Reddit status: access issues and outage reports
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.
May 29: Problems at Reddit
Reddit is having issues since 11:00 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.
- Website Down (62%)
- Errors (26%)
- Sign in (13%)
Live Outage Map
The most recent Reddit outage reports came from the following cities:
| City | Problem Type | Report Time |
|---|---|---|
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Sign in | 14 hours ago |
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Sign in | 5 days ago |
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Sign in | 5 days ago |
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Website Down | 7 days ago |
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Sign in | 7 days ago |
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Errors | 8 days ago |
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:
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Sabamika (@Sabamika1) reported@athiestboi Reddit is down the hall, good day.
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I'm in the 4×4, I got my wrist up (@iieffff) reported@SpotifyCares Nope Autoplay/Radio is still not working. Look on Reddit. Allot of people complaining about it.
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AB (@AaaBbbAaaBbb90) reported@rich8606 @epicanime009 @IGNDeals It expired like 4 days ago. You can check in reddit , many people have the same problem. You must be currently a ps subscriber to upgrade to premium,or at least in Europe 🤷. Idk
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Annie Yang (@annieqyang) reportedHere's my exact growth playbook and how I'm going to get 10 users to use my tool so I can iterate on user feedback in the next 5 days: 1) Reddit - search for Bloggers, eComm founders, and SaaS founders who have mentioned issues with getting traffic to their site and DM them directly. 2) Reddit - Make posts that agitate the pain point and point them to my free SEO tool on the site. I have previously gotten hundreds of users for another project so I'll use the same strategy. 3) Reach out to smaller Pinterest creators I see on TikTok/YouTube/Instagram and have them use the website. Will report back every day on how this goes 🫡 #buildinpublic #marketing #growth
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TheFantasticStrange (@fantastik_mcu) reportedSPIDERMAN BND "SPIDER-PUBERTY" Tom Holland just revealed his pitch to the Brand New Day writers room. After knowing that Tom Holland explicitly stated that he had been examining what fans want on X and Reddit, fans can expect that our to-die-for scenes will be in the film. “My pitch when I came to the table with it was called ‘Spider-Puberty.’ What happens if Peter Parker is losing control and things are changing? ‘Spider-Puberty’ was my tagline pitch to the studio, which was immediately shot down. But they liked the kernel of the idea and it grew into what we have in the movie now.”
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Jimoh | UX/UI Orchestrator (@Designersimp) reported@Raynerdtech @Windows Lol That's not a windows issue, if it was, mine would disappear too. You probably did something the wrong way, fix it... Windows are really really easy to fix. Go to Reddit or smth, a cmd prompt would like fix your issue or some regedit edit.
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J-Money (@GiannisAllStar) reported@stucoates @Sarahhuniverse Reddit is down the hall and to the left
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Gene Splicing (@GeneSplicing) reported@StreamersEra Most people in your life aren't your friends. There are very few people you can actually count on when it comes down to it. I read a post on reddit of a person moving cross country and their friend was supposed to drive. They ghosted them last minute. Thats crazy.
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SilentGamer (@SilentGame33687) reported@oidonhagouda It really comes down to the person. Most people I know take a shower or a bath every day. Some people wash their hair twice a day because of the job they do. If it is on Reddit it is more than likely bullshit. There are people who don't wash or shower often though.
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Vinod KR (@always_VinodKr) reportedDON'T CHATGPT - WHAT TO BUILD DON'T CHATGPT - WHAT TO BUILD DON'T CHATGPT - WHAT TO BUILD i've been spending too much time in the corners of the internet — reddit threads, forum rants, 1-star reviews, frustrated comments from real people who couldn't find what they needed. turns out that's exactly where the best micro SaaS ideas live. not invented. not generated. found. i'm going to start sharing them — one validated idea at a time, each with the real frustration behind it. the problems were frustrating enough to made someone type it out. if you're a builder who knows how to build but keeps getting stuck on what — this feed is for you 🎯
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Tony Whitehawk (@tonywhitehawk) reported@mweinbach Interesting results. All I see on Reddit about gemini 3.5 flash are complaints about hallucinations and broken workflows. And hope that pro will be better.
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Feminist Batman (@FeministBade6) reportedGoy the type of Reddit athiest to see someone type “I’m so sorry your gran died, she is looking down at you in heaven” and go “well erm ackshually, she is decomposing. Heaven isn’t real. 🤔 “
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ZennSquabbles (@ZSquabbles) reported@Govindtwtt If I google a problem, I have to dig through forums, reddit posts, etc to find answers. ChatGPT checks all that for me. So, no.
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Pawel (@pawel_888) reportedIt's been a busy couple of days. 54,523 Reddit posts scraped 5,292 Analysed using an LLM 3,300 identified as real problems that could be solved using software. 102 Recurring problems (≥2 unique users have the same problem) This will be the best directory for SaaS ideas EVER.
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Civic Chronicle (@CivicChronicle1) reportedSometimes you just see a guy walking down the street and you think ''this guy is on Reddit.''
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KenFarmer ⒶⓋ (@KenFarmerTV) reportedThe problem with LLM's (aka AI) is that they use sources like Reddit. Chat GPT made up a "fact" that people passed around on Facebook. When I tracked it back, its a single reddit post. There was no **** kit for E jean Carroll, she never went to the police. But the LLM's have picked this post and tried to make it true. When I asked its source...this is what it gave me. A random anon post on Reddit used to lie. Dont trust the AI
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fúnlólá 💕🍉🧚🏽♀️(18/50📚) (@__dabira__) reportedActually put down the chat gpt and Google your problems. There's a person on quora or reddit or some Internet blog that has written about that same thing.
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TheEliteOne (@im_so_lost_45) reported@Lumivibes_ Problem is i used to use reddit but im banned
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ItsLethal (@ItsLethalTTV) reportedReddit is useless in 2026 for solving problems
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andresfgp13 (@andresfgp13) reported@JamesMa44909251 @reddit_lies its Reddit, behaviour like that its encouraged by the mods, its only a problem if it makes news.
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Cobalt ಠ_ಠ Azurean (@CobaltAzurean) reported@Musicalstorm05 @CDCgov Flag on the play, hyperbole detected. I think the various governing bodies need to stop talking out of both sides of their face when trying to convince people that it's a bigger problem than it really is when, in fact, it's not. Now kindly **** off back to Bluesky or Reddit.
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Andy Wheeler (@CrimeDecoder) reportedNew Reddit banner for the crime analysis site. It ended up being easier to just generate some of the elements, and post edit to make them the correct aspect ratio. None of the image generation APIs can make arbitrary dimensions for images, and struggle heavily to consistently keep empty margins for wide pics to just crop down.
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Crytem (@Crytem_) reported@sonicx246 @VMedrane Reddit is down the hall and to the left
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Tommy Vietor (@TVietor08) reported@LevineJonathan You’re right vague historical Reddit posts are a huge issue in Maine
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Greg from Butler PA (@MammothUsa8269) reported@unusual_whales Reddit is a cesspool and honestly should be shut down
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Harshil Tomar (@Hartdrawss) reportedRead this if you're stuck at $0 MRR 40 marketing moves that actually get you paid : 1. post on reddit before you post anywhere else because your buyers are already there having the exact conversation you need to be part of, you just have to find the right thread 2. answer questions in your niche every single day because consistency in one place builds more trust than showing up everywhere once a month 3. find threads where your buyer is already complaining and read every reply before you write anything, the language they use to describe their problem is the exact copy you should be writing 4. comment with value first and put your link in the reply to your own comment, not in the post itself, because reddit will suppress you otherwise and you lose the distribution 5. screenshot winning reddit threads and post them on X because you get the reach of a relatable story without having to manufacture one yourself 6. write one SEO article per week targeting one specific problem your buyer is googling, not a broad topic, the exact words they type when they're frustrated 7. your title tag is your hook and most people write it last when it should be written first because it determines whether anyone clicks regardless of how good the content is 8. update old content before writing new stuff because google rewards freshness and a ranking article that you improve will compound faster than a new one starting from zero 9. go after low-competition keywords first because ranking for something small builds domain authority that makes the harder keywords easier to rank for later 10. build internal links between every post you publish because it tells search engines which content is related and keeps readers on your site longer instead of bouncing after one page 11. post on X daily because the algorithm rewards accounts that show up consistently and punishes ones that disappear for a week and come back with a promo post 12. reply to 5 accounts bigger than you every morning with something genuinely useful because their audience sees your name before they ever see your content 13. your bio is the first thing someone reads when they decide whether to follow you, treat it like a landing page with a clear outcome not a list of things you are 14. threads get reshared because people save them for later, single tweets get forgotten because there is nothing to come back to 15. pin your best performing post not your calendar link because the pinned post is what every new profile visitor sees first and a promo post tells them nothing about why they should stay 16. post on linkedin 3 times a week minimum because the linkedin algorithm gives organic reach to accounts that are active and that reach is still far cheaper to earn than on any other platform 17. lead with the story on linkedin not the lesson because the lesson makes people nod and scroll, the story makes them stop and read 18. write your re-hook at line 3 because that is the last line visible before the see more cutoff and if it doesnt pull them in the rest of the post doesnt matter 19. comment on 10 linkedin posts before you publish your own because the algorithm reads your activity before it decides how far to push your content 20. document client results before you pitch anyone new because one specific outcome with real numbers closes faster than any service description you will ever write 21. send one email to your list every week because the founders who built real businesses from email did it through boring consistency not through perfect campaigns 22. plain text emails convert better than designed ones because they feel like a message from a person not a newsletter from a brand 23. write your subject line the same way you write a tweet hook because the open rate is decided before anyone reads a single word inside 24. collect emails from day one not after you have a product because the list you build before launch is the only audience you actually own 25. make one short video showing the before and after of working with you because proof of transformation is more convincing than any feature you can describe 26. hook in the first 3 seconds because the platform has already decided whether to push your video further based on how many people rewatched those first 3 seconds 27. one problem per video not five features because people share content that solves the exact thing they are dealing with right now, not content that covers everything 28. repurpose one piece of content across 4 platforms because the same insight lands differently depending on where someone finds it and you only have to think of it once 29. lo-fi content shot on your phone outperforms polished ads almost every time because it looks like something a real person made and real people trust real people 30. show the workflow not just the outcome because anyone can claim a result but showing how you got there is what makes people believe you and want to hire you 31. cold DM 3 people a day but lead with a specific observation about their work before you say anything about yourself because a compliment that shows you actually looked is the only opener that doesnt get ignored 32. follow up once exactly 3 days after your first message because most people dont reply to the first message and a single follow up doubles your response rate without feeling pushy 33. build in public so strangers trust you before they ever meet you because by the time someone books a call with you they should already feel like they know how you work 34. document your failures louder than your wins because everyone shares wins and nobody believes them, a real failure with a real lesson is the content that actually builds an audience 35. share your revenue numbers if you can because specific numbers make everything you say more credible and most of your competitors are too scared to do it which means you stand out by default 36. get one case study written before you pitch the next client because a case study does the selling for you and removes the part of the conversation where they have to take your word for it 37. ask every client for a testimonial the day you deliver because that is the moment they are most satisfied and waiting even a week means you are chasing them down for something they were happy to give 38. referrals close faster than any cold outreach you will ever do so build a simple incentive structure that makes your existing clients want to send people your way 39. pick two platforms and go genuinely deep on both before you touch anything else because trying to be everywhere at zero MRR just means you are mediocre everywhere 40. stay consistent for 90 days before you judge whether any of this is working because almost every founder who quit did it at day 60 when the results were two weeks away save this !
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🍔 merri 1# minedai fujoshi ✰ (@ribcagekiss) reported@SharkyLeo_YT why are you letting reddit losers getting over your head you're better than them man... Don't let some other people's opinions let you down for some bullshit on a game!
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Armaan Sidhu (@realarmaansidhu) reportedReddit and Shopify partnering is one of those deals that sounds boring and quietly solves a real problem for both sides. The integration lets Shopify merchants plug their storefronts straight into Reddit Ads, with codeless pixel tracking and automatic product catalog syncing. The strategic fit is sharp, because Reddit says its users are 62% more likely than the average American to be daily shoppers, and a TransUnion study found Reddit delivered over twice the incremental return on ad spend of the average North American media plan. Reddit gets ad dollars, Shopify merchants get a high-intent audience. Reddit's users don't just browse. They research purchases obsessively, which is exactly who a merchant wants to reach. The bigger frame is the agentic commerce shift the market keeps underpricing. Both companies are positioning for a world where buying happens through AI agents and embedded storefronts rather than search-and-click. Shopify in particular put up a strong quarter the street has been strangely dismissive of, treating it as just another expensive SaaS name in a semiconductor-obsessed market. The whole market is pricing chips and ignoring the businesses that actually sell things. The valuation context is what makes this interesting. Both Reddit and Shopify are founder-run compounders with accelerating growth that have sold off hard in 2026, largely because they aren't AI hardware. That rotation, everything semis up and everything else down, has left genuine growth businesses cheaper than they've been in a while, which is usually when the patient money starts paying attention. Two real businesses with accelerating revenue got cheap for the crime of not making chips. The partnership is a reminder that commerce is still where the money actually moves.
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james b (@longdongdaddy69) reported@TheJZackT @StrongDreamsW @MikeDuncan14033 Should've got a PhD in "looking at the picture first, instead of spouting off ehrmmm actually's in a ham-****** attempt to appear smart, then doubling down again when proven wrong-ology." Stick to Reddit, " Doc".
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krishnakant (@krishna37930189) reported“AI doesn’t have an intelligence problem. AI has a context problem.” Databricks CEO Ali Ghodsi said this on CNBC, and honestly… that’s exactly what I’ve been building around for the last 4 months. I launched GrapeRoot in March with messy code, a Reddit post, and pure frustration around token waste in AI coding tools. Fast forward to today: 20k+ installs, developers saving real money, and one user alone saved $10k in 2 months according to our leaderboard