UPD. Jooble is cutting 16% of its staff: what is known
Jooble, a global IT product company whose main product is an international job search website, is laying off staff.
Jooble, a global IT product company whose main product is an international job search website, is laying off staff.
Jooble, a global IT product company whose main product is an international job search website, is laying off staff.
"Overheard in IT" was the first to report this. According to the Telegram channel, 50 employees were laid off.
"They mainly laid off ordinary employees, almost all roles. They almost didn't cut the leads. They gave 1 salary from above. They don't leave the equipment."
"The reason: savings in wages and falling profits," the post from June 6 says.
UPD. 06/11/2026 The material has been updated according to Jooble data.
Jooble later clarified that the layoffs affected 16% of the core product team, namely 45 people.
"Everyone affected by the changes received a notice period with full pay, an additional month of salary, health insurance until the end of June, and job search support — including a Q&A session, referral support, and access to the alumni community," the company said in a statement about the terms of the exit.
Jooble also added that the decision is related to changing market conditions in the field of online recruitment and changing approaches to work.
"Due to the geopolitical and economic situation in the world, the online recruiting market has been declining for some time, and this directly affects our work as one of the largest players in the global market."
Jooble is a job search site that operates as an aggregator and is among the top ten most popular employment services in the world. The project was created in 2006 by two Ukrainian KPI students, Roman Prokofiev and Yevgeny Sobakaryov. The head office of the IT product company is located in Kyiv. The service is available in 67 countries around the world.
Recall that over the past year, 17% of Ukrainian IT professionals have lost their jobs . Senior specialists were most often laid off.



