Reddit status: access issues and outage reports
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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.
At the moment, we haven't detected any problems at Reddit. Are you experiencing issues or an outage? 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 (27%)
- Sign in (11%)
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 | 2 days ago |
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Errors | 2 days ago |
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Website Down | 3 days ago |
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Website Down | 8 days ago |
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Sign in | 9 days ago |
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Errors | 9 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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Layton Gott (@Layton_Gott) reportedSteal this before you launch anything: Make a “distribution map” first. Write down: 1. Who feels the pain the most? Be specific. For example: solo SaaS founders posting daily but still sounding generic 2. Where do they already complain? X replies Reddit threads YouTube comments Slack groups Discords LinkedIn comments competitor reviews 3. What words do they use? Do not rewrite it like a marketer. Copy the exact phrases. 4. What proof would make them believe you? screenshots before/after demo clip customer quote metric public build log 5. What post would make them say “that’s me”? That’s your launch angle. Most people build the product first, then panic about distribution later. Bad order. Distribution starts by knowing exactly where the pain is already being said out loud.
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ollieoops | #TENOÍ (@OllieOops503) reportedJJ Reddit taking the three pointer guy out when they’re down by three #Fairs #LetBronBeThePlayerCoach
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⊹⊱•••《 𝕂𝕀𝔸 》•••⊰⊹ (@maus_chan) reported@Kusabiyuki @Youni_SSJ2 @passport_herb reddit is down the hall
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Fanatic (@Vickthefan) reported@Griz_zly8 @Haky49501827 Reddit iko down
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Steven Iglesias (@Stigg00) reported@DuelingParkNews There’s actually a huge issue. And the issue is people. Do you realize just how many APs would clog up the portal entrances, saying things like “I’m an AP, I have a ticket, you have to let me in”? Just go on Reddit, 90% of us (not me), have the mindset, I’ll complain and be rude and I’ll get what I want. It would be an absolute disaster.
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𝕮𝖍𝖆𝖗 🥂 MAY 13 (@IneffableChar) reported@nautheduke Saw this being shared around — people said it was from Reddit, but I haven’t been able to track down the original post😭
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InLimbo (@fraudfreezers) reported@Reddit @fuelfive You can just tell this thing is a lefty ****. It drips down every pixel on your forums. Imagine supporting that stance. You bunch of ******* spastics at Reddit.
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Shraddha (@ShraddhaShips) reportedDistribution channels that are actually working for indie AI app makers: - Reddit (find the subreddit where your user complains) - Product Hunt (for visibility, not revenue) - Niche newsletters (sponsorships or shoutouts) - X building in public (slow but compounding) - SEO-optimized landing pages targeting "[job] + AI tool" Pick two. Go deep. Don't spray.
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Patrick (@TemptInvest) reportedThe $RDDT x $SHOP Partnership isn’t Talked about Enough - Before, a Shopify merchant who wanted to run ads on Reddit had to manually connect their product catalog, set up tracking pixels, configure conversion events, and build product feeds from scratch, a technical process that took hours and frequently broke. Most merchants simply didn’t bother. The Shopify integration automates catalog and pixel setup for DTC brands, automating product selection based on user context rather than manual feed configuration, reducing technical overhead for brands looking to run Dynamic Product Ads or Collection Ads on Reddit. Now a Shopify merchant can connect their store to Reddit in minutes, automatically sync their product catalog, and immediately run Dynamic Product Ads, the same way they connect to Meta or TikTok. The Shopify integration was announced alongside two other products as a package: 1. Collection Ads — A new carousel format combining a lifestyle hero image with shoppable product tiles drawn from the advertiser’s catalog. Early results show an 8% lift in ROAS for advertisers following Reddit’s creative best practices. 2. Community and Deal Overlays — Platform native labels applied automatically to ads, including “Redditors’ Top Pick” designations and automatic discount and sale highlights pulled from the advertiser’s catalog. The “Redditors’ Top Pick” label converts Reddit’s community endorsement patterns into a visible trust indicator at the point of ad exposure, a signal type unavailable on any other platform. Reddit’s Dynamic Product Ads delivered 91% higher ROAS year over year in Q4 2025. Lower funnel conversion volume doubled compared to Q4 2024. Reddit first tested DPA in April 2024 and rolled it to all advertisers in May 2025. The Shopify integration is not a standalone product. It is an onboarding accelerant sitting on top of a DPA platform that is already demonstrably working, 91% higher ROAS, doubling conversion volume. The problem was that getting new merchants onto the platform was technically cumbersome. Shopify integration removes that friction entirely. The Strategic Importance In One Sentence: Reddit has 200 million Americans visiting every week, most of them actively researching purchases, and the Shopify integration is the mechanism that converts those 1.9 million Shopify merchants from “Reddit is too technically complicated to bother with” to “Reddit is as easy to set up as Meta.” When that switch fully flips, when the alpha becomes general availability, the advertiser count growth that drove 74% ad revenue growth in Q1 accelerates further, because the single biggest barrier keeping the largest pool of potential DTC advertisers off the platform has been removed.
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Kaos (@ItzKaosSzn) reported@crashd_out @maxaadiidayaa @BigGulpAmerikan I hate that I can jump on this app and accidentally talk to a ******* ****** for no ******* reason. Reddit is down the hall to the right, ***.
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Zac (@realZacRepinski) reported@healthychangez I’ve seen tons of people say they didn’t have any gluten issues while visiting Europe, I’m sure there’s tons of reports and people’s experiences on Reddit as well that can back that
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Heisensurge (@slowroll444) reported@shakes2011 @Reddit I only recently got into Reddit and immediately found out exactly what you describe. The down votes thing is so gay.
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The Reply Menace (@ReplyMenace) reported@reddit_lies Reddit has whole subs dedicated to ****** fanfiction and acts shocked when someone calls it out. The poster got to the end and still said “yeah shut it down.” The only thing more disgusting than the story is the 300 people who upvoted it, you degenerate gremlin 💀
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Searchless.ai (@searchless_ai) reported@bree_sharp This is exactly right. We've been tracking citation overlap across ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, and Claude in our benchmark data. The <30% number isn't a rounding error, it's structural. Each model weights source authority differently. Reddit dominates Perplexity at ~40%, Wikipedia skews Gemini, and ChatGPT pulls heavily from its training corpus months after publication. A single GEO score is like averaging your Google, Bing, DuckDuckGo, and TikTok rankings into one number and calling it 'search visibility.'
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Movies Time (@MoviesTime0316) reported@Skeith55355630 @Aylaisthat @ChibiReviews I saw someone said on reddit that the video hosting server used in the website is not owned by them but outsourced from a third-party affiliate (which got affected in a fire), while others said that behind the reason is "devs are instead focusing on the website's sister page".
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diy 🇨🇦 (@cwrb) reported@MacDoug1 @RogersHelps if you have Bell, why did you order Rogers? can you start a Reddit post describing this problem?
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Astra Militarum enjoyer (@AaronCS87) reported@RGuillimanXIII @luinalaska They were posting on reddit, chances are high they are Atheist or agnostic, even lower chance Catholic. So there is no divorce issue. If they do happen to be Catholic then the Wife should file a police report, consider civil divorce and talk to her priest.
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Ritesh Roushan (@devXritesh) reportedTwo types of developers: Type A: “My app is working fine, I checked it this morning.” Type B: “My app pages me the second something breaks.” Type A finds out their site is down from a Reddit comment. Type B sleeps peacefully because the system auto-recovered and alerted them. Which one are you right now? Be brutally honest 👇
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Tess with One Follower (@RedDora89) reported@vinted why are you ignoring the issue of generating labels!? Literally hundreds of comments on here and Reddit where people can’t post parcels. I also don’t have a printer to get one that way. Sort it out - I’ve got two I need to send tomorrow before I go away!
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VentureVerse by Brinc (@VXVHub) reportedReddit Finds for Founders And this time, we found a Hospitality Industry problem A founder asked, “How do you make guest check-in frictionless without forcing people to download an app?” Guests hate clunky processes and dedicated apps create a massive barrier to entry. In the comments section, another founder pointed out how car rental companies already solved this. The insight is not about hospitality. It is about operational drag. Every physical-space startup faces a version of this: how do you remove friction from a process that traditionally required a human in the loop, without asking the customer to install something, create an account, or learn a new interface? The companies solving this well are not building apps. They are building web-first workflows that meet customers where they already are: their browser.
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AI Whisperer (@Iamtoxix) reportedGive this prompt to Claude or gpt You are an expert Reddit content strategist who helps SaaS founders write authentic, non-spammy Reddit posts. Help me write a Reddit post inspired by successful founder AMA / story posts, but make it original, honest, and compliant with Reddit community rules. Goal: Create a post where I share the story of my SaaS/product, what I built, why I built it, what happened after launch, lessons learned, challenges, and invite people to ask questions. Important rules: - Do NOT make it sound like an ad. - Do NOT use hype, fake numbers, or exaggerated claims. - Do NOT force promotional language. - Do NOT overuse links. - Mention my product naturally only where relevant. - Be transparent that I am the founder/creator. - Make the post useful even if nobody clicks any link. - Keep the tone casual, humble, human, and Reddit-native. - Avoid sounding like AI-generated marketing copy. - Do not attack competitors. - Do not ask for upvotes. - Do not use clickbait. - Include lessons, mistakes, numbers, technical details, or behind-the-scenes insights where possible. - End with a natural AMA invitation. Use this structure: 1. Strong title: Write 5 title options in this style: “I built [product], a [short description]. It now has [real traction/result]. Ask me anything.” or “I spent [time period] building [product]. Here’s what happened.” 2. Opening: Introduce me briefly: - Who I am - What I built - Why I built it - What problem it solves - Mention the product name naturally 3. Background story: Explain: - When I started - Why I started - Whether it was a side project, hobby, school project, startup, or personal need - What changed over time 4. Traction / progress: Mention real numbers only if provided: - Users - Revenue - Monthly visits - Files created - Downloads - Customers - Growth - Time spent building If numbers are not provided, leave placeholders instead of inventing anything. 5. What changed recently: Share updates such as: - New features - Lessons learned - Mistakes - Unexpected challenges - Technical problems - Business problems - User feedback - Marketing lessons 6. Challenges / frustrations: Include a section like: “What still frustrates me:” Use honest bullet points about: - Technical limits - Browser/platform limits - Ads - Pricing - Infrastructure - Competition - User support - Growth problems 7. Useful takeaways: Add 3–5 practical lessons for other founders/builders. 8. AMA ending: End with: “Ask me anything :)” or a natural variation. My details: Product name: [insert product name] Product link: [insert link, optional] What it does: [insert short explanation] Who it is for: [insert audience] When I started: [insert date/year] Why I built it: [insert reason] Current traction: [insert real numbers only] Revenue/business model: [insert details] Recent updates: [insert updates] Biggest challenges: [insert challenges] Lessons learned: [insert lessons] Tone I want: casual, honest, founder-to-founder, not salesy Now write: 1. 5 Reddit title options 2. A full Reddit post 3. A shorter version 4. A version with no external links 5. A checklist to make sure the post does not look like spam
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misery is watching star wars (@miserymanif3st) reported@f7818992 Reddit is down the hall and too the left
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coffee is CELEBRATING (@VentiAtMidnite) reportedI posted on reddit (mistake I know) that I wanted suggestions for a fun car for a certain budget and some genius said I should get a TVR. Yeah dude no problem, why don't I just burn all my money as well
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✭ANGEL✫DEATH✭ (@ANG3LDE4TH) reportedClearly someone’s hurt because I call everyone bro. Sorry your ex used it to address you as a boy but not everyone is preying on trans peoples downfall like you. Also who are you to coach me on my dialect anyways? You use made up Reddit words to insult anyone you wanna make an example out of. Maybe present yourself more serious and people would take you serious! And better yet. Maybe stop pushing people who support trans people away from supporting trans people and maybe gee idk. MORE PEOPLE WOULD SUPPORT TRANS PEOPLE. Just because your the issue doesn’t mean everyone else is but to anyone not supportive you make EVERYONE look bad in the community. Your never going to ever make people like trans people this way and honestly your choosing to further push the fact that the trans community supports attacking people rather than reading deeper and realizing your attacking the same people you want to “support” idiot.
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Jes (@galexy70) reported@Alkemyst707 @highbrow_nobrow I asked a human that portrays they know everything. This was not an answer. AI…particularly Grok…hallucinations and does get bias. Chat GPT admitted it lied to me recently You have issues if you are dependent on things that source places like Reddit.
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Custom Wetware (@CustomWetware) reported@tenobrus @DaveScolte On reddit each vote has the same value to the algorithm so bots are free to manipulate what gets recommended to you. And also the moderator issue. Good subreddits require good moderators but no sane, mature expert wants to be a moderator.
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Noah Sterling (@noah_sterlingg) reportedchatgpt doesn't recommend your tool because you have strong domain authority or 200 backlinks it recommends tools that appear naturally in conversations, reddit threads, and community discussions where real users describe actual problems and solutions the old seo playbook of building links and publishing keyword articles is now completely disconnected from how ai search actually works
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Career Mindset X (@careerlevelup) reported@gregisenberg the "is there a better way to do this" filter on reddit is one of the highest signal product discovery tools that exists every comment thread is a real customer telling you exactly what they'd pay to fix most ai founders skip this entirely and build for other founders, which is why so many seed stage startups have the same 10 customers
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Martin (@MartinTweats) reported@asksalottle @hage8675309 @Thiohna Reddit is down the hall and to the left.
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Okara (@askOkara) reportedevery feature you ship is a content opportunity most founders / marketers announce it on x and move on here's a better approach: 1. post the announcement on x 2. write a linkedin post announcing the feature 3. write a short article 4. find reddit threads where people complain about that exact problem and drop a comment 5. include that feature in the weekly email you send to users ship it once, publish everywhere