Hiring signals
Tier-2 cities are quietly outpacing metros in tech hiring
While Bengaluru, Hyderabad and Pune see double-digit declines year-on-year, Tier 2-3 cities grew 10% month-on-month. GCC expansion and remote-first companies are reshaping the map.
India's tech hiring map is being redrawn. Bengaluru is down 12% year-on-year, Hyderabad 33%, Pune 35%, Chennai 29% and Delhi NCR 42%. But Tier 2-3 cities posted 10% month-on-month growth in early 2026.
The driver is GCC satellite expansion and an emerging crop of remote-first product companies that don't want metro real estate cost or attrition. Coimbatore, Indore, Jaipur, Kochi and Ahmedabad are all seeing engineering hiring at scale.
For candidates: this is good news. Cost of living in these cities is 35–50% lower than Bengaluru, while base pay at GCC offshoots is often only 10–15% lower. Your effective take-home goes up. The trade-off is a smaller peer network and fewer in-person meetups, which compounds over a career.
A reasonable rule: if you're 0–4 years in, optimise for Bengaluru/Hyderabad ecosystem and learning velocity. If you're 7+ years in with a remote-friendly team, Tier-2 becomes a strong financial play.
Keep reading
H-1B
60 days to find a job or leave: H-1B Indian techies hit hardest by Meta and Oracle layoffsIndians hold 283,772 of 406,348 approved H-1B petitions in FY25. With Meta cutting 8,000 jobs and Oracle, Amazon and LinkedIn following, thousands of H-1B holders are racing a 60-day clock — and the B-1/B-2 stopgap is becoming much harder to land.
AI hiring
AI is rewriting the tech jobs map — OpenAI lands in Singapore, Anthropic poaches Karpathy, AI postings up 117% YoYOpenAI is opening its first overseas applied-AI lab in Singapore (~200 roles, $235M committed), Anthropic just hired Andrej Karpathy into its pretraining team, and AI-related job postings in the US are up 117% year-to-date. The hiring story has split: 'no-hire, no-fire' for generalists, frantic competition for AI talent.
Layoffs
Tech layoffs cross 142,000 in 2026 as Intuit, Meta, LinkedIn and Cisco swing the axeIntuit will cut 17% of its workforce, Meta has begun 8,000 cuts, Cisco is trimming nearly 4,000, LinkedIn is reducing ~875, and ClickUp slashed 22% under an 'AI-first' rebuild. The pattern is no longer cyclical — it's structural.
