2025 has undoubtedly touted itself as the year of layoffs. We’ve seen giants like Meta, Amazon, Microsoft and Intel announce mass layoffs in 2025. The restructuring and workforce reductions have rolled over to various sectors, including public. On April 29, 2025, United Parcel Service (UPS) announced it would cut 20,000 jobs. This move has sent shockwaves through its workforce. For HR professionals, the UPS layoffs in 2025 offer a sobering case study in managing mass workforce reductions while preserving employee morale. The HR Digest sat down with Sarah Mitchell (name changed for anonymity), a former UPS operations supervisor in Atlanta, to better understand the human toll of the UPS layoffs and what HR can learn from her experience.
Careers upended by the UPS layoffs in 2025
Sarah, 38, had been with UPS for 12 years, rising from a package handler to a supervisor overseeing a team of 18. “I thought I was set,” she says, her voice steady but tinged with frustration over the UPS job cuts.
“UPS was my sanctuary. I believed in the mission, the stability the job offered.” But the UPS layoffs, driven by reduced Amazon delivered and significant cost-cutting, changed everything.

“We heard rumors, but no one explained why or how they chose us for a long time.”
The company aimed to save $3.5 billion after a “disappointing” year, as CEO Carol Tomé noted. This massive goal is tied to reconfiguring UPS’ network across North America.
Sarah received an email in late April, giving her a short window to clear her desk. “It felt like a punch in the gut,” she recalls. “No warning, no personal touch; just a cold directive.”
The current round of UPS job cuts in 2025 are part of a broader trending affecting jobs. These layoffs in 2025 have hit workers across roles, from drivers to managers. As for Sarah, the suddenness of the job loss is unexplainable. “I managed people through touch times.”
The cost of UPS’ 20,000 job cuts
These layoffs aren’t mere numbers; they disrupted 20,000 lives. Sarah describes the chaos we saw that day. Her colleagues scrambled to secure jobs elsewhere, dozens of families were uprooted, and retirement plans were derailed. “I had a mortgage, two kids, and suddenly no income,” she says. The layoffs followed a 2023 Teamsters deal that promised UPS drivers $170,000 by 2028, making the workforce reductions feel like a betrayal.
HR professionals can draw plenty of lessons here. Sarah notes the lack of transparent communication that hit the most. “We heard rumors, but no one explained why or how they chose us for a long time.”
A 2024 UPS layoff of 12,000 employees had already strained trust, and the 2025 job cuts deepened this rift. Clear communication could have softened the blow.
Key takeaways from UPS workforce reductions
For HR professionals, the UPS layoffs highlight the clear need for strategic workforce planning. We spoke to Mitchell Bloom, an analyst, who suggested a hefty severance, outplacement services, and mental health support.
“UPS has provided severance, but it isn’t enough to bridge the gap,” he says. HR teams should also prioritize retraining programs, especially for roles tied to UPS – Amazon jobs, where skills could transfer to other logistics companies.
Sarah is still applying for logistics roles, but considering a career pivot by 2026. “I’m resilient, and I guess that’s what matters at the end of the day,” she says.
The 20,000 job cuts at UPS reflect broader industry shifts in 2025, with UPS earnings under pressure from reduced Amazon reliance. For HR professionals, the challenge is balancing fiscal goals with human dignity.
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