The shift, visible across lenders including HDFC Bank, Axis Bank and Kotak Mahindra Bank, marks a departure from the industry’s long-held strategy of expanding workforce in tandem with business growth. Instead, banks are increasingly relying on technology to handle routine operations while directing human resources towards sales, relationship management and advisory services.
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HDFC offers perhaps the clearest sign of the transition. The country’s largest private lender reduced its workforce by 3,343 employees during FY26, according to its annual report, taking its total headcount to 211,178. The bank had a total of 214,521 employees at the end of the previous financial year.
The sharpest decline came in non-supervisory employees, whose numbers fell by more than 8,000. At the same time, the bank added employees across junior, middle and senior management, underscoring a deliberate shift in the composition of its workforce rather than broad-based job cuts.
Managing Director and CEO Sashidhar Jagdishan said the bank was “consciously redeploying talent from backend functions, where we are able to bring technology-led efficiencies, to customer-facing roles,” as it accelerates its transformation into a technology-led, customer-centric bank. The lender has expanded the use of AI across customer engagement, card processing, trade operations, risk monitoring and routine employee workflows through its in-house AI platform, Neev.
Axis Bank has followed a similar path. Its workforce fell by more than 3,100 employees in FY26 even as the lender added about 400 branches during the year, suggesting that productivity gains rather than business slowdown drove the reduction.Also Read: RBI mandates kill switch for AI models at banks, introduces comprehensive model risk framework
The bank’s total headcount stood at around 1,01,300 at the end of Q4 FY26, down from about 1,04,400 in Q4 FY25.
Executives attributed the trend to sustained investments in digitisation, employee enablement and technology across branches and customer touchpoints. “While technology is a powerful enabler of productivity and scale, we believe its full impact is realised only when it is paired with strong culture, capable talent and disciplined execution,” Axis said in its annual report.
For investors, leaner workforces could help improve operating leverage and contain costs even as banks continue expanding their branch networks. For employees, however, the shift signals changing skill requirements, with demand gradually moving away from routine operational roles towards technology-enabled and customer-centric functions.
Kotak Mahindra Bank also reported a decline of around 1,269 employees during the year, reinforcing a broader industry trend of leaner workforce expansion. Kotak’s standalone workforce declined to 74,054 employees as of March 31, 2026 from 75,323 a year earlier.
The emerging strategy reflects a wider global banking shift. International lenders such as JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup and Standard Chartered have all said artificial intelligence is expected to automate repetitive processes, improve productivity and eventually reduce demand for certain operational roles, while increasing the need for technology specialists and customer advisory functions.
Routine activities such as account servicing, document verification, transaction processing and customer support are increasingly being handled through automation, allowing banks to deploy more employees in relationship management, wealth advisory and sales functions that require greater human interaction.
