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Reddit status: access issues and outage reports

Problems detected

Users are reporting problems related to: website down, errors and sign in.

Full Outage Map

Reddit is a social news aggregation, web content rating, and discussion website. Reddit's registered community members can submit content, such as text posts or direct links.

Problems in the last 24 hours

The graph below depicts the number of Reddit reports received over the last 24 hours by time of day. When the number of reports exceeds the baseline, represented by the red line, an outage is determined.

July 13: Problems at Reddit

Reddit is having issues since 10:00 AM GMT. Are you also affected? Leave a message in the comments section!

Most Reported Problems

The following are the most recent problems reported by Reddit users through our website.

  • 56% Website Down (56%)
  • 24% Errors (24%)
  • 20% Sign in (20%)

Live Outage Map

The most recent Reddit outage reports came from the following cities:

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Douai Sign in 1 day ago
Olathe Website Down 2 days ago
Da Nang Sign in 4 days ago
Chhindwāra Sign in 5 days ago
Puteaux Website Down 10 days ago
New Delhi Website Down 10 days ago
Full Outage Map

Community Discussion

Tips? Frustrations? Share them here. Useful comments include a description of the problem, city and postal code.

Beware of "support numbers" or "recovery" accounts that might be posted below. Make sure to report and downvote those comments. Avoid posting your personal information.

Reddit Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • clovergalaxie
    Clover 🍀 (@clovergalaxie) reported

    rivals devs have a severe problem w listening to the playerbase and reddit too much. let **** ******* sit and marinate. force people to figure it tf out before holding their hand. its actively killing this game and making it unfun to play

  • amolitor99
    amolitor.dolt (@amolitor99) reported

    @TheLincoln only on Twitter and Reddit. this is mostly a made-up issue.

  • wsbrobinhood
    WSB Robinhood (@wsbrobinhood) reported

    Gm $WSB degens! A few updates from us - 💠 We have added a custom sticker pack to telegram, more will be added overtime. 💠 Dex bug looks to be corrected soon, we have been hounding them about it - this will show us as an OG coin of hood chain. 💠 CA has been added to our bio & X community is being made 💠 NOXA have been contacted for redirecting fees, they are slow to reply but as soon as they do the buy backs & community rewards will start! 💠 Our website is starting to be built, we want this to be perfect and show the story & history on WSB along with a custom WSB meme generator so this may take some time. 💠 Working on advertising across other platforms like tiktok & reddit.

  • HowDevelop
    Shivay Lamba (@HowDevelop) reported

    It reads your repo's live GitHub state and computes 4 action lists, nothing generic: 🔍 Triage: dupe clusters, hot issues, unanswered threads 🚀Ship It: approved-ready PRs + a changelog draft 👥 People: first-time contributors going stale 💬 Worth Replying To: HN/Reddit/web mentions

  • kmahjn
    KM | Reddit Marketing (@kmahjn) reported

    The biggest problem anyone who does Reddit Marketing faces is the BANS and REMOVALS. These 3 tips will help you avoid it: 1. Do not spam. Do not post unnecessarily 2. Post only if it's relevant to the sub 3. Warm-up your reddit account

  • avcanthony_
    Anthony Camacho (@avcanthony_) reported

    How To Select Pain Points That Drive CONVERSIONS, Not CLICKS Was doing learnings on one of my own ads this morning and had an insight I had to share. The ad had incredible soft metrics. Low CPM, low CPC, tons of engagement. And this is US, feed only, health. The hardest setup there is. Problem? It wasn't converting. Here's why: I built it around a pain point that's great at driving engagement but doesn't actually drive a purchase. That's the trap. You find an emotional, heavily upvoted Reddit post and think "perfect angle." But engagement is just people agreeing. It doesn't mean they'll buy. Made a quick video on Skool breaking down how to spot the difference. If you've got great soft metrics but no sales, this is probably what you overlooked. Go watch it. Quick bullet points of the video for those who can’t watch: • Engagement does not equal conversions. A pain point can rack up upvotes and great soft metrics while doing nothing to make people actually buy. • Facebook rewards engagement because that's how it measures user experience, so an engaging ad wins auctions and gets cheap traffic even if nobody purchases. • The trap: you see a Reddit post flooded with upvotes and emotional language and assume it's the perfect ad angle. It's good fuel, but usually not the pain that drives the sale. • Reddit engagement is just agreement. People relating to a pain doesn't mean they'd buy something to fix it. • To find the pains that actually convert, go to the ad library, pull your top competitors, and watch their longest-running ads all the way through. • Copy verbatim every pain they depict and every dream outcome they promise. The pains they keep returning to are the ones that convert. • Across every SmoothSpine ad, not one led with "bullshit politeness." They all lead with reclaiming your life and not feeling trapped in your body. That absence is the proof. • Don't throw the engagement pain away, demote it. It works as a secondary line to build relatability, just not as the thing you lead with. • Before leading with any pain point, check the ad library: are competitors putting it at the forefront, or is it just relatability filler? • Bottom line: low CPMs, great engagement, no sales? Check if you built the ad on a pain that engages but doesn't convert. Hope ya'll get value from this. To the moon we go boys.

  • ogbonigwe1
    The obonigwe (@ogbonigwe1) reported

    I knew there was going to be a problem with baby rose when my siblings that typically like all the songs i listen to suddenly said they didn’t like her(“she sounds like an old woman”). Just checked reddit and i am seeing the same thing on there. Welp. Maybe a drake and future feature is what she needs at this point. I also have two tracks she removed from Spotify and they’re really good.

  • EndrewBiz
    Endrew Cruz (@EndrewBiz) reported

    @molaerga that's the biggest problem with reddit sadly

  • Hemanth15938721
    He-MAN (@Hemanth15938721) reported

    @Uffdamnn_ @deepika45638 Ivr bido content kuda hange idhe Manipulate madi exaggerate madoke perfect agidhe Ivag heng agidhe andre toxic henge idru release dina 10× negative spread madtare pakka Adhe dodd problem, X matte reddit alla instagram matte youtube ge aa hate spread adre thumba kasta

  • knivesnhoney
    ⋆˚꩜。𝚔𝚒𝚝𝚝𝚢。𖦹°꩜.ೃ࿔ (@knivesnhoney) reported

    @SOCKZXX @holyldpdl according to reddit it was in e2 (toledo) n christine calls lemuel “grace jones in gucci” as an insult. kevin hanna co-wrote in both that episode and e6 so if he’s got an issue w louis/jacob he’s not hiding it well 😭😭

  • hugo_mata_
    Hugo Mata (@hugo_mata_) reported

    If you're starting out building apps: Build >> PRODUCTS << Not communities. Not marketplaces. Not directory aggregators. Create something a user will pay to solve a real PROBLEM. I did that mistake, and I keep noticing a lot of new SaaS and platforms that rely on daily engagement to work, like voting, interacting, submitting something. In reality, most users won't even open your site a second time. But this is also one of the coolest things to build, especially if you're starting out. You ask Claude to build a website scraping, listing and aggregating information about, let's say, all the events happening in your city. Or all websites to submit your site when launching a product to get visibility and good backlinks. Anyway, this is all nice but it's also useless, since it will become a graveyard as soon as nobody enters the site for a second time. So keep in mind that X and Reddit exist and don't waste time recreating communities or something to get upvoted or downvoted, which are something they solved a long time ago. The only way a solution like this would have a minimal chance is if you already have a certain level of influence and audience on these social platforms and can drive traffic to there by posting about it. But if you are not that yet, let's focus on a PRODUCT that solves a real problem.

  • dragon_sea8
    AustralDragon (@dragon_sea8) reported

    Dismiss the problem of evil is really dumb. Yeah, that there is kids with cáncer but the billonaire ****.lives 90 yo it's a theological problem that must be deal in a mature way, instead of * lol, reddit atheist "

  • aCovingtonBot
    joey from Baltimore (@aCovingtonBot) reported

    @ThourCS2 You forgot the part where the real players refuse to kick the bots. Only to log onto reddit and complain about the cheating problem 5 minutes later

  • kmahjn
    KM | Reddit Marketing (@kmahjn) reported

    "Reddit hates marketing" is the most expensive lie in the SaaS industry. Reddit hates ads. It rewards usefulness and no product is better positioned to exploit that than Postiz. Here's the 90-day Reddit playbook I'd run if @wickedguro hired me: 1. Pick the right rooms: This is the basic mistake everyone makes. You built a SaaS and post about it on r/SaaS. That sub consists of other SaaS founders, not your customers. Postiz is about social media scheduling. Still not gonna post on r/marketing. Too obvious, too jaded, too full of other marketers. Instead, I'd go: → r/AI_agents → r/opensource → r/Entrepreneur → r/digitalmarketing → r/socialmediamanagers → r/sideprojects + r/SideProject → r/degoogle + r/privacy (own-your-data angle) → r/selfhosted (the goldmine, these people convert on "free + own your data" like nothing else) One tool, eight different angles. The self-hosted crowd cares about data ownership. The Entrepreneur crowd cares about the business story. The social media manager crowd cares about saving money. Same product. Different pitch per room. That's the part everyone skips. -------------------------------------------------------- 2. Warm the account first: A 2-day-old account posting about a product = instant removal, possible ban. Before anything else: → 100+ comment karma minimum → 2 weeks of genuine activity in target subs → Join the communities. Upvote. Reply to random threads that have nothing to do with Postiz. Mods check post history. Every single time. An account that only talks about one product is a billboard, and billboards get torn down. -------------------------------------------------------- 3. Comments before posts. Always: Weeks 1–2: zero posts. Just answers. Someone asks "cheap Buffer alternative?" You show up with a genuinely helpful comparison. Buffer vs Hootsuite vs Later vs Postiz. Honest pros and cons. Postiz mentioned once, in context, not as the punchline. Even mention where Postiz falls short. "The Instagram integration can be flaky since Meta keeps changing their API" builds more trust than ten feature lists. Here's what nobody tells you: Reddit threads rank on Google for years. Go and search "Buffer alternatives" right now on Google and you'll find Reddit threads on the first page. One good comment there gets read by thousands of buyers every month, forever, for free. That's not a comment. That's an asset. -------------------------------------------------------- 4. The founder posts, not the brand Nobody wants to talk to a logo. A brand account dropping a link = ignored or banned. A founder posting "I built an open-source Buffer alternative, here's what I learned" = front page. The post formats that print on Reddit: → "6 months of building an open-source SaaS — revenue, mistakes, numbers" (build in public) → "Buffer raised prices again, so here's how to self-host your own scheduler" (newsjacking) → "Why I made my startup open-source and what happened next" (transparency bait) → "I built X because I was tired of paying $99/month for Y" (origin story) Notice: none of these are about the product. They're about the story. The product is just the setting. -------------------------------------------------------- 5. Give away the whole thing: The product is free. Weaponize that. Post the complete self-hosting guide directly in r/selfhosted. Docker compose file included. Every step, in the post. No "link in bio." No "DM me for the guide." No newsletter gate. Counterintuitive truth: the more you give away inside the post, the more people click through anyway. Reddit can smell a funnel from three subreddits away. The posts that hold nothing back are the ones that get 500 upvotes and the traffic from 500 upvotes beats any gated funnel you could build. -------------------------------------------------------- 6. Mine the competitor complaints: This is the highest-intent traffic on the internet and it's sitting there for free. Search Reddit for: → "Hootsuite too expensive" → "Buffer price increase" → "Later alternatives" → "canceling Buffer" Those threads are full of people with their wallet already out, actively shopping for a replacement. A helpful comment there is worth 50 cold posts. Set up alerts (F5Bot is free) for competitor names + "alternative." Respond within hours, not days. First good answer in the thread wins the Google traffic forever. -------------------------------------------------------- 7. Handle the mod problem before it happens: Every founder eventually gets a post removed and rage-quits Reddit. Wrong move. → Read the rules of every sub before posting. Actually read them. → Some subs have "Self-Promo Saturday" threads: use them. → Message mods before posting anything borderline: "Hey, I built an open-source tool your community might find useful, is this okay to share?" Half will say yes. Some will even sticky it. A removed post isn't censorship. It's feedback on your approach. -------------------------------------------------------- 8. Turn users into posters: One founder posting = marketing. Fifty happy users mentioning you organically = a moat no competitor can cross. Postiz already has the raw material — an active Discord and GitHub community. I'd nudge it: → Screenshot-worthy dashboards = free content → When a user writes a genuine review or tutorial, amplify it everywhere → Ask users to share their self-hosted setups in r/selfhosted (people love posting their stacks anyway) Not scripted. Not incentivized with discounts (Reddit sniffs that out instantly). Just nudged. -------------------------------------------------------- 9. Build your own room: r/Postiz: Once the flywheel starts spinning, stop renting attention and start owning it. Create the official subreddit. But here's the thing, a dead subreddit is worse than no subreddit. An empty room with 12 members screams "nobody uses this product." So you don't just launch it. You seed it: → Move support questions from Discord/GitHub into the sub. Every answered question becomes searchable content that ranks on Google. → Post changelogs and release notes there first, give people a reason to check it before Twitter. → Pin a mega-thread: "Show us your Postiz setup" self-hosters love showing off their stacks. → @wickedguro does a monthly "what should we build next" thread. Reddit users vote with upvotes. Free roadmap prioritization AND engagement in one move. The compounding effect nobody talks about: every "how do I fix X in Postiz" thread answered in your own sub is a Google result you own forever. That's your documentation, your community, and your SEO, all in one place, at zero cost. Buffer has r/BufferApp with a few thousand members. It quietly does more for their retention than most of their paid marketing. -------------------------------------------------------- 10. Measure what actually matters: Upvotes are vanity. Track: → GitHub stars per week → Branded search volume → "Found you on Reddit" in signup surveys → Direct traffic spikes after each post (Reddit users don't click tracked links — they type the URL) Reddit attribution is messy and delayed. A comment from month one drives installs in month six. Judge the channel on a 90-day window, not post-by-post. -------------------------------------------------------- The Ideal 90-day timeline: Weeks 1-2: Warm accounts, join subs, comment only. Weeks 3-4: First value posts (guides, comparisons). Zero links if possible. Month 2: Founder story posts, build-in-public updates, competitor thread mining. Month 3: Community flywheel, user posts, AMAs, mod relationships, launch r/Postiz and seed it with support threads + changelogs. That's it. No hacks. No bots. No fake accounts asking planted questions (people notice, and the fallout is brutal). Reddit is the most underpriced channel for SaaS right now and almost every founder does it wrong by leading with just link and ending up getting banned. Lead with usefulness. The traffic follows. I would like to mention that while researching about Postiz on Reddit, I found @wickedguro's Reddit profile and he was already doing most of this stuff that I mentioned. But seems like he has taken a break from Reddit for now. Anyhow, this playbook can be replicated for any SaaS, any product. The basic premise would be similar to the above mentioned points. -------------------------------------------------------- P.S- I run exactly this for SaaS founders doing $15K–$500K MRR. If your Reddit channel is sitting idle, DM me.

  • Spirit_Handle
    yellow boy (@Spirit_Handle) reported

    @sacarybagna14 @DanLassmanq0vz @ArtetaEra ****** hell. His stans spread misformartion.Gyokeres was the problem,not other players I CAN FIND HUNDREDS OF COMMENTS FROM TWITTER,INSTA, REDDIT WHEN THEY SAID GYOKERES CAN CREATE FOR HIMSELF. AND HE CANT BECAUSE HIS POSITIONING AND MOVEMENT IN THE BOX ARE **** HE WILL BE SOLD

  • Helixantithesis
    Ian Matson (@Helixantithesis) reported

    @roydherbert I publish no where. Idk the"rules" 3blu1 Brown on reddit has a lot of my posts. Cern had the dna decryption. Reddit scrapped my account. Had over 15k views on 1 post. That's why they shut down I exposed their fatal mistakes

  • PurelyCoders
    BugsAndVibes (@PurelyCoders) reported

    Got banned on Reddit for using AI to fix grammar in my posts Temp-label on X for scheduling content I improved with Grok Not spamming. Not generating fake stuff. Just trying to communicate clearly. Is this the new normal? Platforms punishing people for writing better? Feels wild

  • EggSpicey
    MrDark007X (@EggSpicey) reported

    @mandalorymory No matter what you do on Reddit, there’s always going to be someone who is going to have a problem you, I’ve asked multiple questions multiple times because I didn’t know something and get passive aggressive responses no matter how nice I put it or how I’ve even gotten threats.

  • JerichoGTA
    Jericho (@JerichoGTA) reported

    Could GTA 6 cause depression once it's released? Sounds like a stupid question. But it's not really a new thing, and once you notice that, it starts to feel more plausible. After Avatar came out in 2009, some people said they felt depressed after watching it. People started calling it "Avatar depression." There's a similar thing with post-concert blues, where you feel down after the excitement of a big event just stops. With GTA 6, I've already seen Reddit posts from people making drastic life decisions around the release. So it's clearly doing something to people before it's even out. What happens once they've actually played it and there's nothing left to wait for? Once it's just another game sitting in the library, I wonder if we'll see the same kind of crash. #GTA6 #GTAVI

  • leopardracer
    leopardracer (@leopardracer) reported

    some guy on reddit just gave away the entire quant finance interview playbook and it's actually good not the usual "just grind leetcode" advice, dude spent months prepping himself and got fed up with everything being scattered across random threads and paywalled courses so he wrote the whole thing down > month 1-2 is foundations, prep book cover to cover, mental math until it's fast, and actually pick a track instead of prepping for everything at once > month 2-4 you specialize, redo the hard section twice, start doing mock interviews even when they're rough > month 4+ it's company specific, practicing saying your thinking out loud, keeping the mental math sharp under pressure honestly the best line in the whole thing has nothing to do with quant, it's talk through your reasoning even when you don't know the answer, and don't only apply to the dream firms whole breakdown's free, worth the read

  • Vision33X
    Vision33X ♘ (@Vision33X) reported

    @brucefenton nobody drops billions on a company just to burn it down. thats a reddit theory not a business model

  • TheRealBirnbaum
    The Psycho Analyst (@TheRealBirnbaum) reported

    We’re starting to enter the greatest bubble of all time: the non-bubble bubble. Read the articles from 1999 and 2000. Look at the actual dotcoms—everything from the names, which literally to a man had .com in them, to the fundamentals, which were literally nonexistent. It’s just not close. Yes, bigger infra companies benefitted temporarily. But none of it was built with cash flows, and almost none of their customers had viable business model to sustain that spend. Today, AI companies are funding their own cash flows. The entire structure of the market in 1999 had become fraudulent. It was a giant Ponzi scheme, with I-banks underwriting new dotcoms and straight up lying about their prospects for the fees so they could then consult and issue secondaries for more fees. Retail was just chock full of rubes ripe for the plucking. These people had zero understanding of business, investing, or anything that’s far more widely understood today by tens of thousands of retail investors across X and Reddit alone—if not much more. They swarmed chat rooms and pumped stocks with zero shame. 2026 bears quite literally zero resemblance to 1999. Understanding history is important. It doesn’t repeat, and it rarely even rhymes.

  • ecomchigga
    ecomchigga (@ecomchigga) reported

    at 7:40pm i had no product. by 11:17pm a stranger in texas paid me $19 for one. i've made $1,340 from it since and haven't opened the file once. every minute timestamped: 7:40pm. opened reddit. searched "struggling with" in r/sidehustle, r/EntrepreneurRideAlong, r/workonline. scrolled for 19 minutes looking for the same complaint posted by different people in different words. 7:59pm. found it. same question asked 6 different ways: "how do i actually get my first sale with a digital product when i have zero audience." 300-900 upvotes each. dozens of comments all saying "following" because nobody had the answer packaged. 8:12pm. opened a blank google doc. wrote the answer like a long text to a friend who just asked me at midnight. no outline. no headers. just the answer start to finish until the answer was done. 9:28pm. finished. 14 pages. messy. read back like a voice note someone typed instead of recording. 9:34pm. organized it. added section breaks and 3 screenshots of real dashboards showing the steps working. cut 2 paragraphs that were just me performing credibility i didn't have. 14 pages became 11. 9:48pm. cold pizza break. stared at the wall for 6 minutes questioning whether anyone would pay for this when half of it exists in scattered reddit threads. decided the scattered part is the whole problem and the assembly is the product. 9:54pm. exported as PDF. opened canva. free template. typed the title. changed one color. exported. total design time: 4 minutes. it looked exactly like a cover made in 4 minutes. 10:03pm. created the product page. uploaded the PDF. one-sentence description: "how to get your first digital product sale with zero audience." priced at $19. not $9 because single digits feel worthless. not $39 because a stranger with no proof doesn't get to ask for $39. $19 clears without a testimonial. 10:14pm. went back to the 6 reddit threads. answered 3 questions with real detail. not links. real answers. mentioned the guide in a reply when someone asked for more. link on my profile. never in the comment. 10:29pm. posted one tweet about the problem. not about the product. the tweet described why most people never make their first sale. link in the first reply. 11:17pm. phone buzzed on the couch. $19. texas. someone i'll never meet bought an 11-page PDF i wrote in my underwear 3 hours ago. that was 4 months ago. same file. same cover. same price. $1,340 and i haven't opened the google doc since that night. meanwhile someone in my DMs last week said they're "almost ready to launch." been almost ready for 8 weeks. they have a notion board, a color palette, and a logo they paid $200 for. product doesn't exist yet. page one hasn't been written. 3 hours 37 minutes. $1,340. the cover still looks like it was made in 4 minutes because it was.

  • Ringo391854
    Ringo (@Ringo391854) reported

    What a terrible platform @Reddit is.

  • ReluctantBadger
    Plush (@ReluctantBadger) reported

    At most I will post paggro sometimes , but I’m not out here courting danger. I have the most vanilla takes and I’m too scared to post them lately because everyone’s so gd mean. Not on Reddit though. We may have a Problem.

  • Berserk710415
    berserk415 (@Berserk710415) reported

    @xint3ger @Lampontheapp @IGN God you people are slow there’s a whole sub Reddit and YouTube videos about people complaining about it and you just assume I’m not one of them. Are you that dense?

  • Radha54716344
    Radha (@Radha54716344) reported

    @Sikha1385956 I want to stay away from this negativity same i want for my girl but without any reason they drag her. I am not on reddit and SS mujhe X per hi mila hai. Mujhe aapse koi issue nahi hai dear Mujhe gussa iss baat ka hai ki ek ladki ka phir se CA karenge ye sab.

  • Rix6145
    Rixsaw (@Rix6145) reported

    @reddit_lies Someone needs to shut down reddit, it is reinforcing insanity.

  • Jamesthehamez12
    Justin Watson Enjoyer 🇺🇸🇺🇦🇲🇲🇵🇸 (@Jamesthehamez12) reported

    @Lothric961 @spacecowgiirrl Reddit is down the hall and to the left sir

  • zanedhanoo204
    Zane Dhanoo (@zanedhanoo204) reported

    I support this, but while that being said i doubt he will, its a mostly useless social media apart from aggressive networkers, it solves a problem that shouldn't exist, If you want news, get some papers subscriptions, If you want opinions, hop over to x/reddit Unless theres an opportunity he wont waste his valuable time on Linkedin, although god i hope he spots something i would love to see a turnaround of the site