
Klarna
Swedish BNPL fintech that publicly admitted AI could not replace 700 human customer service agents.
Last refreshed: 9 July 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
Can a fintech that fired 700 customer service agents trust AI to run its business?
Timeline for Klarna
Mentioned in: Ford and IBM start undoing AI cuts
AI: Jobs, Power & MoneyMentioned in: Salesforce hires 1,000 graduates, but for sales
AI: Jobs, Power & MoneyMentioned in: China bets AI can fill a 300m jobs gap
AI: Jobs, Power & MoneyMentioned in: Only 2% of layoffs tied to real AI: HBR
AI: Jobs, Power & Money'We went too far': Klarna rehires staff
AI: Jobs, Power & MoneyWhat is Klarna?
Did Klarna reverse its AI customer service experiment?
How many jobs did Klarna cut using AI?
Background
Klarna is the reference case for AI customer-service overreach: it cut roughly 700 human agents for AI in 2023-24, then admitted in early 2026 that service quality had degraded, with customers complaining of 'robotic responses' and 'Kafkaesque loops', and began rehiring humans. Chief executive Sebastian Siemiatkowski put it bluntly: 'We went too FAR.'
Salesforce joined Klarna's pattern the following month, announcing on 27 April 2026 the hiring of 1,000 graduates having previously cut support headcount from 9,000 to 5,000 and frozen engineer hiring entirely. The two cases are not identical: Klarna reversed in the function it had cut (customer service), while Salesforce hired into a different one (sales). Both expose the same dynamic, aggressive AI-driven headcount reduction followed by recognition that some functions still need human labour.
By July, Klarna's reversal had become the template cited across the beat. Ford's rehiring of quality-control engineers and IBM's tripled entry-level hiring pledge both landed alongside references back to Klarna's admission and Orgvue's survey data on AI-layoff regret, cementing Klarna as the case study every subsequent reversal gets measured against.
Klarna is a Swedish buy now, pay later (BNPL) fintech founded in 2005 in Stockholm by Sebastian Siemiatkowski, Niklas Adalberth and Victor Jacobsson. It reached a peak valuation of $45.6 billion in 2021 before a 2022 down-round cut that to $6.7 billion amid rising interest rates and regulatory scrutiny of the BNPL sector.
Klarna filed for a US initial public offering in 2025, aiming to list on the New York Stock Exchange, and operates across the EU under the bloc's 2023 Consumer Credit Directive revision, which brought BNPL lending under formal credit regulation.