Volkswagen’s operating profit fell 53% as US tariffs and China competition bite, prompting plans for up to 50,000 layoffs. Learn the full story.
German automaker Volkswagen announced a dramatic 53% plunge in operating profit for 2025, sending shockwaves through the auto industry and prompting a massive workforce reduction plan.

Key figures that matter
The company’s operating profit fell to €8.9 billion (about $10.3 billion), down sharply from the previous year and well below analyst expectations. Revenue stayed almost flat at €322 billion ($374 billion), but the operating margin shrank to just 2.8%, a steep drop from the 5.9% recorded a year earlier.
Why the profit fell
Two external forces hit Volkswagen hard:

- US tariffs imposed during the Trump administration increased costs for many global manufacturers, resulting in multi‑billion‑dollar losses for the German group.
- Intensifying competition in China, Volkswagen’s largest market, where home‑grown brands are rapidly gaining share.
Adding to the pressure, Porsche, Volkswagen’s high‑performance subsidiary, recently pivoted back to internal‑combustion engines after lower‑than‑expected electric‑vehicle demand. The strategic shift has added an extraordinary €3 billion (≈$3.5 billion) charge to the parent company.
The restructuring plan
In response, Volkswagen is tightening its belt with a familiar playbook: cost cuts, operational re‑structuring, and careful spending. A central element of the plan is a large‑scale workforce reduction.

- The group previously approved 35,000 job cuts at its German Volkswagen brand.
- Further reductions at Porsche and its software arm Cariad could push total layoffs to around 50,000 positions by 2030, according to Brussels Signal.
Targeting a healthier margin
Volkswagen aims to bring its operating margin back to the 8‑10% range through these actions. CEO Oliver Blume emphasized that even automotive giants must tighten spending as the industry faces “ever‑increasing challenges.”
What’s next?
Stakeholders will be watching closely as the company rolls out its cost‑saving measures and navigates a market reshaped by trade policies and fierce competition in China. The success of the restructuring will determine whether Volkswagen can recover its profitability and retain its standing as a global automotive leader.

