Oracle Leaves California for Texas (2020) | Buildremote
Companies Leaving California

Oracle Leaves California for Texas

Oracle left California for Texas in 2020. The company employs approximately 196,710 people, though it is unclear how many were directly affected by the relocation.

In Buildremote's database of companies leaving California, Oracle is one of 109 companies that have moved to Texas — 53% of our total database, and one of 39 that left (19% of all tracked departures) in 2020. Oracle is also one of 18 companies with 10,000+ employees to have left the state, accounting for 9% of all relocations in our database. By employee count, Oracle is the 1st largest company to have left California in our database.

See all companies that moved to Texas →

Moved To
Texas
When
12/11/2020
Employees
196,710
Moved From
California
"“Oracle is implementing a more flexible employee work location policy and has changed its Corporate Headquarters from Redwood City, California to Austin, Texas. We believe these moves best position Oracle for growth and provide our personnel with more flexibility about where and how they work,” a spokesperson confirmed to CNBC."" Source

Frequently Asked Questions

When did Oracle leave California?

Oracle left California in 12/11/2020.

Where is Oracle headquartered now?

Oracle relocated its headquarters to Texas after leaving California.

Why Are Companies Leaving California?

Companies cite a consistent set of reasons for leaving California: taxes, regulation, and the cost of living. Executives have pointed to the ability to reduce state corporate tax rates by more than a third after relocating, and many describe searching for a "more sustainable place to do business." California's regulatory environment is frequently mentioned — in the state, "local rules could dictate how the company chooses board members, for instance."

Talent is another major factor. While California has long been a talent magnet, executives now describe finding "a great talent pool" in their new states — and the ability for employees to actually afford to live there. As one CEO put it, their employees can be homeowners in Texas, "which in the Bay Area is virtually impossible."

Others cite cultural reasons: an "increasing intolerance and monoculture of Silicon Valley," and a desire to find a state with "a strong economic climate with low taxes, reasonable regulations, and a high-caliber workforce." States like Texas, Florida, and Arizona have actively marketed themselves as alternatives — Arizona, for instance, offering "the ideal conditions of being business-friendly, offering a high quality of life at reasonable cost."

For many companies, the decision comes down to practical business needs: "our business needs, opportunities for cost savings, and team members" — and an acknowledgment that there were "some symmetries in the way that the Bay Area works that just didn't really work well for us."

Buildremote Research

Companies Leaving California — The Complete Database

Every company that has left California since 2020. Destinations, dates, employee counts, and sources — all in one spreadsheet.

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Data compiled by Buildremote. Last updated April 23, 2026. Sources linked above.