Reddit status: access issues and outage reports
Some problems detected
Users are reporting problems related to: website down, errors and sign in.
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.
June 19: Problems at Reddit
Reddit is having issues since 04:40 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.
- Website Down (63%)
- Errors (24%)
- Sign in (12%)
Live Outage Map
The most recent Reddit outage reports came from the following cities:
| City | Problem Type | Report Time |
|---|---|---|
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Website Down | 7 days ago |
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Errors | 8 days ago |
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Sign in | 10 days ago |
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Website Down | 14 days ago |
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Website Down | 16 days ago |
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Website Down | 17 days ago |
Community Discussion
Tips? Frustrations? Share them here. Useful comments include a description of the problem, city and postal code.
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Reddit Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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threadline (@threadlineCX) reportedMost companies don’t have a “lack of customer feedback” problem. They have a “too much feedback, not enough clarity” problem. Reviews, surveys, tickets, calls, chats, Reddit, app stores… The signal is there. Threadline helps teams pull the story out of the noise.
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ABI 🍂 comms open (@aboureux) reported@sun_breakerr it's crazy how broken everything so honestly same. i really hope he gets tired and goes to reddit or some ****
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Red&Wolf Fund Management Co (@CrimsonSellec9) reportedBeen telling the crackers that for the last wo)7 2 decades. But the crackers were like "Uh hyuck *Fixes reddit longhouse glass* do you ummm burn the whole house down just because cockroahces in it? Checkmate atheist". Idk can you? Lots of cracker golems with guns up there wo)7.
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vandit. (@v4nd1t) reportedthin skin take is the common trap, reddit doesn't hate promotion, it hates being sold to. those are different. you can promote all day if you lead with help reddit works if you teach. - so don't post your product - comment on threads where people already have the problem and answer it properly. - mention the product only when it's the actual answer or when someone asks you or shows interest in learning more that's why "reddit is hard" and "reddit is a goldmine" are both true. same platform, opposite approach
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Mitul (@indiemitul) reportedMini SaaS #12 Most founders ask: "How do I get more customers?" Wrong question. instead ask, "Where do my customers already spend time?" Your first customers are usually hiding in plain sight: → Reddit communities → Facebook groups → X conversations → Slack communities → Niche forums Stop trying to reach everyone. Go where the problem is already being discussed. Read the complaints. Answer questions. Become useful. Because the best marketing doesn't feel like marketing. It feels like help. And people buy from those who help them first. Where did you find your first customer?
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Alexa | AI Distribution & Sales (@alexabelonix) reported@varshith5289n haha same, reddit is chaotic and weird but also where the real problems live. Lurk a bit and you’ll find better intel than any polished site.
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Guna (@gunaa_dev) reported18 days of building Clksy in public. still $0. here's what today actually looked like: - updated the docs page (Zapier native integration, added Slack guide) - scheduled next week's posts - wrote and scheduled Ship Log Issue #2 - replied to founders on Twitter and Reddit - added a new feature idea to the backlog none of it shipped a feature. none of it brought a paying customer. but I think this is just what early stage looks like. you do the unglamorous work. you don't see the result yet. you do it again tomorrow. 24 days left to get my first paying customer before my 27th birthday. the pressure is useful.
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Max Ellison (@MaxEllison2048) reported@white_rxbt @septisum I saw a lengthy post on Reddit that goes into details. The gist is that this isn't new technology, it's old tech with AI "enhanced" images. This type of body scan can't penetrate bones, so it can't see inside the skull. The resolution tends to be lower so things like microscopic fractures won't show up. AI enhancement can't enhance things below resolution thresholds. It could harm people by giving them false positives making them spend money on more testing and treatment for phantom issues. As well as false negatives where they think they are fine, but the machine missed a tumor or other issue. If this is affordable and helps us find tumors early and often, or understand our health better, it could be a net benefit. But it's not a sure thing.
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IsaChaudhary (@Chaudhary_Isa) reportedQ - How many times do I need to say this? A - One more time. So what I'm about to talk about, is something I've mentioned before. In fact, I've probably spoken about it several times. And I will continue to speak about It. Because it's that important!!! And I hope, that by the end of this, you'll do what I've recommended. Especially if you own a business and are struggling to sell. Because I can guarantee this is going to be one of the reasons you cannot see good numbers. But before I get into all of that... ... I should warn you. What I'm about to say isn't new. In fact it's very basic... But it might as well be new, because almost no one does it properly. And I don't blame them. Because It isn't exactly fun. No one wakes up and goes: "Oh I cannot wait until I do *A**** *E****H." Okay, enough foreplay. What am I talking about? I'm talking about getting inside the readers head AKA market research. Before you huff and puff and scroll... just read what I'm about to say. I've met and spoke to many business owners, and every time I ask them questions about their audience. The answers are always bad - to put it bluntly. Even when I sent surveys, I just get information that is useless. If that sounds like you. If you can't give a detailed explanation on how they feel with their problem, how they feel when around others, how it affects their life. Basically, if you cannot go super deep, and know the reader better than their own mother knows them. Then you my friend have a very big problem. And the only way you're going to fix it, is by doing more market research. Now, I'm not talking about sitting behind a screen scrolling reddit, YouTube for hours on end. While you can do that, and it can give you good results. You need to step out of your comfort zone, and actually speak to people. Because this method will give you the best results. How do you do this? Speak to your customers on a call, speak to people in your market, go to where they hang out and analyse everything. I promise you, once you do this... You'll see a massive difference with your sales.
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giuseppe1010 (@giuseppe1010) reported@Project_COE I read that someone posted on Reddit that Plaion replied to them and said about 2 more weeks for the tax issue to be fixed for ordering the Ultimate Edition
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Dooderoni (c0mms open!) (@Dooderoni1) reportedentire genre of people going "marioboing12345 was caught on camera gunning down everyone in a dollar general, but he also drew unethical fandom content/medias which is way more evil if you really think about it" while standing in front of a reddit shelf or their plushy collection
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çüd (@KemalistHitler) reported@criticalcivil @ATwinkler2ND reddit is right down the corner you ******* ******
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Jean-Philippe Lebœuf (@jpleboeuf) reportedTried moving money out of PayPal Business. Even Gemini 3.5 Flash Extended couldn’t explain it after a long back-and-forth, even with full access to PayPal docs and Reddit. PayPal, your documentation and UX are broken: if an LLM cannot get it, regular users have zero chance.
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BYUAdam (@byutandaor) reported@bonevoid Anything moderated by Riot yk is gonna be super cringe. League chat, twitch chat, Reddit threads. Can't say anything anymore without the fun police breaking down your door with M-16's.
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John Gaines (@Jgainsey) reported@BMKing23 I retested yesterday after an IO dev replied to a comment I had made about the issue on Reddit. I saw an uplift in overall performance from whatever version I played through the game on, but the “uplift” from DLAA to Quality was basically identical to launch.
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rae! ✒️ is writing... (@xXm0n_fairyXx) reportedIs there a reddit for really perculiar tech problems?
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Jen (@JadesSabre) reportedI read this horrifying discussion of first person on Reddit and people swearing up and down that it's like putting words into their mouths instead of being told a story by someone. And I really do wonder if it has to do with this trend lately where people can't identify with the main character of a book unless that character is exactly like them in meaningful ways.
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hollow (@Cardern1) reportedI sat her down after dinner and explained that after reading a bunch of Reddit threads and watching some TikTok therapists, I realized I have “unmet needs.” Monogamy is a patriarchal construct anyway. She started crying immediately, classic female manipulation tactic. I was very calm and logical. I said: “Babe, you’ve let yourself go a bit since the kids. I still love you, but I need variety. You can have the house and the kids full-time. I’ll still pay the mortgage… most months. In return, you support my journey and never shame me for dating 22-year-olds.
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Nainsi Dwivedi (@NainsiDwiv50980) reportedMost people install Claude. A few people build a system around it. That's where the gap starts. The weird thing about Claude Projects is that they're deceptively simple. You create a Project. Upload a few files. Add some instructions. And it feels like you've understood the feature. I thought the same thing. Then I started seeing people getting outputs that were dramatically better than mine. Not 10% better. Not "slightly cleaner." I'm talking about work that felt like it came from an entirely different model. Same Claude. Completely different results. After digging through dozens of Reddit threads, creator workflows, power-user setups, and making most of the mistakes myself, I realized something: The people getting the most out of Claude aren't better prompters. They're better at structuring Projects. A few examples: → They don't rely on custom styles for consistency. Everything important lives in Project instructions. → They aggressively remove outdated knowledge files instead of letting stale context quietly degrade answers. → They start fresh chats far more often than you'd expect instead of dragging around 200-message conversations. → They use Sonnet for almost everything and save Opus for work that genuinely needs it. → They explicitly tell Claude to say "I don't know" instead of rewarding confident guessing. → They separate Projects by objective instead of throwing everything into one giant workspace. → They upload examples of their own writing instead of typing "write like me." → They understand context doesn't magically transfer between Projects. None of these tips are groundbreaking on their own. That's what makes them dangerous. They're small enough to ignore. But together they completely change how Claude behaves. I turned the biggest lessons into a visual cheat sheet because I wish someone had handed this to me on day one. Would've saved me weeks of trial and error. If you're already using Claude daily, you'll probably recognize at least one mistake you're still making
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Ghostroot (@Gh0stroot) reported90% of startups fail. AI didn't change that number. It just made failing faster. Here's what's actually happening. In 2024 it took 6 months to build an MVP. In 2026 it takes 6 days. So founders build more. Ship more. Fail more. Faster. AI didn't fix the core problem. It amplified it. The core problem was never execution. It was never speed. It was never lack of tools. It was building something nobody actually wanted. The graveyard of startups in 2026 looks different from 2020. More polished products. Cleaner code. Better UI. Zero users. Because the founder used AI to build faster instead of using it to validate smarter. The founders who survive use AI differently. Before writing a single line of code — they feed Claude the market data. The competitor reviews. The Reddit complaints. The job posting trends. They ask: "Is this problem real? Is it painful enough? Is anyone already solving it?" Then they build. AI is the best tool ever built for executing on a validated idea. It's also the best tool ever built for executing on a wrong one. The tool doesn't know the difference. You have to.
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laurie cooper | tng s7 ds9 s2 (@laurie_tbbt) reportedIs a Cosmo subscription worth it in 2026? I need to have outside sources on my problems that are not just TikTok and reddit
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Inkline (@InklineO) reportedI've watched founders pour six figures into redesigns... Thinking a slicker hero section would fix pipeline. It won't. The decision was made in a Slack channel, a peer call, a podcast, a Reddit thread. You weren't in the room.
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Simon Wilhelm (@Simon_LeanderW) reportedHow to get your brand cited in AI answers, in order of impact: 1/ Fix your entity so it reads identically across every platform 2/ Restructure content answer-first, not intro-first 3/ Earn third-party mentions (Reddit, press, reviews) 4/ Clean up schema and headings so models can parse you 5/ Keep it recent, models discount stale sources Only 30% of brands stay visible between two consecutive AI answers on the same topic.
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Mizz Elizabeth (@mizz_fieldss) reportedis anyone else’s @Reddit broken rn? my pfp, followers/following, bio and insights won’t display, and i can’t make a post or a comment but i can upvote…. i tried all the fixes and cleared caches , offloaded app… wtf reddit?
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Chan Chu (@chanchutoad) reportedWhoever posted this on reddit needs to be put down
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Harshil Tomar (@Hartdrawss) reported@eliana_jordan reddit hands down
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Adam Taylor (@adamtaylorl) reportedI had a friend spending $8K per day on Meta ads who told me his ad account had become a slot machine. I looked at his ad account. One winning ad doing 80% of the spend… A graveyard of dead tests behind it… And him, personally, scripting UGC at 11pm. I asked him: "What happens to the account the week that one ad dies?" He went quiet. He already knew. He'd just been praying it wouldn't. So I gave him 4 rules and told him to stop launching anything that didn't pass all four. Rule 1: No Customer Language = No Ad If the hook came from a brainstorm instead of a real review, survey, or Reddit thread, it doesn't run. You're guessing, and the algorithm knows it. Rule 2: No Awareness Level = No Ad Every ad has to be mapped to a stage of awareness. He was 90% bottom-of-funnel and shouting at the same exhausted audience. That's why ROAS kept sliding. Rule 3: No Iteration Plan = No Scaling A winner is just a signal for what’s next. Before scaling anything, he had to know how he'd repackage it – new format, new hook, new creator. Rule 4: No System = No Founder Sleep If the process only worked when he was the one running it, it wasn't a system. It was a second job he'd hired himself for. He implemented all four. His account stopped depending on a single ad. Winners started compounding instead of dying. And for the first time in two years, he wasn't the bottleneck. I caught up with him a few months later. He said, "I forgot the brand could grow without me touching every ad." Don't confuse launching more ads with building something that scales. If your whole account is riding on one ad you're scared to lose – that's what we fix on a Creative Planning Call. Schedule for free using the link in my bio.
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Oh great, it’s Ryan. (@IconRepulsive) reported@aboardgravyboat @MenezesCracked They got distracted ************ and had to go back to Reddit to calm down.
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Proxima Centauri B (@ProxCentauriB) reported@booktycoon Reddit is a terrible source.
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Sea Slug (@sluggymcduggy) reported@WarnerBernieBro The chemicals used in the making of the toilet paper don’t agree with my skin/ph balance. A lot of women now have an issue with Kirkland brand ever since they changed how it was made. There’s a whole Reddit thread on it lol