One year after the merger between Vodafone and Three UK, fresh figures suggest the combined company has already reduced its workforce by more than 1,700 roles as it pushes ahead with integration plans and network modernisation efforts.
Much of the recent restructuring has been driven by the need to integrate operations and eliminate overlapping functions. Roles in administrative and corporate departments, including back-office operations, have reportedly been most affected. The company has stated that retail-facing positions are not currently part of planned reductions.
Prior to the merger, Vodafone’s UK operations employed an average of 9,332 people during the financial year ending March 2025. Three UK, meanwhile, had around 4,800 employees at the end of 2024. Had both workforces remained intact, the merged business would have employed more than 14,000 people.
However, Vodafone’s latest annual report shows the UK workforce averaged 12,416 employees during the most recent financial year. The figures indicate a reduction of approximately 1,716 positions, representing about 12 per cent of the combined pre-merger workforce.
The cuts continue a longer trend of downsizing across both operators. Vodafone’s UK headcount has steadily declined over the past decade, while Three had already reduced staffing levels through earlier technology and operational restructuring programmes. Combined, the two companies appear to have eliminated nearly 30 per cent of their workforce since the late 2010s.
The merger also brought strict regulatory commitments tied to network expansion and 5G deployment across the UK. To meet ambitious rollout targets, VodafoneThree has increased its reliance on network equipment suppliers Ericsson and Nokia. These vendors are now handling portions of network planning and implementation work that would previously have been managed internally.
The shift marks a departure from Vodafone’s earlier strategy of building greater in-house technical capabilities through open radio access network (Open RAN) technology. Before the merger, the company had promoted plans to reduce dependence on external integrators and expand its software engineering workforce. Those ambitions appear to have taken a back seat as the merged operator prioritises rapid network deployment and regulatory compliance.
Alongside network consolidation, executives have acknowledged efforts to retire legacy systems and streamline operations. Entire departments have reportedly been removed as Vodafone and Three combine their infrastructure, technology platforms and support functions.
While the merger is expected to strengthen 5G coverage and improve competitiveness in the UK telecom market, it also highlights the continuing pressure on employment within the sector. For telecom workers, consolidation and efficiency drives remain a significant source of job losses, even as operators invest heavily in next-generation networks.



