For the first time in its 44-year history, Microsoft’s employee count surpassed 150,000 people, the latest sign of the tech giant’s continued resurgence.

Microsoft listed its global headcount as 151,163 as of Dec. 31, the end of its most recent quarter. That’s an increase of 7,000 people, or close to 5 percent, from 144,106 six months ago, when the company’s new fiscal year began.

Nearly 90,000 Microsoft employees, almost 60 percent of its total headcount, work in the U.S. And 53,973 people — 35 percent of Microsoft’s workforce — are based in the Seattle area, primarily at the company’s headquarters campus.

Microsoft surpassed the 150,000-person mark primarily through hiring outside of HQ. In the most recent quarter, Microsoft hired just shy of 2,700 people. New hires were split roughly 50-50 between domestic and international offices. But only 397 of those recent additions, about 14 percent of the growth, are based in Washington state.

The number does not include contract workers and contingent staff, people who work on Microsoft projects and assignments through third-party staffing firms.

Microsoft’s big tech rivals are updating their headcounts as they report their earnings: