Food manufacturing layoffs are continuing to add up in 2026 as major companies reduce headcount, close plants and restructure operations. The latest confirmed moves center on Nestlé’s global cuts, Del Monte Foods’ California closure and Leprino Foods’ layoffs in Lubbock, Texas.
Nestlé announces the biggest confirmed cut so far
Nestlé is planning to eliminate 16,000 jobs globally over a two-year period, according to company statements cited in recent reporting on the food manufacturing sector. The reduction equals nearly 6% of Nestlé’s workforce and includes about 4,000 manufacturing and supply-chain positions.
The company said the cuts are part of a broader restructuring under new leadership. Nestlé also said the plan is intended to streamline operations, improve productivity and reduce costs as the company adjusts its business.
Those numbers make Nestlé the largest confirmed workforce reduction mentioned in the latest round of food manufacturing layoffs. The scale stands out because it reaches across multiple operations rather than a single plant or one regional office.
California and Texas are seeing confirmed local fallout
Del Monte Foods announced the closure of its fruit-processing facility in Modesto, California, affecting roughly 600 full-time employees. During harvest periods, the Modesto closure can also affect as many as 1,200 seasonal workers tied to the site’s operations…