Monday, June 29, 2026 - British American Tobacco announced Monday sweeping job cuts as the cigarette maker axes 5,500 roles globally and outsources another 3,500 to help slash costs.
The maker of Lucky Strike and Dunhill cigarettes aims to
save £600 million ($792 million) a year by 2028 in a restructuring that will
affect around 20 percent of BAT’s 47,000-member workforce, it said in a
statement.
BAT, along with other tobacco majors, faces declining demand
for traditional cigarettes, and is turning its focus instead to newer
categories including vapes and oral nicotine products.
“We are building a future-ready organization that is more
agile, cost disciplined and technology enabled,” said chief executive Tadeu
Marroco.
“These changes affect many of our colleagues, and we are
focused on supporting them through this transition with care and respect, as we
position the business for the future,” he added.
The job cuts span BAT’s global workforce except for the
United States, its largest market, where the business is run through its
subsidiary Reynolds American.
Shares in the company fell 1.5 percent on the London stock
exchange, where the top-tier FTSE 100 index was trading 0.2 percent lower.
“British American Tobacco is the latest name to
ramp up the use of technology to help its business run more smoothly and be
able to launch new products faster,” said AJ Bell investment director Russ
Mould.
“The scale of cutbacks is a sign of the times, and the trend
is worrying for the state of the labour market,” he added.

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