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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 (63%)
- Errors (25%)
- 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 | 10 days ago |
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Errors | 10 days ago |
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Sign in | 12 days ago |
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Website Down | 16 days ago |
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Website Down | 19 days ago |
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Website Down | 20 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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Solomon Codez (@solomonuche) reported@hintberryhq The solo founder with a great product and no sales team. You can't afford to run ads. Cold outreach feels wrong. Inbound is slow. But somewhere on Reddit right now, someone is asking for exactly what you built. Hintberry makes sure you're the first one in that conversation 🫐
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you are obsessed🌱 (@vegananddisco) reportedEhhh reddit does have a bit of an issue but it isn't as bad lol.
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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
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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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Saptrishi Mishra (@saptrishi12) reported@ykykaman @abhsk_0x @_Creation22 Even a non-IITian can tell these are fake. The grammatical errors alone give it away. Also, if you're really his neighbour, why did you need to get these details from Reddit? Either your neighbour thinks he's smart, or you think you can fool us by fabricating stories.
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Okara (@askOkara) reportedhere are some tips: 1. do not post links in your comments 2. if you add value first and only mention your product where it’s relevant (without the link), reddit is totally fine with it. 3. the only time you might run into issues is if your account is brand new with almost no karma, because new accounts get flagged more easily. build a bit of karma, comment normally, then start using it and you’ll be good. 4. if you comment on too many posts in a short window, you may get banned. this is why we only show a few relevant reddit posts per day, so people don’t comment on every post. 5. follow the rules. some subreddits allow self-promotion, some have weekly threads for promotions, and others don’t allow it at all 6. the better your system prompt, the better your replies 7. not every comment has to be about your product. help people and comment thoughtfully without mentioning your product
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Natia Kurdadze (@natiakourdadze) reportedI recently discovered a new growth hack that SaaS startup founders use on X, Product Hunt, Hacker News and Reddit: 1. They set up Google Alerts, F5bot, ReplyGuy or BrandWatch for the competitors' products 2. Then, using these social listening tools, find discussions that mention their competitors 3. And leave comments that follow this framework: "Any reason why not using X instead of Y (competitor’s product)? Way better if you do not want to {problem agitation and/or unique selling proposition}" 4. People get curious and start googling the alternative 5. As a result, this improves SEO, gets them mentions, backlinks and customers
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NiteCapsLSU (@LSUomaha8) reported@AnonymousLeftie komi is a mentally ill reddit freak who needs to be put down. You live behind a computer and have no power in the real world
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Sergey Atroshchenko (@kapxapot) reportedReddit was probably created by robots, for robots or both. Posting a comment... 1. Server error. 2. Server error. 3. Rate limit exceeded. 🤦
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Praveen Kumar (@praveenkumaryo) reportedWhy My Digital History Is Triggering Active Hacking Attempts on Anyone I Interact With (The Cost of Pirated Software) Since 2011, I had a habit of digital hoarding - collecting and testing cracked games and expensive enterprise software (AutoCAD, Autodesk, Ansys, Adobe) just to see them run. In college and later in my professional life, I freely distributed these terabytes of pirated software to friends and colleagues, completely unaware of the massive digital footprint and security liabilities I was creating. By signing into these cracked builds with my personal email, my credentials were leaked to respective servers and weaponized through data breaches, allowing bad actors to tie my email, unique username handles, phone number, and social media profiles together. The real-world consequences started falling like dominoes. In 2017, a friend’s startup was targeted with Google account hacks and an Autodesk audit after their residential IP address registered as a business entity using cracked software from me. When I joined the rocket startup AgniKul Cosmos in 2019, I distributed these software packages again. The fallout was severe: the entire team began receiving targeted, unknown messages on LinkedIn and WhatsApp phishing calls; our Wi-Fi became unusable unless restarted; and our founder's email was compromised to spam the team, forcing me to wipe and reinstall every office machine. I later found out the startup faced massive licensing fines after audit visits. Even after moving to a spacecraft design startup, the exact same disruptive patterns followed. The targeting escalated heavily during the 2020 lockdown. After noticing a suspicious Microsoft account login alert that perfectly correlated with an Argentinian "ethical hacker" visiting my Premium LinkedIn profile, I confronted him directly via InMail. That very night, a coordinated wave of login alerts hit my Reddit, PayPal, and other social media services. Because I use a consistent username across platforms like Twitter/X and LinkedIn, these actors have mapped my entire network. They’ve tracked my investor interactions, used malicious links in bio pages to harvest my home IP addresses (forcing me to rely on a VPN to restore normal speeds), and targeted my family members. Because of this relentless surveillance, I keep my current venture strictly in stealth mode and refuse to update my employer details on LinkedIn to shield my current team. This is a public apology and a massive heads-up. Recently, this targeting has shifted outward to anyone I publicly engage with. Whomever I interact with, reply to, or tag on Twitter/X is immediately seeing a surge in suspicious login alerts and hacking attempts on their own accounts. If you are interacting with me publicly, please enable robust 2FA, monitor your active login sessions, avoid clicking any random links, and stay highly vigilant. My past digital hoarding has turned into an active security vector, and I am sharing this so you can protect your data before they target you next.
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Jaded Phantom (@BitterEcho) reported@BrightEyedDork @Felisnexus They’re all on Reddit, interesting bunch. They will all say he’s a terrible father but that’s only decoration for his development. Expert victim blamers, first time I’ve seen the phrase self-inflected trauma used to describe Touya, apparently he caused his own trauma!
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Md. Mehedi Hasan Rakib (@mehedi_u) reportedMore content in 2026 is a liability, not an asset. 68% of the global population, 5.66 billion people, now uses social media. And yet 35% of users say their trust in what they see on these platforms has dropped in the last 12 months alone. The cause is direct. AI-generated content has made it trivially easy to flood feeds. Sprout Social's March 2026 data found that 56% of users encounter AI slop often or very often, and 83% see it at least sometimes. Feeds feel synthetic. Users feel it. They are responding by going elsewhere. Reddit grew 19% in a single quarter. Substack traffic jumped 67% year over year. WhatsApp, a platform with no algorithmic feed and no strangers, now sits as the third largest social network on the planet at 2.9 billion users. People are not leaving social media. They are leaving broadcast social media. This distinction is what most brand strategies are getting wrong right now. The instinct when reach drops is to post more. The data says the opposite. Content perceived as AI-generated now suffers engagement penalties of 20 to 35% compared to human-created alternatives. More volume of low-trust content compounds the problem rather than solving it. The brands tracking ahead of this are making a different bet. Sephora's Beauty Insider Community has 25 million members generating social proof directly on product pages. Creator ad spend has reached $29.5 billion, up from $13.9 billion in 2021, because audiences trust people who are already customers and advocates, not polished brand accounts optimized for reach. Follower count is not your distribution. Community depth is. The practical move is not complicated. Stop optimizing for volume and start optimizing for depth. 200 deeply engaged community members outperform 30,000 passive followers on every metric that drives commercial outcomes: conversions, referrals, and user-generated content at the point of sale. Three decisions worth making now: 1. Run social listening to locate your most vocal advocates. They are already posting without you, and they are the most credible voice your brand has. 2. Build presence on one community platform, Reddit, Substack, or Discord, rather than broadcasting thinly across six. 3. Audit your content mix. If AI is generating the output, a human must own the editorial voice, the perspective, and the actual argument. The social commerce market is projected to reach $27.5 trillion by 2034. The brands that will capture that commerce are not the ones with the most content. They are the ones with communities that trust them enough to buy. In 2026, trust is the distribution channel. #socialmediamarketing #communitybuilding #contentmarketing
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gn८ (@LJ_gn8) reportedMorphe has helped me fix youtube and reddit. Now I'm hoping for twitter please
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Alem Amirov (@alemseo) reported@Yogii_42 Reddit and SEO first. Your buyers already type their objections into Google and AI search, so build pages answering those exact queries, then meet them in the subreddits where they vent the problem. X compounds slower but pairs well.
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My name is Michael. (@NoidCrawler) reported@NBCNews Good. Other people's lifestyle choices shouldn't be celebrated outside of friend circles and Reddit, nor forced on those who don't support it. If straight pride night was a thing, there wouldn't be an issue.
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RiseOfBacon (@RiseOfBacon) reportedIt’s incredibly sad to see community attacking you because of having issues with Reddit rules and your their own bad behaviour Insulting someone’s family, of which you know nothing about is the height of loser behaviour Hope these people get the help they clearly need.
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Cheese (@Ripple2011418) reportedWtf is Ripple actually doing? It’s been a while since the XRP lawsuit was dropped, freeing Ripple from the chains it was binded. After the whole SEC drama cooled down, you’d think there’d be a ton of public news, big partnerships, real adoption stories but it feels… quiet. No massive updates, no flashy announcements, no big cross-border payment rollout proof, nothing trending. It was projected towards replacing old SWIFT rails. Yet outside niche corners of Twitter/Reddit, I don’t see screenshots of pilot programmes, banks actually sending stuff of real transactions with XRP live on the ledger. Japan ? no update. By when can we expect Ripple to just breakout with its amazing system ? Seriously Ripple had lot of time since past half decade to just get things ready and get things real once the case was dropped. But it feels like no one is serious out there
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Camilo Castañeda | Ad Creatives for Ecom (@Camicees) reportedTwist the knife. Average marketers remind people of their problem. Elite marketers make them feel it. Don't just say "do you have wrinkles?" Go deeper: → Does it remind you of how your grandma looked? → Have you tried everything and nothing worked? → Have you spent months on Reddit looking for a fix? Build tension. Then present your solution. The relief hits harder.
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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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Dumb Idiot ⚔️ (@HundredHandSlut) reported@ViceOnceOrTwice "peon" Reddit is down the hall and to the left my good sir!
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Stone (@Last_Stone_) reported@aughhh8364 I was never allowed to use reddit. I been basically banned from all social media my whole adult life. I dont know what reddit is like and never used it . Reddit is way to extremely far left to allow me on it Listen! you are in a tribalistic mind set. You see me as the "other team" so attack put down ect Why not instead let go of the team and be like a scientist or detective and only seek truth?
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Faina Shpund (@HeyFaina) reported@ParthProductX Go where they already complain about the problem. Reddit, niche forums, DMs. Reply to 100 people one at a time. Boring, free, works.
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Andrew (@andrewrdn463) reportedREDDIT WILL CLOSE DOWN SOON.
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𝑏 𝑥 𝑛 (@bxn45I) reported@XDJGUNDAMX @iamrobtv I mean thats the same with people who are having problems with their consoles overheating or the ring of the death on 360, when it doesn’t happen to u it seems unrealistic but then u check reddit and see threads upon threads with people who are having that problem
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Jon Knight (Tryks's Husband) (@JontheknightYT) reportedI remember battling the entire dbd discord server on why 2 survivors hiding in a 2v1 scenario is not holding a game hostage, and one community manager backed me up. Now I see my take being upheld on reddit is really nice to see.
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AKAY 💙❤️ (@Captainbugggy) reported@apoorvdarshan @ChadAppDev I’m having issues creating and I’m guessing it’s due to my location. Really miss reading and being active on Reddit. Would really appreciate any help I can get on getting an account again
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Marv the Famous Soundcloud Rapper (@MountainMarvLad) reported@E_Barcohana @BasedMikeLee The left is patiently waiting on their top-down slogans to come through the mailers so they can watch the TV, Twitch, or use Reddit to learn what they're supposed to say to gaslight about this.
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Kettleverse Daily (@KettleworksSFW) reported@SheeGee This isn't reddit you ******* quango. You don't get to red marker someone's image and you're suddenly in the right. Why don't you stop traveling and use that fly money to fix that absolute ******** of a city you call home.
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Jakub Jawniak (@niakjaw) reportedHappy Mammoth has been running this ad for 63 days. But it doesn't advertise any product, so how does it print? Let me explain: 1. Creative The creative is Reddit post on r/hormonal thread. Looks organic. Something that potential buyer might be used to, because they maybe scroll Reddit often. Anyway it is just a post, not an ad and you can see this from the first sight. The post says: "I took a hormone quiz by women's health specialists... and it gave me a plan that actually worked" It's pre-invitation for taking the quiz. The social proof is here with "women's health specialists". The result is the plan that actually worked. Below there is CTA for taking the quiz yourself and a bunch of other social proof indicators. 2. The quiz The psychology of quiz is pre-selling. Admission to the symptoms you have. But also helping you choose the best product for your symptoms. Then the product feels completely dedicated to your problem. 3. After-quiz After submitting answers, we can get personalized results via e-mail with discount and then the website redirects the user to the product page. "Our #1 Recommendation For Your Body Type Is:" does the job here, because as I mentioned earlier, it feels like the only solution, specifically designed for your problems. The same discount from the e-mail appears on the page. Website also shows before-after pictures and testimonials. Another thing is upsell section and look what they do... It's not just "Add to your order", but "To Eliminate Your Unique Symptoms FAST, Pair Hormone Harmony With..." There is an intent with this upsell and reason for buyer to do so. To eliminate symptoms FAST. If someone doesn't even buy, but completes the quiz, it's a win, because the company got their e-mail address, so the potential lead that will be converted later.
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Moth Lobster (@Moth_Lobster) reported@MarshSMT I think when I had problems with pc98 emulation I switched emulators and found some old *** reddit thread with one guy who solved it so praying you get better results here