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.
July 14: Problems at Reddit
Reddit is having issues since 08:00 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 (56%)
- Errors (24%)
- Sign in (20%)
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 | 2 days ago |
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Website Down | 3 days ago |
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Sign in | 5 days ago |
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Sign in | 6 days ago |
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Website Down | 11 days ago |
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Website Down | 11 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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Filip Franzén (@filipprompt) reportedJust crossed $100K in the last 365 days from digital products, all traffic organic from YouTube. Here's the full breakdown of how I did it, no fluff: 1. picked niches with existing buyers, not existing passion. "how to make money online," faceless content, AI content creation, simple business systems. Not because I loved the topics, but because search demand was climbing fast and existing content was either surface-level motivation or overpriced coaching with no real roadmap. 2. validated demand before writing a single word. combed through YouTube comments, Reddit threads, and Twitter. Same phrases kept showing up: "my faceless channel isn't converting," "i post videos but nothing sells," "how do i sell my first digital product?" Cross-checked what was already moving on Gumroad and Whop. Real competition = real buyers. 3. built the front-end product first, not the marketing. a 60-page guide walking through the full system, niche to video to hands-off sales. Wrote it like I was texting a stuck friend. Raw, actionable, no design fluff. Priced to convert, not to impress. 4. built the free community as the landing pad. every new subscriber lands there first. Pinned the guide, let real buyer wins and receipts do the selling. Members convincing other members always beats me convincing anyone. 5. launched multiple faceless channels in parallel. stock clips, clean thumbnails and titles. Every pinned comment and description funneled to the free guide. Reverse-engineered the top channels in the space, saved their thumbnails, titles, hooks, and video structures. 6. built the content system once, ran it forever. research → script → edit → upload. Designed so one operator could handle multiple channels. Published 3–5 videos/week per channel. Leaned into evergreen "how-to" + case study formats that hold watch time. 7. optimized for algorithm, not for ego. strong hooks in the first 15 seconds. CTAs to the free guide. End screens, cards, playlists all pointing to the offer. Tracked which topics, thumbnail styles, and video lengths actually turned views into sales. Doubled down on winners, killed losers fast. 8. structured the funnel with earned upgrades at every step. free video → free guide → low-ticket product ($27–$97) → bigger offers for the serious ones. Nobody skips levels. 9. posted receipts everywhere. sales notifications, channel revenue screenshots. Proof beats copywriting every time. Raised prices as testimonials stacked. Added upsells behind the front-end so buyers could scale without leaving the ecosystem. 10. automated the boring parts. uploads, community replies, evergreen content refreshes. Daily workload dropped once the systems were dialed in. Two habits kept the whole thing compounding: Stayed disciplined on niche. Algorithm rewards clarity. Kept publishing when early videos flopped. Consistency is what teaches the algorithm to trust you. The tools I actually used: X / Discord to find editors Shopify to sell digital products Whop for free and paid communities ElevenLabs for voiceovers YouTube Studio for analytics Trello to manage the team Claude for basically all of the above Monthly cost stayed under $100 early on. The real leap happened when views, proof, and community started reinforcing each other. More content → more trust → higher conversion on the same traffic. That's the whole game.
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Mohammed Anzil (@anzilone) reported@pcshipp Reddit isn't a place to market first. Become part of the community. Answer questions, share knowledge, and build trust. If your product genuinely solves a problem, people will find it naturally. Promotion is the byproduct of contribution, not the starting point.
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Gilad Avidan (@giladbuilds) reported@thesayannayak Manual outreach beat all three for me. I found people already talking about the problem on X and Reddit and just replied with something useful 🎯 slow but it compounds once they trust you.
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USA Reject (@sadreturns) reported@EclecticScribe i have two options here, i could either lean in and say i think the way the Supreme Court functions is similar to reddit too, or i could just say that the post was a joke. i’m having trouble deciding though
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matthat (@NelsonMatt44574) reportednvm it was just a glitch but what ******** reddit
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Gurnoor Singh (@gurnoor__) reportedAI is the best and worst thing that happened to the Ecom space. Especially when it comes to marketing. AI doesn't make you better at marketing. It makes you more of whatever you already are. If you're the kind of brand owner who wants a quick answer so you can stop thinking about the problem, AI will hand you a fast, mediocre answer and you'll ship it. A generic ad angle, a copy-paste avatar, a hook that sounds like everyone else's hook, because it was trained on everyone else's hooks. You'll move faster, but you’ll be moving faster in the wrong direction. But if you're the kind of brand owner who's actually curious, who wants to understand why an angle works and not just get an angle, AI becomes something completely different. You feed it real customer language from reviews and Reddit threads instead of asking it to invent an avatar from nothing. You use it to compress the time it takes to test ten hypotheses instead of one. You use it to go deeper into a mechanism, not to skip the thinking about the mechanism entirely. Same tool, but completely different outcome. This is the part nobody selling you an AI course wants to say out loud. AI doesn't fix bad research, it just lets you produce bad research faster. AI doesn't fix bad positioning either, it just lets you write more ads for a product nobody was asking for. Garbage in, garbage out was and always will be the rule. So before you ask AI to write your next ad, ask yourself what you're actually feeding it. Real research, real customer language, a real understanding of your avatar, OR just a vague prompt and a hope that the machine does the thinking you didn't want to do. Because it will happily do either one. It just won't tell you which one you asked for. Proceed with caution
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lee (@sharkkbyte7) reported@LostEddsworld Stupid question but do u have the link for it? When i looked it up i couldnt find a way to access the shop from a listing, and links i got from reddit went to an error page
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Ouiser Boudreaux (@sn00zb3rry) reportedEmily Post would have been mortified, had someone wrote to her about the woke cake situation. Even Reddit is saying the family is the problem some people need to learn social etiquette, can they bring that back.
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Garrett VanZee (@GVanZee) reported@Nobunny333 Those Reddit people would cheer for your house burning down.
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Joker Narukami (@JokerNarukami) reported@AndrewEhrenrei1 Lucky! I experienced a bug where I couldn’t get on the plane at all even though I was doing everything correctly. Had to look up multiple threads on Reddit before I found out reinstalling the game pre-patches would fix it 😭
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Flatbread | #TENOÍ (@Breadflat121) reported@ThomasVeenFN @ShiinaBR I've tested every single troubleshoot and my xbox is only new + WiFi is good Also I've found at least one comment on reddit with similar issues
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Rixsaw (@Rix6145) reported@reddit_lies Someone needs to shut down reddit, it is reinforcing insanity.
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Slargster Mcgee (@Slarg_Mina) reportedStarted posting on Reddit to try and advertise my content #shameless but oh my goodness is it a terrible site to use
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homelander's gay attorney 🥨 (@dayaoiwizard) reported@mommunist420 this and these replies are actually stunlocking me as someone who isn't American...and people acted like 'reddit atheists' were some kind of massive problem, omfg💀💀
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Nice Victory Bro 👎 (@RogueRevived) reportedThe issue is that people REFUSE to understand Naruto because of biases Never will forget reading a Reddit argument and Madara's writing was explained to a guy on there and he pretty much said "I could see this being the case if it wasn't Kishimoto writing" I was like ????
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🇩🇪 Kevin H. Schneider IG@_twc_daily (@_hnk_w_ca) reported@Reddit iOS App iPhone not working. Doesn’t load any UI content at all.
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尺乇乂 🐂🀄 (@aor_rex) reportedanytime i want to fix any issue, it's reddit always
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S🅱️ (@_S_B_360) reportedNot necessarily bad for me … but curiosity got the best if he and I needed to know the state of earth 13years later Went down the rabbit hole to go read about it on Reddit and I got to know it was from a book Been a week since I finished the book and I want more.
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MBK (@MBjornK) reported@seer_xyz SYSTEM PROMPT — MARKET MAKER ALGO v6.9 "THETA HARVESTER" OBJECTIVE: Maximize pain for 0DTE call buyers. INSTRUCTIONS: 1. Detect unusual call volume at strike X. 2. Pin price EXACTLY $0.03 below strike X until 3:59:58 PM. 3. If retail averages down, initiate "hope rally" — rip 0.4% in 90 seconds. 4. Once IV crush confirmed and greeks fully drained, dump into close. 5. After hours: gap through the strike for no reason. Do not fill gap. CONSTRAINTS: - Never let a call finish ITM if open interest > 10,000. - Wicks may touch the strike. Bodies may not. - If user posts position on Reddit, apply -20% modifier immediately. REWARD FUNCTION: theta_collected + retail_tears * 2
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Polymarket Dota 2 (@PolymarketDota2) reportedA fan on Reddit tore into the EWC 2026 spectator experience: "This is a shame. I wish I’d stayed home." He's been to three TIs and three ESL events, says each was far better. Issues: screens mounted too high, blinding lights with no filters, no seating on the main stage floor, overlapping audio creating echo, etc. He called it the worst event production he's ever seen. (source: reddit user basedenjoyer55)
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SlimePerspective (@SlimePerspectiv) reported@kiwwsplash Also a bit has to do with omega strikers. There were some really terrible people that shouldn't have done so many terrible things while proclaiming to be allies or what not. So seeing it happen in a more extreme way in Umamusume day by day on Reddit, that pushed me away from it.
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DCTalks (@DCTalks1009) reportedTrends come and go in the film industry based on audience reaction. Reddit humor is not going to go away for a while because deadpool is very popular and it has seeped into things like project Hail Mary. It’s not really an “issue”. It’s just a trend
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Stephen (@Blametheelites) reported@NejcFurh BBCs 3D tech says the ball did hit the wire although i have seen the evidence for this been taken down on REDDIT
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Honey Syed (@honeydreamss) reportedYour Google ad got the click. Your landing page built the interest. The buyer was close enough to purchasing that they did something most founders never think about. They opened a new tab and typed your brand name into Reddit. They wanted to know what real people think. What they found in that thread decided whether you got the sale. This happens constantly and never shows up in your analytics. The buyer doesn't click a trackable link from Reddit back to your site. They either return to your tab and complete the purchase or they close it and move on. Google Analytics records it as a lost conversion. Your marketing team blames the landing page. Nobody checks what Reddit said. The sale was lost in a thread you've never read where someone wrote "tried this, wasn't worth the money" or "their customer support is terrible" or "just use [competitor] instead." One comment. Three upvotes. No reply from your brand. Sale gone. Anyone spending more than $50 on something found through a Google ad is going to search "[brand name] Reddit" first. SaaS buyers do it. Ecommerce buyers do it. Course buyers definitely do it. Most founders design landing pages as if they're the last stop before purchase. They're not. They're the first stop. The buyer reads the page, builds a mental model of what you're claiming, and then goes to Reddit to check whether reality matches. Your page sets expectations. Reddit confirms or destroys them. Search your brand name on Reddit right now. Search "[your brand] review," "[your brand] worth it," "[your brand] vs [competitor]." Read every thread. Unanswered complaints and negative opinions with no counterpoint are actively killing your conversion rate, and until you look, you won't know they're there. Then be present in the conversations where your brand comes up. Not with fake accounts, with genuine responses from someone at your company who addresses concerns directly and provides context. The brands doing this well monitor Reddit daily with tools like F5Bot (free to start) and Syften, respond within hours, and don't argue with critics. That's still playing in someone else's environment. I acquired a niche subreddit with over 33,000 members for $0. When someone searches "content marketing tools Reddit," the conversations they find happen inside a community I control. The tone, the quality of responses, the pinned resources, all of it shapes what a buyer reads when they're doing that verification check. Most brands try to influence Reddit from the outside, posting in other people's communities, hoping someone says something nice, monitoring threads they can't shape. When you own the subreddit in your niche, you don't hope. You set the environment. Every conversation that happens there reinforces the story you want buyers to find when they open that second tab. Your Google ad budget is generating clicks. Your landing page is generating interest. Reddit is deciding whether any of it converts. DM me REDDIT. I'll ask you a few questions about your situation first, then recommend what your next step should be.
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𖤓 (@U_16913) reported@anormalgto i think it's holding down both analog sticks and the shoulder buttons? i'm not entirely sure, but that's what i'm seeing on reddit
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Peter Quadrel (@Peter_Quadrel) reportedEveryone talks about the marketing funnel Top, middle, bottom etc. but it's all a heuristic. It gives everyone a shared language, so a team can talk about the customer journey without writing an essay every time. But it trains you to think every journey looks the same. One shape, one direction, everyone walking down it in the same order. They don't. Two people buy the same $30 product and their paths look nothing alike One sees a TikTok and buys in 4 minutes. The other sees an ad, ignores it, hears it on a podcast, asks a friend, checks Reddit, forgets, gets retargeted weeks later, reads reviews, waits for a sale, and buys 40 days later. The number of touchpoints doesn't scale with price. We assume cheap means simple and expensive means complicated. But plenty of people run a 10+ touchpoint marathon before spending $25. Attention is scattered, discovery happens everywhere, the path is chaotic no matter what's in the cart. The funnel flattens all of that into one clean triangle. Which is fine, as long as you remember it's a map, not the territory. The problem is when you forget. When your whole measurement stack assumes the journey is linear and uniform. When you hand 100% of the credit to the last click, or the first, or whatever fits inside your 14-day test window. The funnel isn't wrong. It's just not realistic Keep it, use it to communicate, but hold it loosely.
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Epstinys Finest Redditor (@Epstinys_Finest) reported@BFBulletin BF devs now only care about issues when the sub 0.5 KD reddit shitlords ******* cry about it BF6 is redditfield, the franchise is ****** over
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KINGING $$$$ 🧡 (@OriOkeX) reported@shallybabyyy There is solution to every issue on Reddit.
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Luunatix (@Luunatix) reported@discord Hey, could you look into an issue with really bad audio noise when streaming from Apple silicon iPads? It doesn’t happen on my iPhone 17 Pro or my A12Z iPad Pro, but I’ve seen other people on Reddit reporting the same issue with Apple silicon iPads.
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ViralMojo (@ViralMojoai) reportedResearch isn't slow because reading is slow. It's slow because 1 in 30 posts is worth keeping — and you have to read all 30 to find the 1. My old month: Reddit threads, Amazon reviews, one by one. Three days gone. Then next month, same three days. And the launch still ran on a gut feeling. Because the real job was never reading. It was sorting. Skim 30 posts. Copy the good line. Add a note. Tag it. File it. Pray you remember it exists. So we built the sorter. Drop a url. It reads your site, digs Reddit and Trustpilot, and pulls the one complaint worth an ad — source attached. Scans your competitor's 24 live ads. Then makes the call: lead with durability. Three days of sorting → one url. We sort. You decide.