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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 (57%)
- Errors (23%)
- Sign in (21%)
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 | 6 days ago |
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Website Down | 7 days ago |
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Sign in | 9 days ago |
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Sign in | 10 days ago |
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Website Down | 15 days ago |
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Website Down | 15 days ago |
Community Discussion
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Reddit Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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Iacobus Hampton (@Iacobushampton) reported@reddit_lies Volunteer moderation is the major problem with Reddit. Only broken-brained losers have the time and energy to moderate a website for free. This could be fixed in 1 day with AI.
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Chris Gormley (@Chrisgormley) reported@sinistrsnack @growing_daniel From reading more, they are simply selling api access. Similar to Reddit or X or many others. Currently there are 3rd party api’s, but those get blocked and are slow.
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HeavyHonkers (@HalfpintCollect) reported@TheGirlWonder23 I think a lot of theaters are trying to make 70MM more accessible and since they are just bringing that in, they gotta work out the kinks. This issues has been with kinda circulating via Reddit & somewhat on here as well. But not a complete sound issue just couple of loud popping. If you do get a chance to see it in 70mm and you choose a back row seat then try for the middle (if comfortable) because I like the end seat in the back and that has work perfectly for most movies; I just wished I would've gotten a center back seat for it----though I enjoyed myself nonetheless. Idk if it has after credit scenes because I had to leave right away to go to another movie theater to watch a different movie
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Count Grimhart (@Count_Grimhart) reported@Leprechaunlock2 @Nobbie_OCs I use the Heeth Veteran tag thing on the HD2 reddit XD I genuinely care about holding it, more so than the Creek. Helldivers there were learning the ropes, there were no vets, must of been bloody. I still remember learning tricks to take down chargers with leg shots.
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ecomchigga (@ecomchigga) reportedi've made $127,000 selling digital products across multiple faceless X accounts. no name on any of them. no face. never filmed a video. never got on a podcast. the entire operation runs on $69/month and 14 minutes a day. here's everything i know after 8 months. 1. make the first product ugly on purpose. the best-selling product i've ever uploaded has no logo, no branded colors, and a canva cover i made in 4 minutes. ugly products with real solutions outsell designed products with surface-level advice every single time. the buyer came for the answer. the answer doesn't care what font you used. 2. you don't find a niche. you find a complaint. go to reddit. sort any subreddit by top of all time. read until you see the same frustrated question asked by 5 different strangers who've never met. 200+ upvotes on each version. that repetition isn't a conversation. it's a price tag with no product attached yet. 3. write the product like a long text to a friend at midnight. no formatting. no design. no outline. just answer the question from start to finish until the answer is done. keep it between 8 and 14 pages. short enough to finish in one sitting. detailed enough they never need to google it again. add screenshots wherever a step needs visual proof. export as PDF. done. 4. price it $29-$44 and raise $5 every 20 sales. under $29 people assume it's worthless. over $44 a stranger with no reviews can't ask for that yet. by sale 100 you're charging $49 for the same file you listed at $29. the person paying $49 converts at a higher rate because 100 receipts in the community made the price feel low relative to what's been confirmed. 5. your free guide is not a gift. it's a trapdoor. everyone who downloads it joins a community where real buyers are posting screenshots and sharing results. you don't convince anyone. the proof from strangers convinces them. you just built the room they walk into. 6. nobody buys from an empty room. a community with 14 members converts at zero. a community with 2,000 converts at 8-12% on a product pinned at the top. the free members aren't freeloaders. they're the reason the paying members pay. their questions create activity. their screenshots create proof you never manufactured. 7. stop writing tweets from scratch. i spent 4 months writing every tweet from nothing. 3 hours a day for content averaging 600 views. then i loaded 170+ viral tweets with view counts into a Claude project and wrote everything against what already performed. same account. same niche. 14 minutes for all 3 daily tweets. views jumped to 8,200 average inside 3 weeks. the system didn't make me better. it made starting from zero irrelevant. 8. the algorithm doesn't reward good content. it rewards good content from accounts that already have good content. a brilliant tweet from an account that went quiet for 3 weeks will underperform. an average tweet from an account that posted strong content yesterday will compound. Phoenix scores your posts based on recent engagement history before anyone sees them. consistency is a mechanical input to a prediction engine, not a motivational poster. 9. every reply you post under your own tweet in the first 30 minutes is worth 75 likes. each author reply carries a 75x engagement weight in the ranking code. the engagement cache refreshes every 5 minutes for tweets under 30 minutes old. after 30 minutes the refresh rate halves and the velocity window closes. most people post and walk away. the ones sitting in replies for 30 minutes are playing with completely different math. 10. the checkout page is a better salesperson than you. a $10 product that fires a $59 upsell on the confirmation screen generates 77% more revenue from the upsell than the product itself. the card is already on file. the buyer is still in the dopamine window. configure it once. it runs on every purchase automatically. no emails. no follow-up. the screen does the selling. 11. never post off-topic. not once. the algorithm builds a content vector for your account based on what you post. one viral meme drifts that vector. every on-niche tweet after it reaches fewer people because the system is less certain what your account is about. the penalty is invisible. you'll blame the hooks. it was the meme. 12. "i don't think you're ready for this yet." the most effective closing line i've ever used. 30-50% of stalled DM conversations close the same day after hearing it. the brain treats a disappearing opportunity completely differently from a patient one. you're not selling. you're leaving. that's what made them stay. 13. followers don't make money. infrastructure makes money. a faceless account with 8,400 followers and a backend makes $6,312/month. an account with 147,000 followers and a linktree makes $1,840. the bigger account gets 4x the eyeballs on every post. doesn't matter. 6 links means 6 exits. one link means one path. the difference was never content. it was plumbing. 14. the gap between you and the people making $5K-$15K/month is one afternoon. they're not more talented. they just picked a random evening, built something ugly, priced it $29, and posted about the problem 3 times a day for 6 months. the information was always free. the willingness to look stupid for 6 weeks while the first $300 came in was the part that cost something.
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goddess coco 😵💫 (@TheCourtneeLove) reported@spoilnature I tried growing my page on Reddit but girllll was it not working out in my favour 😭 I’ve given up
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#defundcbs (@bbukhia) reported@xd3rek reddit is down the hall to the left
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Deserted (@DesertedWorlds) reportedReddit is disgusting, years ago they took down a comment saying women shouldnt get child support if custody is 50/50 or the man has more custody. This was in response to someone who had their kid 90% of the time and the mother took him to court and won
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Ray Spicer (@jackalspicer) reportedLadies be sure to send DMCA's to reddit and any other sites that has your content illegally posted and pirated by idiots who are on ya onlyfans also there's a new report option called the take it down act that can help counter this issue.
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Jyoti Soni (@soni_jyoti_) reportedFire up Claude or ChatGPT and paste this prompt: 1. Track down 10 lively founder hangouts online Slack workspaces, Discord servers, Telegram groups, Indie Hackers threads, and relevant Reddit communities where remote-first builders openly talk about hiring needs or missing skill sets. For each one, provide: the invite/join URL, the specific jobs/gigs channel (if there is one), and one recent freelance/contract post that was shared inside.
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Ooey Kablooey (@ooeykablooey) reported@JigglyPants44 Maybe if you spent less time on reddit and more time clearing the underbrush like your parents and grandparents did, you wouldn’t have this problem.
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crizzo (@crizzonet) reported@nikitabier Can you update the Community Notes guidelines, so many harassment Notes, it’s turning into Reddit. Check every @PlayStation post the last week for example. Need higher standards to write Notes, then when people leave NNN, they get abused and down voted and can’t leave Notes.
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The Wise Investor 🧠 (@TheWiseIC) reportedDidn’t like $RDDT at $207? Great! It’s at $177, nothing changed aside from the fact that a bunch of algorithms at citadel decided to limit down $RDDT by aggressively selling it. It’s lumped in 2 baskets that suck : (1) Software (2) Platform Economy Best part is - Reddit is about to beat and raise again, and it’s at the same price it was last earnings before they beat and raised! So something’s clearly broken here. Do your own due diligence. 🤠
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tamimbuilds (@tamimbuilds) reportedBefore I build anything now, I do this: 1. Post the problem on X — "Does anyone else struggle with [problem]?" 2. Search Reddit for the problem — are people actively complaining? 3. Check if competitors exist — if yes, market is validated 4. DM 5 people who engaged with the problem post 5. Ask: "Would you pay $ X for a solution?" If nobody engages with step 1 → the problem doesn't exist. If nobody says yes to step 5 → nobody will pay. Total validation cost: $0. Total potential savings: months of wasted building.
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Cody (@DegenRisk) reportedWe are not reddit the country, we do not get along like that. Chop it down build sky scrapers, wood prices will probly go higher still tho so wait on it.
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Quattro (Weiss's Husband) (@QuattroMKII) reported@DenjiDreams His "research" almost always boils down to copying the popular opinion from Reddit
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RnBRaijin (@RayKahunaLaguna) reported@Kid_Da_04 @johnnyjl96 @PlaystationSize The only Bs I see is from you Johnny. Just because you don't have that issue, doesn't mean its Bs. A look on reddit will tell you how much Bs that is. To prevent a temporary workaround: Try playing the game on a different account. No crashing.
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Chizzy Ejieh (@chizzycore) reportedIf someone bet me ₦1M that I couldn't make money online in a brand new niche I've never entered before, this is exactly what I'd do on day one. Morning: Pick the niche. Go to Reddit. I don't care that I've never been in the niche before. What I care about is finding out what people are struggling with. I'd spend about 2–3 hours reading posts, looking for recurring complaints, seeing the questions people keep asking, and paying attention to the exact words they use to describe their problems. By the time I'm done, I should have a list of problems people are actively looking to solve. Afternoon: I'd pick one problem. Not five. One. Then I'd use ChatGPT to help me create a PDF that solves that specific problem. After that, I'd build a sales page in SystemeIo. Most of the copy would come from the research I already did because there's no better copy than the language your market already uses. Evening: I'd create 3 or 4 static ad creatives, write the ad copy, and launch the ads before going to bed. The next morning, I'd have data. Maybe people click but don't buy. Maybe they don't click at all. Maybe I get my first sale. Whatever happens, I now have something to work with instead of sitting around guessing. People think making money online starts with creating a product. I don't think that's where it starts. I think it starts with understanding a market. Everything else comes after.
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Lisa Kuhnley (@LisaJKuhnley) reportedThey’re never gonna let me be popular. The moment I start to gain any sort of real traction they’re going to invent some reason to delete my post restrict my account or download me to Hell or whatever I mean every time my post starts to attract views on Reddit they invent some reason to take it down. They do not like real people. They do not like real people who make Valid arguments. They do not like people who speak the truth they do not like people who represent a real danger to the system that thrives on people maintaining the status quo of pretending not to notice that you’re all so completely full of ****. The point is if you’re waiting for me to go viral it’s never gonna happen in the end if it does, it’s not gonna matter because I’m not gonna farm engagement for you anymore. That’s not what I’m here to do.
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dani c: (@danielopezdiaz) reported@nelsonfilipesi1 @downn100 @PlaystationSize I have 100mb internet, and for some odd reason, when Either I hit a player or I am about to dia just lagged me out and "frame skip" to my death. I read on reddit that is really big and I so maybe its a performance's issue
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Omar Choudhury (@OmarChoudhury99) reportedI hate sloppy work... A client's assistant sent us 4 links And 2 were wrong He almost paid to take down someone else's articles Imagine paying thousands... Only to realize you've been removing someone else's problem Just because your assistant was too lazy to verify 4 damn links But good thing we always check everything ourselves We called the client and found out 2 were the wrong links Yeah, he could've paid four figures to take down negative articles that weren't even his And honestly... this is a pretty crucial trait if you want to work with people at the highest levels You need the initiative to check every detail and be smart enough to do the work that needs to be done Almost everybody's getting lazy now, and if you're sharp enough to make sure quality and process are always on point... It's surprisingly easy to stand out And this lazy assistant also reminded me of something I see with business owners all the time They neglect things that have the potential to turn into expensive mistakes... Like leaving negative or defamatory content about themselves and their business sitting online They think prospects won't get a bad vibe after reading those nasty Reddit threads about them When in reality, it's eating away at their conversions and slowly dragging their brand into the dirt So don't be one of them If you've got harmful reviews, defamatory articles, or Reddit threads hurting your business... Talk to me and let's get that handled 📲
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Serge (@smorgaskeybord) reportedik a lot of them are probably kids but that’s also a whole other problem cuz they aren’t old enough to even be on Reddit
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Steve (@Game_Dev_Steve) reportedWe can't say the questions are a retail problem until we address the Say platform problems. It has two major issues, and probably more: 1. Doesn't use an OAuth style authentication. It literally requires full authority plaintext credentials to use on your behalf. This is retard level opsec. Thus, only retards participate. 2. Promotes early proposals to the front. Aka, the Reddit problem. Dumb questions get seen on the first page and people spend votes there without considering more thoughtful questions on deeper pages.
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Naz Reid, 1/4 CPA (@Raz_Neid) reportedIf you have an issue and it hasn’t been solved on reddit might as well just end it all
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Sierra⁷ 🪭 🏳️🌈 (@JinMoonRights) reportedgot a new phone months ago and still experiencing an infuriating tech problem that no one seems to be able to help me with I'm in the middle of trying a good old reddit fix wish me luck
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The Backrooms Online // BackroomsMovie.com (@backroomsonline) reportedHello all. I guess I didn’t get eaten by Pirate Clark. As you can see, my account has been restored. I’m not sure how long it was down as this all happened when I was asleep. Waking up to it certainly wasn’t fun. And having a full time job means I can’t just drop everything. It seems there’s a lot that has happened since all this went down. In particular I would like to thank those who posted giving support while I was trapped in the Backrooms of X. After my account was restored, A24 got in touch with me to check up on me and let me know that when they found out my account had been suspended, they helped out to get it restored. They have assured me that they didn’t initiate the suspension in any way. I don’t think I’ll ever know how the account got suspended as I didn’t receive an email from X saying what rule I broke (and the notice I could see when I logged in just said “for breaking rules”). And while the copyright strikes people were getting on RedBubble can be attributed to automated systems, what happened to me on here doesn’t seem to have any direct correlation seeing I seemed to be the only one it happened to. But it also doesn’t seem to be just a coincidence. I am so thankful to Kane Parsons for following this up with A24 to find out what was going on. He may be a successful film director now, but he is still one of us. He’s someone who understands that the Backrooms aren’t something that can be taken by one person or one corporation. He didn’t have to do what he did. But he did and I’m sure many of us fans and creators are thankful for that. I’ve been looking through posts on here and on Reddit about the whole situation. And I’m proud of the Backrooms community for stepping up and making a noise about this. I even saw that it reached a couple of news sites. That’s what my aim was with making noise like I did - for others to do so too and to spread the word. It wasn’t my fight but I felt so passionately about this and what it potentially could mean did the Backrooms. When I first saw @regularlyblue’s post about it, I done my own research and found more than just the wallpaper designs were being affected. Although I am very passionate about the movie, I am even more passionate about the Backrooms concept and that it is something that belongs to everyone (or no one depending on how you look at it). Being an internet IP makes it unique in that no one owns it and that anyone can create work based around it which is just as relevant as another person’s work. People may not necessarily love everything that is created based around it, but we can at least respect what the Backrooms is in that way and what it inspires. I want to end by posting this screenshot someone sent me from Kane’s Discord server. Seeing him say that they (A24) love TBO (The Backrooms Online) and that it was Kane saying such really meant a lot to me. 💛 Now let’s all continue to enjoy what ever part of The Backrooms we love. 💛💛 TL;DR …. I’m back in the rooms!
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ColaBlizzard 🇮🇳 (@colablizzard) reported@thehawkeyex Even pro BJP reddit sub reddit are filled with posts and heavy down vote for anyone not supporting this. Mods also paid off and changing DP etc.
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Anastasia Trusova (@amtrusova) reportedI posted one of my original paintings on Reddit. Two hours later I was permanently banned from r/MadeMeSmile for “self-promotion.” Shortly afterward, r/pics reviewed my account, removed many of my old and recent painting posts, and permanently banned me as well. What surprises me most is that the post had no links, no prices, no title of the painting, and no call to buy anything. The entire discussion was about the mood, emotions, and what people saw in the image. Judging by the comments, most people didn’t even realize I was the artist. Personally, I see a big difference between sharing art and advertising it. Anyway… here’s the painting that caused all the trouble. 🎨
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just andrey (@andreyiscoding) reported@danielkleach Spent 6 months perfecting an app nobody used. Built new app - now in 2 weeks Started posting on Twitter and Reddit in communities relevant to the problem. First week had more signups than the previous year. And got paid users. The answer is right there.
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MrMastero (@mastero_mr) reported@brndxix Reddit atheists only issue was that they are annoying But idk how you can look at the world and think it is a fair tradeoff