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Reddit status: access issues and outage reports

Problems detected

Users are reporting problems related to: website down, errors and sign in.

Full Outage Map

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 4: Problems at Reddit

Reddit is having issues since 08:20 PM 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.

  • 62% Website Down (62%)
  • 26% Errors (26%)
  • 12% Sign in (12%)

Live Outage Map

The most recent Reddit outage reports came from the following cities:

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Puteaux Website Down 17 hours ago
New Delhi Website Down 20 hours ago
Paris Website Down 3 days ago
Vigo Website Down 6 days ago
Phoenix Errors 6 days ago
Lima Errors 8 days ago
Full Outage Map

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:

  • indexsy
    Jacky Chou (buying online businesses up to $1m) (@indexsy) reported

    apparently there's a conference in dubai that teaches you how to NOT ship the products you sell. here's everything from this week: 1. the "no ship" underground is real and insane. tony met people in dubai who went to an actual conference teaching you how to take orders and never ship the product — how to spin up fresh ad accounts, stand up throwaway websites, the whole playbook. it's so blatant it's held openly as a conference. the reason they're all in dubai: zero taxes on the fraud revenue. straight up mail fraud with a lanyard and a badge. 2. tony broke down why people buy 3 fridges or 4 pairs of the same shoe, and it's pure decision architecture. every step of the funnel limits you to 2-3 choices so they know exactly what you'll pick. come in on a high-value low-cost hook, get 3 options (good/better/best), add to cart, then 3 upsells, then shipping insurance, then a post-purchase offer. once you've added to cart your brain treats it as a past decision and rides the sunk cost — "it's only $20 more for another pair, why wouldn't i?" insurance is the highest-margin add-on in any industry because you're framing a $10 spend against a $120 loss. 3. the offer structure lesson tom hammered: never sell just one unit. they were selling $69 for one keyword. tom asked chatgpt to build 3 price points (single, 3-pack, 5-pack), sent it to the group chat with a smug "told you," and jacky was vibe coding it from the playground with his kid. someone had already bought 3 keywords manually — the demand for the bundle was staring at them the whole time. always give people a way to spend more. 4. long VSLs still print despite everyone saying attention spans are dead. tom met a guy in dubai running a $100M supplement brand whose entire funnel is a ONE HOUR long VSL — ugliest page imaginable, no buttons, no skip, just a video player you can't fast forward. tony's point: on youtube you pay per view not per second, so if you hook someone into a 10-minute VSL they're getting 10 minutes of pitch at the same cost. the scammy-looking offers (buy 2 get 1 free) scale the hardest. 5. the ad creative framework tony uses: hook + body + outro, where the body is made of interchangeable "modules." each module is a feature + benefit + lifestyle shot bundled together. you run the video, watch where people drop off, then reorder the modules to hold retention. the guy doing big numbers on youtube said he's recycled the same body for 2 years and only ever writes new hooks — the hook is the new audience. meta now wants ~60% new creative per week and their AI scans the first 3 seconds to decide whether to expand your audience. 6. the CPM debugging bit was gold. jacky's running the same offer as tom in the same ad account same pixel, but tom's creative pulls $300 CPMs and jacky's pulls $30. tom immediately called it a skill issue. real answer: it's a brand new facebook page (new pages spike to $150-170 then settle) plus new campaigns reset learnings under meta's andromeda update, so every fresh campaign behaves like a brand new ad account until it spends. bonus: the human-vs-AI hill tom is willing to die on. he spent 5-6 hours reading 1,000+ collagen reviews on reddit by hand and jacky nearly had a breakdown ("that's a single API call, bro, send me the thread, i can't watch a friend struggle like this"). but tom's point landed: AI hands you the top 5 pain points, but reading line by line is what feeds YOUR brain the customer avatar. he discovered people buy collagen for joint pain, not skin — the rock climber who can't climb 3x a week anymore, the person who feels "hit by a bus" getting out of bed. that nuance became a landing page per pain point. even tony and jacky drew the line at reviews specifically, but conceded the deeper principle: call every customer, because people tell a founder on the phone what they'll never put in a review. ep 10 of NGMI with @itstonyyu and @tomwang24 watch/listen ↓

  • RobbieNoBelts
    The General 🇺🇸 (@RobbieNoBelts) reported

    @JaValle Your reddit bubble is down the hall and to the left.

  • ddsboston24
    DDSBoston.com (@ddsboston24) reported

    It’s wild how the same kids who spent hours perfecting combos in Street Fighter are now asking where their clothes come from. It’s not about the hype anymore; it’s about substance. We’ve watched the entire industry churn out disposable trends, built on a foundation of synthetic fibers and planned obsolescence. They flood the market with cheap polyester, masquerading as innovation. That’s the systemic failure we’re here to dismantle. This isn't about buzzwords. This is about first principles. It's about understanding that the material dictates the lifespan, and the lifespan dictates the true cost. I see threads on Reddit – people complaining about shirts falling apart after three washes, about the feel of cheap synthetics. They're not asking for more options; they're asking for clothes that *last*. They're asking for authenticity. We built DDS Boston on a radical premise: durability *is* sustainability. It's that simple. We don't chase fleeting aesthetics. We obsess over the tensile strength of organic cotton. We engineer our garments for longevity, not for a season. Take our heavyweight hoodies. They're not just warm; they're built to become heirlooms. We use GOTS-certified organic cotton because it’s demonstrably better for the planet, yes, but also because it’s inherently stronger. It’s a tangible difference you can feel – the weight, the texture, the way it drapes. This isn't some marketing gimmick; it's physics. The industry narrative is broken. They tell you "recycled" is always the answer. But what about the microplastics shed from recycled polyester in every single wash? That's not a solution; it's just shifting the problem. We chose GOTS organic cotton for our core line because it bypasses those issues entirely. It’s about zero compromise. It’s about building a product that stands up to life, a product that you don’t have to replace every few months. That's the real "circular economy" – making things that don't need to be constantly remade. People ask how to buy sustainable clothing. It's not complicated. Stop looking at the price tag and start looking at the material composition and the certifications. Ask yourself: will this garment still be wearable in two years? Five years? Our GOTS certification isn't just a badge; it’s a guarantee. It means rigorous standards, from seed to shirt. It means no harmful chemicals, reduced water usage, and fair labor practices. It’s the proof point that allows us to stand behind the durability of our products. The fear isn't about missing out on the latest trend; it's about contributing to a mountain of textile waste. It's about the guilt of buying something that’s designed to fail. We offer an antidote. We offer clothing that aligns with your values and withstands the test of time. This is for the builders, the creators, the ones who understand that true value lies in craftsmanship and intention, not in disposability. This is the uniform for the post-hype era. If you’re tired of clothes that disintegrate, if you’re looking for genuine quality that doesn’t cost the earth, then you’re looking for us. Stop buying clothes. Start investing in garments. Check our Transparency Ledger in bio to see the real cost breakdown and understand why our approach is the only way forward.

  • isohaibilyas
    Sohaib Ilyas (@isohaibilyas) reported

    @aiwithkelso Most of the time, I would trust a frustrated Reddit comment over a competitor page. People don’t describe problems neatly when they’re annoyed. They often say it in a way your copy never would. It’s not clean research, but it gets you much closer to how customers actually think and talk.

  • jihyoschae
    dawn 🐖 (@jihyoschae) reported

    like can we please cross the bridge when we get there ..... put reddit down😭

  • isohaibilyas
    Sohaib Ilyas (@isohaibilyas) reported

    @Krypto_Bishop Starting with the audit makes sense. A lot of crypto launches jump to KOLs and hype too fast. I use a tool to check Reddit and X conversations first, because early doubts usually show up there before they become bigger launch problems.

  • algorecrave
    ellen🍸 (@algorecrave) reported

    @brownliberite reddit was down for a bit

  • Boxed_Music
    BM (@Boxed_Music) reported

    @andyburnham people are giving up because hamptons like you do AMAs on Reddit, pretend the server crashed and delete all the tricky questions… *******

  • NeuralStacks
    Ryan Linn (@NeuralStacks) reported

    @thedavestdave85 @Smith_WessonInc They don't make a shield 10. That would be badass if they did. I was referring to the 2.0. if you look on reddit in the 10mm sub there's tons of people showcasing ftf's, stovepipes, etc. Just saw one yesterday. Might be a break in issue but I've never had that happen in my Glock.

  • Burlydee
    Monstar (@Burlydee) reported

    People like Tre are paid to distract voters from real issues. Six year old tweets are not real issues. They would rather comb thru people’s Reddit pages than figure out how to lower the cost of healthcare, education, stop funding Israel. Paid demons.

  • redzonefanpage
    hoeyomommaugly (@redzonefanpage) reported

    @BennyG10001 @RichardThr16683 He also filed a lawsuit which he had the video up and was constantly giving updates on reddit for a while then randomly he went ghost and stopped talking about It There Is a possibility there was a undisclosed amount that was paid OR his lawyer just told him to take all it down

  • AndrewCavanagh3
    Cav_outdoors 🇬🇧 (@AndrewCavanagh3) reported

    @MartinDaubney @andyburnham @Reddit The communist tactic of 'eradicate the party's problem'

  • aiwithkelso
    Micheal O'Neill (@aiwithkelso) reported

    Most businesses start their marketing by guessing what customers want. They search Google, look at competitors, and write copy based on what feels right. That is not research. That is assumption with extra steps. The problem is that polished case studies and competitor websites show you what businesses want to say about themselves, not what customers are actually feeling. You end up writing to a version of your market that does not quite exist. Claude can do something more useful. You can point it at Reddit threads, YouTube comments, and forums where real people describe their frustrations in their own words. That is where the actual language lives. Not the professional summary of the problem, but the 2am complaint post from someone who has run out of patience with the exact issue you solve. There is a Skill on GitHub called Last 30 Days that directs Claude to pull recent conversations from these sources and surface what people in your market are saying right now. I used it to research a content brief and what came back was a list of phrases I would never have chosen myself. Phrases that matched how customers think, not how I would have described the problem. That language is your brief. It tells you what to put in your ads, your landing page, and your emails before you spend a penny on any of them. Find the Last 30 Days Skill on GitHub. Run it against the main problem your business solves.

  • dhphoto
    dhphoto (@dhphoto) reported

    @MartinDaubney @andyburnham @Reddit This is Communism, shut down any dissent Now we really know what a Burnham government will bring

  • Dr_TheHistories
    Dr. M.F. Khan (@Dr_TheHistories) reported

    In the ancient Roman world, only the wealthy elite would be able to afford their own toilets. This meant that the rest of the population was stuck either using a bedpan, a cesspit, or heading over to the public toilets. As you could imagine the smell would have been dreadful. However, that was not the only problem. Due to the sheer amount of people that would use these toilets, an immense amount of hydrogen sulfide and methane gas would build up in the pipes below. This could cause flames to shoot out from the toilet seats and injury or even kill those who were unlucky enough to be at the wrong place at the wrong time. Not to mention the rats who dwelled in the pipes and could climb up from underneath and bite at some very "sensitive" areas. © Reddit #drthehistories

  • streetvoicesUK
    Britain Unfiltered (@streetvoicesUK) reported

    @PolitlcsUK caught the reddit ama buzz at the chip shop queue two ministers swapping barbs feels like a street market showdown i reckon most of us just want them to stop talking and fix the potholes

  • Krypto_Bishop
    Crypto Bishop (@Krypto_Bishop) reported

    A Web3 project asked me this week: "We got featured in a small crypto outlet. How do we get into MSN or mainstream media?" Here's what I told them: Mainstream media placement for crypto projects is possible but the approach is completely different from crypto-native press. You don't pitch your token price or your tokenomics. You pitch the problem you solve and the market you're disrupting. We placed an organic article for a client on MSN reaching millions of monthly readers with zero paid amplification. The secret? A press release written for journalists, not for crypto traders. Angle, credibility, and timing matter more than your tech stack. Bishop Richard · Web3 & Crypto Marketing Strategist · Global · Proprietary Audit Framework Bishop Richard | Parker Advisory Web3 & Crypto Marketing Strategist | Global KOL Management · Reddit Growth · Press Placement · Campaign Execution RESULTS → Helped 31+ Web3, Tech and SaaS projects grow their audiences and communities → Managed a single successful campaign with a $50K+ budget  experienced with large-scale spend → 70,000+ Reddit views for a client in 30 days  zero ad spend → Organic MSN placement reaching millions of monthly readers  no paid boost → Delivering on time that i got a name from a client (Bishop Speed )

  • 0xcuriousapple
    curiousapple (@0xcuriousapple) reported

    Marketing in age of AI i am developing a family member's website for their new business, and once everything was live, i started an seo agent. and it immediately started commenting on reddit threads to generate inbound traffic. if there wasn't already a relevant question, it would post the question itself from one account and then answer it from a second account. reddit's spam filters shut those comments down in about hour tho haha, probably because the accounts had low karma. this is the new pvp 🍷 came across a new service called fastlane, which does similar for meta platforms. crowdplay does this across reddit, quora, and facebook using old trackable accounts. we're entering an era where agents are being used to spread a brand's presence across online platforms, while those same platforms are building systems to detect and filter. let the games begin 🍷

  • Hydra_Paradox1
    Ace (@Hydra_Paradox1) reported

    @_Deez_Games @weekndlover5 Are u stupid?? People at Sony don’t control the Reddit server 😭😭😭

  • Lionbush
    Lionbush (@Lionbush) reported

    @andyburnham With scripted questions no doubt. Why is your Reddit ask me anything removing any questions which are controversial? Why are you censoring it all and avoiding any real issues like Rupert Lowe and his request on the **** Gang Report? No one voted for you to be PM.

  • FilipPanoski
    Filip Panoski (@FilipPanoski) reported

    Most founders pick their first distribution channel backwards. The usual move: post on X, launch on Product Hunt, hope it sticks. Best case, a spike of curious browsers. Worst case, polite feedback and zero buyers. Your first channel shouldn't maximize reach. It should maximize conversations. For me that was Reddit DMs, messaging people who literally just described the problem. Reach feels good. Conversations make money.

  • PeterCaliexile
    St Peter of Texas (@PeterCaliexile) reported

    @farmingandJesus @pinkrosesdawn @FreddyLA7 Apparently some folks on Reddit didn’t like his old posts, doxxed him, and were being generally unpleasant to him. He shut down his account in response.

  • explorer_czw
    Martin K. (@explorer_czw) reported

    If someone would take Reddit down for whatever reason, it would be service to humanity.

  • Tyras_Mikhail
    Mikhail J. Clive - Author 📚🐯 (@Tyras_Mikhail) reported

    @ModDoesStuff Mass shootings have been an issue in the US since the 80s (strangely, after gun laws were at their loosest before 1934). This is not comparable to increased security at airports. It's a bunch of hoplophobes exercising Reddit mod tier petty power to stop cosplays they dislike.

  • PattaliAshwinis
    confusedsoul (@PattaliAshwinis) reported

    The amount of hate thread on reddit post after this incident is seriously infuriating , you will ask men to share their emotions and experiences the moment someone does it if it doesn't matches your narrative just bash him. Same issue was with his cheating incident #Harshadchopda

  • Danizeh
    Dani. (@Danizeh) reported

    People that are clowning on this will realize how stupid they sound in a few years. I had two health problems last year that I fixed by just asking Claude and reading a bunch of Reddit posts from other people, because my doctor didn't solve **** but waste my time and money.

  • Shin__Aki
    Shin (@Shin__Aki) reported

    @xikhar I guess i will keep an eye r/Linux on reddit and try a Arch distro on the side? Excluding Arch by default, right. ;) NixOs are somehow my favorite pick because i can personalise my "thing" as i want. Also i play mostly solo games so the issue with nvidia pilot arent my concern.

  • Proper_Memes
    Proper Memes 〓〓 (@Proper_Memes) reported

    @MartinDaubney @andyburnham @Reddit Reddit is an extreme left echo chamber with a serious CSAM problem with many mods being tr4ns.

  • enoelani
    Wai-Lin Terry (@enoelani) reported

    @monkeynearpunch A very well informed Reddit commentator said, after relating the video at slow speeds, that the mom was just watching but when the startled Punch made noise, that was when she acted. Loud noise represented a threat to her baby. She wasn’t aggressive to begin with.

  • girlincrypto007
    solomiya.eth (@girlincrypto007) reported

    @jessyfries I guess we just need better AI literacy. The problem AI is discussed usually in small communities on X & Reddit. And most of the people just don't get that information - that's the space for us to grow also, we can make more content on that.