# AI is killing the summer internship. The entry-level pipeline that built careers is breaking.

> Source: <https://thenextweb.com/news/ai-replacing-summer-internships-college-students>
> Published: 2026-05-30 08:08:46+00:00

#### TL;DR

*Tech internship postings fell 30% since 2023. AI now handles the tasks companies used to give interns. The entry-level pipeline is breaking.*

Tech internship postings have dropped 30% since 2023. Companies are using AI for the busywork they used to delegate to college students.

*Tech internship postings fell 30% since 2023. AI now handles the tasks companies used to give interns. The entry-level pipeline is breaking.*

Katelyn Watterson owes her career to a summer internship. As a student at American University, she spent a summer working for a high-end beauty brand in New York. Her boss offered her a full-time job over drinks at the Plaza Hotel.

Almost two decades later, Watterson runs her own marketing agency, Fifty Six. At times, she managed as many as eight interns. She enjoyed mentoring them and opening doors for the next generation.

Then AI arrived. The hours she spent tracking down unfinished work and teaching college students professional basics started to add up. Meanwhile, AI could do more and more of the tasks she delegated to interns, and faster. [Bloomberg reports](https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-05-29/ai-is-both-friend-and-foe-to-college-students-seeking-summer-internships) that Watterson’s story is becoming the norm, not the exception.

The data confirms it. A Drexel University annual survey shows that the number of companies scaling back internship programmes is growing. The number expanding them is shrinking. Tech internship postings have dropped 30% since 2023.

Only 7% of new hires at major tech companies are now recent graduates, down from 9.3% in 2023. Internships have declined 11% year on year. The traditional pipeline, where students perform routine tasks in exchange for experience and a shot at a full-time offer, is breaking because AI handles the routine tasks.

The economic logic is straightforward. An intern costs time, supervision, and management overhead. AI costs tokens. When the tasks are structured, repetitive, and low-stakes, the cost comparison is not close. Research, data entry, scheduling, first-draft writing, and basic analysis were the bread and butter of internship programmes. They are now the bread and butter of ChatGPT.

[Salesforce cut its support staff from 9,000 to 5,000](https://thenextweb.com/news/salesforce-benioff-300-million-anthropic-tokens-slack-coding) after deploying AI agents. [Detroit’s automakers eliminated 20,000 white-collar jobs](https://thenextweb.com/news/detroit-three-automakers-20000-white-collar-jobs-ai) while posting AI roles. The pattern at the top of the corporate ladder, replacing humans with AI for structured tasks, is now reaching the bottom rung.

The paradox is that AI simultaneously makes internships less necessary and more valuable. Companies need fewer interns to handle busywork. But the interns who do get hired are expected to arrive with AI fluency that previous generations never needed.

[McKinsey now tests candidates on their ability to collaborate with its AI assistant Lilli.](https://thenextweb.com/news/mckinsey-ai-interview-practice-tool-lilli-consulting) The firm has 25,000 AI agents supporting 60,000 employees. It launched a free AI practice tool so candidates can prepare for a hiring process that evaluates how they work with machines, not just how they think alone.

AWS CEO Matt Garman has argued that replacing juniors with AI is “*one of the dumbest ideas*” a company can have. His rationale is that junior employees are often the most proficient AI users, having adapted to the tools during their education. The 2025 Stack Overflow Developer Survey found that 55.5% of early-career developers use AI tools daily, a higher rate than their senior counterparts.

The counterargument is that AI fluency without domain experience produces workers who can prompt well but cannot evaluate the output. The “*Editor Problem,*” as researchers have called it, describes a generation that can generate content with AI but lacks the judgment to know when the content is wrong. That judgment historically came from internships.

[The AI job market is booming at the senior level.](https://thenextweb.com/news/new-ai-jobs-evangelist-philosopher-vibecoder-fde) Forward deployed engineer postings are up 19x year on year. Claude Evangelists earn $240,000. Chief AI Officers command nearly $500,000. The jobs AI creates pay more and require more experience than the entry-level positions it eliminates.

Some companies are pivoting to apprenticeships as an alternative to internships. Accenture now fills 20% of its entry-level hiring through apprenticeships. IBM and Microsoft have scaled programmes that prioritise skills verification over degree pedigree. The apprenticeship model offers longer, more structured training than a summer internship, but it also requires more corporate investment.

The deeper question is what happens to the career pipeline when the first rung disappears. Watterson built a career in marketing because someone gave her a summer job. If that job now goes to an AI tool, the next Watterson does not get the Plaza Hotel moment. She gets a rejection email from an automated screening system that was trained on resumes from people who had internships.

The entry-level pipeline that built millions of careers is not collapsing overnight. It is being squeezed from both sides: fewer positions available and higher expectations for the candidates who fill them. AI is both the cause and the qualification. The tool that replaced the intern is now the skill the intern needs to have.

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