Heineken targets 6,000 job cuts in overhaul

Heineken targets 6,000 job cuts in overhaul

Heineken plans global job cuts as beer volumes slip again. The brewer is targeting €400m – €500m in annual gross savings through an operating model overhaul, supply-network changes, and expanded shared services.


IN Brief:

  • Heineken expects to reduce its global workforce by around 5,000–6,000 roles over two years.
  • The company is pairing headcount reductions with supply-chain optimisation, including digitising breweries and selected closures.
  • 2025 beer volume fell 2.4%, with Europe down 4.1%, sharpening the focus on productivity.

Heineken has set out plans to reduce its global workforce by approximately 5,000 to 6,000 roles over the next two years as it implements a leaner operating model and seeks to reset its cost base amid volume pressure in developed markets.

The company said the programme is designed to deliver €400m to €500m of annual gross savings and is being developed alongside structural changes in how it runs markets, support functions, and supply networks. The plan includes transitioning around 3,000 roles to Heineken Business Services (HBS) as it doubles the scale of that shared-services operation and expands the services it provides to markets.

Heineken said it is moving to a simpler operating model centred on empowered operating companies, while also shifting selected geographies to Multi-Market Operating Companies (MMOs). Four MMOs are due to go live in Europe within the next six months, according to the company, as it reconfigures regional structures and support functions.

Within production and logistics, Heineken said it will step up productivity through supply-chain optimisation, enabled by digitising breweries and “selected brewery closures,” while also accelerating the expansion of global supply networks. The company also referenced a shift to a “global Digital Backbone” as a single digital infrastructure supporting operations, and a smaller head office.

The restructuring comes alongside a further contraction in volumes. Heineken reported total volume of 281.6 million hectolitres in 2025, down 1.2% year-on-year, and beer volume of 234.0 million hectolitres, down 2.4%. In Europe, beer volume fell 4.1% to 73.5 million hectolitres, while total consolidated volume in the region declined 3.5% to 86.0 million hectolitres.

Regionally, Heineken pointed to pressure in parts of Europe linked to retailer disruptions and a softer mainstream beer performance, while highlighting more resilient premium performance and a growing non-alcoholic beer and cider portfolio in parts of its footprint. The business also set out a 2026 operating profit outlook of 2% to 6% organic growth.

Heineken said it employs more than 87,000 people globally and operates breweries, malteries, cider plants, and other production facilities in more than 70 countries, giving it a broad manufacturing and distribution base where savings programmes typically translate into procurement, maintenance, automation, and logistics changes alongside organisational restructuring.

For suppliers into brewing and beverage operations, the programme signals a tighter productivity and capital discipline environment over the next two years, as Heineken consolidates support functions, reworks market structures, and looks for cost and efficiency gains across production, packaging, and distribution.


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