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 (28%)
- 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 | 1 day 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
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Reddit Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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Robinson Armament Co. (@RobinsonArms) reportedI love X. You can actually post something here. This same post was taken down by the Q👂s at r/nfa on reddit. What punks.
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The Growth Engine (@allenxmarketing) reportedI pulled 12 ad headlines from one Reddit thread in 9 minutes. The thread was an r/SaaS post: "anyone else burned out on AI tooling?" 47 comments. Real founders. Real frustration. I dropped the URL into a Claude Skill I built last weekend. It pulled 3 things from every comment: The pain. What was actually broken for them. Their objection. Why they hadn't switched yet. Exact phrases. Verbatim quotes of 6+ words. 9 minutes later I had a sortable table. 28 rows, sorted by emotional intensity. Top 3 phrases went straight into a landing page test that night. No paraphrasing. The awkward real wording is what makes copy land. One row read: "paying for 4 AI tools and using 1." That became a headline test against a generic control. CTR up 18% in 4 days. The lesson isn't really about Claude Skills. It's about where the language lives. Buyers write your best copy when they're frustrated at midnight on Reddit. You just have to go listen. One rule I follow: mine the language, not the people. Never paste usernames in ads. I wrote up the full Skill prompt and the 3-tier headline framework. Free guide. 1. Connect with me. 2. Comment REDDIT and I'll DM it over.
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VC Venkata (@VidyacharanGV) reported@aravind I have serious doubts about @AshwiniVaishnaw . Makes me wonder if he is compromised. GOI has taken no action to handle this issue (Reddit, for example). Anyway the fake-news mafia will cry crocodile tears that their freedom is being oppressed. Let them cry for real henceforth.
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ChiefRocka (@Mr_ChiefRocka) reported@VIZIO @STARZ @Walmart This is ridiculous, there's hundreds of reddit posts with this exact issue and nothing has been done.
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₿rian ₿anks (@BrianBanks08) reportedSo let me get this straight a guy is going famous on Reddit cause he bought 700k of intel 2 years ago with his grandmas money. Was down huge. Didn’t sell and is back on Reddit up 2m now? This the next @TheRoaringKitty ??
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Steven (@StevBuilds) reported@opynrijal @X Go into the Reddit threads and try to interact with them about the problems they face. No direct marketing, more building true connections with parents facing that challenge.
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Fanatic (@Vickthefan) reported@Griz_zly8 @Haky49501827 Reddit iko down
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Lord Iván Emiro Cañas Gutiérrez 🇬🇧🇻🇪 (@LordCanas) reported@CharlesMullins2 Hi, answering your question I would say No. The viral posts (on Facebook, X, Reddit, etc.) love calling it "quantum levitation" or "reversing a fundamental force" because it sounds dramatic. But the researchers themselves describe it accurately as a tunable quantum vacuum force for nanoscale engineering, not a gravity breakthrough. Bottom line: This is a real, fascinating advance in quantum mechanics and potential nanotech (think better MEMS devices, ultra-low-friction components, or quantum traps). But it's not anti-gravity, and it doesn't point the way there. If we ever crack macroscopic anti-gravity or gravity manipulation, it'll come from a very different corner of physics. No, this is not anti-gravity (or a step toward it). The viral claim you're describing is real science, but massively overhyped in wording. It refers to recent (and some older) demonstrations of a repulsive version of the Casimir force, which can make tiny objects repel each other or "hover" at nanoscale distances without physical contact. That's genuinely cool for quantum physics and nanotechnology, but it has zero connection to gravity or anti-gravity. Quick recap of the actual science (no hype) The Casimir effect (predicted in 1948) is a measurable quantum force between two uncharged, parallel conducting plates (or other surfaces) in a vacuum. It arises from quantum vacuum fluctuations, virtual particles popping in and out of existence in empty space. These fluctuations are restricted between the plates, creating a tiny net attractive pressure that pulls the plates together. It's real, has been experimentally confirmed many times, and becomes significant only at distances of micrometers or less (way smaller than a human hair). Scientists have figured out how to reverse it into repulsion in specific setups: Using different materials (e.g., one surface coated with a low-refractive-index dielectric like Teflon in a fluid medium). Chiral (twisted) optical materials between plates. Ferrofluids (magnetic nanoparticles in liquid) tuned with external magnetic fields. Certain metamaterials or geometry tweaks. In these cases, the vacuum fluctuations produce a repulsive force instead. Experiments have shown tiny gold flakes or other micro-objects stably "hovering" or levitating ~50–200 nanometers above a surface due to the balance of repulsive and attractive Casimir contributions. Recent work (e.g., 2019 experiments and 2024 studies with ferrofluids + magnetic fields) has made this tunable and reversible. The force does indeed come from quantum fluctuations in "empty space itself," as the claim says. And yes, it can enable frictionless microscopic motion or prevent nanoscale parts from sticking together (a big problem in tiny machines). Why this is not anti-gravity Completely different forces. Gravity is the attraction between masses (or spacetime curvature in general relativity). The Casimir force is a quantum electromagnetic effect from the vacuum's zero-point energy in quantum electrodynamics (QED). It has nothing to do with mass or gravitational fields. Repulsive Casimir doesn't "cancel" or manipulate gravity any more than magnetic repulsion does. Scale and strength. At the microscopic scales where this works, gravity is insanely weak compared to Casimir forces (by many orders of magnitude). The "hovering" you see in lab demos isn't fighting Earth's gravity, it's balancing short-range quantum forces against each other (or against other tiny effects like Van Der Waals). I couldn't use this to levitate even a speck of dust against planetary gravity. No pathway to anti-gravity tech. Anti-gravity would require something like negative mass/energy, wormholes, or manipulating spacetime on macroscopic scales, none of which this touches. Vacuum fluctuations do relate to big cosmological mysteries (like dark energy), but reversing Casimir locally in QED setups doesn't advance gravitational control or unification theories. Claims linking this directly to "anti-gravity" appear only in social-media hype or fringe posts, not in the actual physics.
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Geoffy (@GeoffyGEO) reported@Simao237 this exact pattern shows up for ecom. products that get cited tend to have problem-first buyer-language threads (reddit, niche forums) the model can pull from. brand-led product copy alone doesn't move the needle anymore.
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. (@1mfslw) reported@deadboylyfee Reddit didn’t play him all year then threw him into the fire in the playoffs down 0-2 vs the defending champs fairs
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שרמוטל (@sharmutal) reported@reddit_lies Per the post he has many other problems that preclude development. Did he ask for CV review on LinkedIn or go straight to reddit to beach?
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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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Moo!!! 🐄🔞:3 (@MooMooZooPalz) reported@KonnerwithaK reddit is down the hall and to the left
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iamfaheem (@theAIdreamer) reported@gregisenberg AI-native GTM is the part nobody talks about. Instead of reps manually hunting for prospects, AI watches conversations happening across X, Reddit, LinkedIn, forums in real time and surfaces the ones where someone is describing the exact problem you solve. That intent signal already exists. Most companies just aren't listening. Tools like Buddyy are built specifically for this.
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Rashi Umapathi (@rashiumapathi) reportedReddit gave us 1,200 signups in 7 days. Here's exactly what we posted (and what got shadow-banned): First rule of Reddit marketing: Reddit hates marketers. Reddit loves builders who share what they learned. So we never posted as a company. We posted as a person who built something and wanted feedback. The post that worked: Title: "I built a tool that does X because I was sick of doing it manually. Here's what I learned after 6 months." Not: "Check out my new SaaS [link]" One reads like a founder. One reads like spam. The subreddits we targeted (in order): 1. r/SaaS - builders who understand the problem 2. r/entrepreneur - people with the pain but not the solution 3. Niche-specific subs - the ones where your ICP actually hangs out Don't go broad. Go where they're already venting about your problem. What got us shadow-banned: - Posting a link in the first comment - Cross-posting the same post to 5 subs the same day - Having a username that looked brand new (less than 30 days old) Build karma first. Then post. The comment that drove the most signups wasn't even our post. Someone else asked a question in a thread. We answered it thoroughly. No link. Then someone replied "do you have a tool for this?" That's when we linked it. 300 signups from one comment. The formula: 1. Find the thread where people complain about your problem 2. Write the most helpful reply in that thread 3. Wait for them to ask "how do you do this?" 4. Then mention your product Patience > promotion.
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Raziel (@tryraziel) reportedI dug into Reddit's IPO filing and the return math for early investors is absolutely wild. A $100K seed investment in Reddit in 2005 turned into $47 million at IPO. Here's the full breakdown: → 2005 Seed: $100K bought ~2.1% equity at $4.7M valuation → 2014 Series B: Company valued at $500M (106x jump) → 2017 Series C: $1.8B valuation → 2019 Series D: $3B valuation → 2021 Series E: $10B valuation → 2024 IPO: $6.4B public valuation That seed check returned 470x in 19 years. But here's what's crazy — Reddit's IPO was considered "disappointing" because it went public below its 2021 private market high. The stock was down 36% from peak private valuations. Yet seed investors still made generational wealth. A reminder that even "underwhelming" exits can create life-changing returns if you got in early enough. The math only works when you write the first checks. Series E investors? They lost money. What's the earliest stage you've invested at?
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TroveStudio (@trovestudio_org) reported@OTTTO27 @MicroLaunchHQ SEO will likely be slow here since the value is experiential and needs to be seen to be understood SaaS explainers or short screencasts showing the difference between upload based tools and your zero upload flow would perform much better on Reddit and X because they communicate the core idea instantly without requiring explanation
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sleed (@bbaddapp) reported@Apple_Pitou @Demonhonho oh my god appleshitou has broken reddit containment
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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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Shadow D. Xebec (@ShadowDxebec) reported@TheRuzzleHybrid @Pirat_Nation I am one of the mods of this website. We are promoting it on twitter and reddit. We need user traffic otherwise we have to shut down the site because of lack of funding.
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Armaan Sidhu (@realarmaansidhu) reportedA Reddit confession went viral. A 22-year-old with terminal cancer took out a credit card with $6,500 limit, 0% APR for 20 months, and bought what he wanted because the debt would die with him. The replies called him a hero. The structural read is harder than either framing. The mechanism. US credit cards charge an effective average APR of 24.5% in 2026 to compensate for default risk. Lenders price expected losses across millions of accounts. Terminally ill borrowers who max accounts they don't intend to repay become statistical noise in a system designed to absorb them.The numbers. ~41% of Americans die with credit card debt averaging $6,400. Lenders write off ~$130B/year in unsecured consumer debt collectively. A single $6,500 default by a terminal patient costs the issuer ~$6,500. The same amount in compound interest gets recovered from ~50 healthy borrowers paying minimum payments over 5 years. The structural read. The system isn't broken. It's exactly what it looks like. Lenders extract value from the healthy and absorb losses from the dying. Both flows are priced into the average. The "hero" framing flatters the borrower without acknowledging the cost still gets paid by other consumers. The honest read. A dying person enjoying months they couldn't otherwise afford is not the moral failure here. The moral failure is a healthcare system that left a 22-year-old with $2,000 in savings after two years of cancer treatment. The credit card is the symptom. The treatment economics are the disease.
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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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Lestacy (@lestat133974) reported@pinkscccubus @refemmed no it isnt if u go on reddit theres tons of stories of guys who get roped into doing cnc fantasy stuff with their gfs and then feel really guilty and terrible afterwards
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Satyam (@sattyyouneed) reportedputting “reddit” at the end of every question i have on google cuz i will never trust an AI i need John from 13 years ago that has the same problem as me to solve it
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Lucas (@luscasgibis) reported@ProfofEvil I do feel that the people that like the book don’t appear on Twitter very often to talk about it. At least on the english language posting they’re mostly shy of sharing because of the constant reminder of how “terrible” it is. Reddit though… is the opposite problem.
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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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motionzoi (@motionzoi) reported@TGGonYT @TGGonYT you see this is proof that a lot of of these weirdos work together to put down others. Here’s why if this was from the known liar who got banned on Reddit for lying which is his buddy @DetectiveSeeds . But he will easily basically kind of discredit this when it seems very realistic. This is why I trust people like dark viper over this clown.
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CommonSense (@Smatterchuboy) reported@Timcast Put. Down. The. Pipe. You're never going to prevent Reddit users from arguing about things over which they have no control.
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hannah (@hannahisstupidd) reportedthe true woman experience is using reddit to find a fix for your broken dyson airwrap and then get muna tickets