Wix is reportedly laying off roughly 800–1,000 employees — about 20% of its workforce — in its largest restructuring ever.
The interesting part isn’t just the layoffs. It’s what they reveal about the economics of AI-first software companies.
Wix’s core business is still growing:
• Revenue reportedly rose ~14% YoY in Q1 2026
• Bookings were up ~15%
• New AI-driven cohorts showed even faster growth
But growth alone no longer protects margins when AI infrastructure costs explode.
The pressure points:
• Heavy investment in Base44, the vibe-coding startup Wix acquired in 2025
• Building and running proprietary AI models
• Massive compute/inference costs
• Expensive customer acquisition and marketing campaigns
• A controversial $1.6B share buyback executed before the downturn
At the same time, investors are questioning whether traditional website builders are becoming commoditized by AI.
The bigger story is “vibe coding.”
Users can now describe an app or website in plain English:
“Create a sleek portfolio site with dark mode, payments, and a booking form.”
AI generates the product instantly.
That changes the value chain.
The old moat was:
templates + drag-and-drop builders.
The new moat is becoming:
AI orchestration + hosting + payments + integrations + reliability + distribution.
Wix understands this.
Instead of resisting the shift, they’ve aggressively moved toward it:
• Acquired Base44
• Launched Wix Harmony, an AI-native creation platform
• Combined natural-language generation with traditional visual editing
• Pushed deeper into AI infrastructure and automation
The irony is that AI didn’t kill Wix’s market overnight. It forced Wix to reinvent what “website building” even means.
Pure AI tools can generate impressive demos quickly. But production systems still require:
• uptime
• commerce infrastructure
• SEO
• analytics
• security
• scalability
• customer support
That’s where incumbents still have leverage.
This looks less like “AI destroyed Wix” and more like:
a profitable software company being forced through an AI-era reset where efficiency, infrastructure costs, and platform strategy suddenly matter more than headcount growth.
The broader lesson:
AI is compressing the value of interfaces while increasing the value of infrastructure and distribution.
The companies that survive won’t necessarily be the ones with the best demos.
They’ll be the ones that can combine:
• AI generation
• operational reliability
• ecosystem lock-in
• cost control
• and real business workflows
AI is making software creation easier.
But it’s also making software businesses much harder to defend.
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