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Amazon is now giving managers leeway to effectively fire employees who fail to meet the company's three-times-a-week, return-to-office mandate.

That's according to updated global manager guidance on Amazon's return-to-office policy obtained by Insider. Amazon shared the guidelines and manager talking points through an internal portal earlier this week.

The guidelines tell managers first to hold a private conversation with employees who don't comply with the three-times-a-week requirement. Then, managers have to document the discussion in a follow-up email. If the employee continues to refuse to come in, the manager should hold another meeting and, if needed, take disciplinary action that includes a termination of employment.

"If the employee does not demonstrate immediate and sustained attendance after the first conversation, managers should then conduct a follow-up discussion within a reasonable time frame (depending on the employee situation, ~1-2 weeks). This conversation will 1) reinforce that return to office 3+ days a week is a requirement of their job, and 2) explain that continued non-compliance without a legitimate reason may lead to disciplinary action, up to and including termination of your employment," the guidelines said.

Giving managers the ability to fire employees for noncompliance is the strongest measure Amazon has taken over its return-to-office policy.

First announced in February, Amazon's return-to-office process has been unusually contentious, with more than 30,000 employees signing an internal petition and many others walking out earlier this year in opposition to it. Employees have expressed frustration because they were hired as fully remote workers during the pandemic and they see the current mandate as a shift from a policy allowing individual leaders to determine how their teams worked.

In February, Amazon said corporate employees would have to come into the office at least three times a week starting in May. In July, the company doubled down by telling remote employees to relocate near office "hubs" where most of their team members were. Those who refused to relocate or find another team that accommodated their needs were told to take a "voluntary resignation" package. By September, Amazon was sharing individual attendance records with employees, a shift from the previous policy of tracking only anonymized data.

In August, Amazon CEO Andy Jassy told employees that it was "not going to work out" for those pushing back against the office-attendance mandate. Confusion only grew when a top Amazon cloud executive told his team last month that he expected the return-to-office process to take up to three years to complete.

In an email to Insider, Rob Munoz, an Amazon spokesperson, said the company was seeing "more energy, connection, and collaboration" with the vast majority of employees in the office more frequently. He added that Amazon's relocation policy was affecting a "relatively small percentage of our team" and exceptions to the return-to-office mandate would be made on a "case-by-case basis."

"As is the case with any of our policies, we expect our team to follow them and will take appropriate action if someone chooses not to do that," Munoz said in a statement.

Amazon's scripted talking points for managers

In the guidelines, Amazon encourages managers to "assume positive intent" and "make high-judgment decisions" regarding individual situations, such as ascertaining whether employees have missed attendance requirements because they're on paid time off or at home because of an illness. Before each meeting, managers are told to "be prepared" by reviewing the employee's badge data and practicing what they want to say ahead of time.

The guidelines also provide basic talking points for managers that reiterate many of the company's public statements regarding return-to-office. Managers are asked to emphasize working together in the same location "supports individual growth and development," and employees are "much more likely to understand our unique culture" when doing so. Before asking why an employee is failing to come into the office regularly, managers are encouraged to say that "this can be an adjustment" and that they "want to understand your circumstances."

Managers are asked to follow a three-step process when dealing with an employee not meeting the return-to-office requirements, according to the guidelines. The first step is a private conversation with the employee where managers "seek understanding and documentation."

If the noncompliance continues, managers should conduct follow-up discussions within a couple of weeks, where they have to reinforce the three-times-a-week attendance policy and explain possible disciplinary action that includes "termination of your employment." The last step is to engage a human-resources representative who may deliver the employee a written warning or other actions, which may "ultimately conclude in termination of employment."

Amazon also shared the following sample documentation template for managers to use when initiating follow-up meetings with employees who refuse to come into the office regularly. Managers in non-US countries are told to consult with their HR partner "as the template will vary by country."

[Employee Name],
I'm following up with you after our return-to-office conversation on [INSERT DATE]. I want to ensure the expectations and next steps are clear. During our discussion, I sought to understand if there are any particular challenges you are experiencing that are keeping you from returning to the office at least three days a week. Based on our discussion, it is my understanding there are not. Instead, [CHOOSE either a or b: a) you have not complied with Amazon's return to office expectations since our last conversation; b) you have made clear that you do not intend to adhere to Amazon's return-to-office expectations.]
As we discussed, returning to the office at least three days a week is in the best interest of our customers, our company, and our team members. If you do not adhere to this expectation within two weeks [by INSERT DATE FOR THE FRIDAY TWO WEEKS IN THE FUTURE], you will receive formal corrective action. After that time, if you do not meet and maintain sustained compliance with returning to the office at least three days a week, you will be subject to further discipline, up to and including termination of your employment.
If you have any questions or would prefer to work together on solutions that enable you to meet Amazon's return-to-office expectations, please let me know as soon as possible. We'll meet again after two weeks to discuss your progress.
[Manager Name]

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Eugene is Business Insider’s Chief Tech Correspondent, where he leads coverage of Amazon. His reporting spans the company’s retail operations, AWS, Alexa, and its secretive internal work culture.Previously, he worked at CNBC, Fortune Magazine Korea, and Japan's Yomiuri Shimbun. He holds degrees from NYU and Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism.In 2022, Eugene broke a story uncovering Amazon’s practice of deceptively enrolling customers in Prime and deliberately making cancellation difficult. A year later, the Federal Trade Commission sued the company, citing his reporting. That case culminated in a record $2.5 billion settlement in 2025.His reporting has earned multiple honors, including the SF Press Club’s Bay Area Journalism Award and SPJ NorCal’s Excellence in Journalism Award.Eugene lives in the Bay Area. Contact him via email at ekim@businessinsider.com, or Signal, Telegram, or WhatsApp at 650-942-3061. Use a personal email address, a nonwork WiFi network, and a nonwork device; here's our guide to sharing information securely. ExpertiseAmazon, Jeff Bezos, Andy Jassy, e-commerce, and cloud computing.Popular ArticlesAmazon:Internal Amazon emails give an exclusive look at how CEO Andy Jassy has started to run the company, with obsessive attention to the retail business and what some employees feel is micromanagingAndy Jassy will be the next CEO of Amazon. Insiders dish on what it's like to work for Jeff Bezos' successor, who built AWS into a $40 billion business.Internal documents show Amazon has for years knowingly tricked people into signing up for Prime subscriptions. 'We have been deliberately confusing,' former employee says.Inside Amazon's flailing brick-and-mortar ambitions: missed projections, pressure to cut costs, and a war with Whole FoodsInside Amazon's complex employee-review system, where workers feel left in the dark and managers expect to give 5% of reports bad reviewsAfter 28 years, 'Day 2' finally arrives at AmazonAWS, Alexa, healthcare:Inside Amazon's struggle to break into the lucrative market for SaaS business applications, including an internal pitch to buy $38 billion HubSpotInside Amazon's struggle to crack Nvidia's AI-chip dominanceAmazon's AI data center dream runs into the reality of 'zombie' facilities, higher costs, and labor shortagesAmazon is gutting its voice assistant, Alexa. Employees describe a division in crisis and huge losses on 'a wasted opportunity.'Amazon is working on a new 'Remarkable Alexa,' but internal politics and technical issues plague the projectAmazon projected huge losses from its healthcare business in 2024, but strong sales growth, internal document reveals