Anthropogenic global changes are impacting biodiversity, however, many previous meta-analyses investigating the impact of different global changes on biodiversity have omitted soil fauna, or are limited in the scope of the global changes studied. Threats to soil biodiversity by global changes need to be understood to mitigate effects on ecosystem services provided by soils. We conducted a meta-analysis using 3,173 effect sizes from 627 publications focused on six global changes (climate change, land-use intensification, pollution, nutrient enrichment, invasive species, and habitat fragmentation) and their associated environmental stressors on soil fauna. We classified stressors as either pulse (short-term, acute) or press (long-term, chronic) stressors, and expected pulse stressors to have less impact on soil biodiversity due to buffering effects of the soil. Unexpectedly, pollution caused the largest loss in soil fauna communities, which is worrying due to continually increasing levels of pollution, as well as the poor mechanistic understanding of pollution impacts. There was no clear pattern of pulse stressors having a smaller impact on soil biodiversity than press stressors. Overall, this work shows the importance of including soil biodiversity in large-scale global change analyses, as soil organisms often do not show the same responses as organisms above-ground.