 98 companies |
| Laid-off workers starting companies | 63% (Clarify Capital survey) |
| Largest single round | ~16,000 corporate roles cut at Amazon in Q1 |
| Notable program | Day One Ventures “Funded Not Fired” — 1,000+ applications |
| Coined phrase | “The year of spite startups” — Jason Lemkin, SaaStr |
| Sectors hit hardest | Customer support, IT, junior engineering |
| Counter-trfinish | Business applications near record highs in early 2026 |
| Term to know | “Invisible unemployment” — jobs never created, not formally cut |
The layoffs are not the interesting part. It’s the answer. According to a Clarify Capital survey, 63% of tech workers who were laid off went on to launch their own businesses—a statistic that would have seemed ridiculous two years ago. After launching its “Funded Not Fired” program, Day One Ventures received over a thousand applications in a matter of weeks. Jason Lemkin, who has been referring to these actions for some time, dubbed 2026 “the year of spite startups,” and the term stuck becaapply it felt accurate.

When you speak with some of these recent founders, a pattern launchs to emerge. Many worked for years at Amazon, Meta, or Google, witnessing committee-killed projects and headcount approvals that took three quarters to review. Suddenly, there is nothing to lose when the layoff and severance pay arrive. Perhaps the cage was the comp package, and the bravery was always present. It is difficult to state. However, the calculus has obviously alterd.
Beneath the romance is a more pragmatic engine. Software shipping costs have been significantly reduced by AI tooling. When Cursor and Claude are performing the tquestions of three mid-level engineers, the unit economics of a tiny startup alter, and a two-person team in 2026 can build what a twelve-person team built in 2021. Despite being more selective with their checks, investors appear to believe this. The pull effect of AI was aptly described in the Business Insider article, which featured six former Big Tech employees who are now building.
Not all stories are spotless. The 60-day grace period for H-1B visa holders launchs on their last day of employment rather than when severance finishs, adding a level of pressure that most American founders never experience. Some of these new businesses will not succeed. It’s a dark joke in and of itself that some will be hired by the same companies that fired them. Observing this develop gives me the impression that we are in the early stages of something that won’t become fully apparent until the next downturn.
What sticks with me is what Lemkin referred to as “invisible unemployment”—jobs that are never created rather than eliminated. In 2026, just one-third of CEOs state they intfinish to hire. Becaapply no one is leaving and no one is hiring, IBM’s voluntary attrition is at a thirty-year low. Those who were pushed out might be the first to shift in that frozen middle. Whether the wave creates a generation of legitimate businesses or a thousand thin wrappers around an API is still up for debate. However, the most intriguing work isn’t taking place inside the towers for the first time in a long time. On the opposite side of the badge return, it is taking place.















