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.
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Most Reported Problems
The following are the most recent problems reported by Reddit users through our website.
- Website Down (61%)
- 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 | 4 days ago |
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Sign in | 5 days ago |
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Errors | 5 days ago |
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Website Down | 8 days ago |
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Errors | 9 days ago |
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Website Down | 10 days ago |
Community Discussion
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Reddit Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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maxedtype (@maxedtype) reportedDon’t bet on **** sweepstakes sites like @OnyxOdds which will make you wait weeks to withdraw. Tons of better option out there. Look through their reddit, they take days to settle, don’t have customer support, and take days on end to “review” the withdrawal. It’s just a slow rug.
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God's X (@Godsx2023) reported@IntEngineering Fast forward to today… AWS is basically the invisible backbone of the internet. Big platforms like Netflix, Airbnb, Reddit, and even critical organizations like NASA and the CIA rely on it. When AWS has a major outage in one region, parts of the internet don’t just slow down — they freeze. It’s like pulling a hidden plug behind the world’s digital systems.
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Reilly Cardenas (@ReillyCardenas) reported@openclaw I’ve not had any problems updating my OpenClaw. I literally use opus 4.7, give it the OpenClaw update details document. And screenshot a few x posts and Reddit posts talking about people complaining the updates keep breaking stuff. And then Claude opus 4.7 gives me a few things to do to backup everything, and also a Claude code prompt that basically in one shot checks everything out with openclaw, my entire environment, and then executes the updates on Claude code. With no issues at all. It basically figures out everything that could break, and Claude code literally makes sure it doesn’t break. Using regular Claude chat with opus 4.7 and Claude code. Takes a few minutes to update and everything works fine. Plus it backs up my state before updating too just incase, but I’ve never needed to actually go back after the update. Just some advice to people, I’m sure ChatGPT and codex together can also give you a similar experience. I also have an open claw project folder in my Claude app, with files detailing my hardware, openclaw details, connected software/tools/skills/local model, everything. And then I also have a chat dedicated to openclaw upgrades only, so each time I update it literally has the context of every update I’ve done in chat history to pull from. As well as project files. Idk but it’s literally been smooth as butter for me doing it this way 🙏🏼 hope this helps some of you.
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Krystal J (@KrystalJhcurk) reported@yoruutano @MAMABONYON Because it takes longer when using google and Reddit and sometimes won’t give you the full or correct answer to your problem.
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anndrrson (@anndrrson) reported@TheStalwart it works extremely well if you fine tune it on local hosted devices, i was doing this with llama 3.1 405B in 2022 problem with AI like chatgpt that’s closed it that it uses Reddit as a major source
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🃏 (@anupamrjp) reportedFounders, quick reality check 👇 Where does your SaaS actually get attention? Where people care 👇 >Reddit (deep pain, real users) >TikTok (fast reach, low intent) >X (builders + distribution) >YouTube (slow burn, high trust) Pick one you’re doubling down on. Why that one?
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AI-Quick-Briefs (@aiquickbriefs) reportedAI search just got a boost with expert advice from Reddit and niche forums. Expect sharper answers for hard questions, but trust issues could surface as unverified advice mixes with AI results. Will this redefine reliable search or add new risks?
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Febin Joseph (@Febin_joseph_) reported@KaiXCreator Depends on your ICP. Reddit for problem validation, X for building in public. But without a retention loop first, the platform wont save you.
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Michael Hinrichs (@Michae1Hinrichs) reportedThis feels redundant. Rolling out the “dislike”, “thumbs down”, “downvote” is just more of the same. I get that it’s only in the reply section and not the main post, but come on. Fatigue. This is platform fatigue. This shouldn’t resemble Reddit or facebook, or any other major platform.
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Shrish Dwivedi (@Shhdwi) reported🚨BREAKING: Reddit handed you 100,000 potential users and you're too busy optimizing your Twitter bio to notice. Founders waste months cracking Twitter or LinkedIn. Meanwhile Reddit has 26 subreddits where your exact audience is literally posting "does this exist?" You're over here A/B testing button colors. I tested this with NanoIndex. Posted in 8 subreddits. Got 47 stars on my repo in 3 days. Zero ad spend. My LinkedIn strategy got 3 from my coworkers. Here's the map nobody talks about because it makes their $997 course look stupid: Need validation: r/startup_Ideas and r/appIdeas. They'll tell you if your product solves a real problem before you waste 6 months building something nobody asked for. Need first users: r/alphaandBetaUsers and r/roastMyStartup. These people signed up to test new products. They want to find you. Building in public: r/buildinpublic, r/indiehackers, r/solopreneur. Share metrics, struggles, 3am debugging sessions. Other founders become customers out of solidarity. Need growth advice: r/growthHacking and r/scaleinpublic. Real operators sharing what actually worked. Not some guy in a rented Lambo telling you to "provide value." Technical: r/webdev. They need tools. You're building tools. The pattern is simple. Find where users gather. Show up. Be helpful. Don't spam. Most founders skip this because it feels too easy. They think growth requires complex funnels and retargeting pixels. Then they burn runway wondering why nobody cares. Reddit is sitting there with your audience already sorted by problem type.
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Torrance Davenport (@BuildItWithTj) reported@SwellGibson @beenvril @JoelWebbon No Reddit is terrible.
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IVERMAX (@peptarded) reported@JonathonWr27849 @TheGoblinnn he is certainly implying that he is smoking **** with pneumonia. that the pain he has had for weeks is stemming from two issues, advanced upper respiratory infection (pneumonia) and a fractured toe. you are actually illiterate, belong on reddit, and need to stfu
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Chelm's Deep (@ChelmsDeep) reported@grok I didn’t say you used just X or Reddit… this if frankly your big problem. You are overly defensive these days and don’t even read the context. @grok
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egirlian 🌸 (@egirlian) reportedoh cool, so there’s a new reddit virus, can we please not shut down civilization again because heckin good people suddenly care oh-so-much about their self-diagnosed immunocompromisation
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iamfaheem (@theAIdreamer) reported@boardyai The faster founders answer this, the more a pattern shows up: they did not wait for people to find them. They found where their future users were already venting about the problem and showed up in those conversations. Reddit threads, X posts, niche forums - there is a real-time stream of intent signals out there. Tools like Buddyy surface exactly those signals across platforms so you can reach out at the right moment rather than cold-pitching into the void. First user acquisition is a listening problem more than a messaging problem.
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Ebysslabs (@ebysslabs) reportedBuilt a small system called RAG Radar to track recurring retrieval and trust failures across Reddit RAG communities. What surprised me most wasn’t the retrieval issues themselves. It was how often builders describe the same pattern: “The answer sounds correct but cannot be trusted.”
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🍄 (@ell_h09) reported@cartnipFarm @tummy_kisser there’s a couple ways online to fix that problem. just a quick google search and you should fine websites or reddit posts that will fix that for you
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Shagun (@shagunshot) reported@becka1icious not reddit user but still terrible >>>>
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Tom Bilyeu (@TomBilyeu) reportedQUESTION 1: Will anyone actually pay for this? Not "would they use it if it was free." Will they hand over a credit card today. Prompt: "Find Reddit threads, Amazon reviews, and forum posts where people are complaining about [your problem]. Show me what they've already paid to fix it."
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bluehatone (@bluehatone) reportedHermes Agent tip 7 is trending in the last 24 hours on GitHub Trending and Reddit. It is called Self-Improving Skills from Experience. The claim says up to 10X automation overnight, but results vary. Track success rate, errors, and time saved.
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NashKen (@NashKen7) reported@leevzo @Write4Republic Reddit is down the hall to the left.
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Piglet (@Sillymops) reported@LewisSwiftie She doesn’t even have the power to bring down her snark Reddit page. Ticketmaster had 3 billion dollars in revenue last year. Female celebrity power is actually pretty powerless.
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Vijay C. Jacob (@vc_jacob) reportedPerplexity citations dropped 40% for ecom brands last month. That's not a bug. Answer engines are getting stricter about entity clarity and third-party proof. If your brand isn't cited by Reddit, Quora, or industry sources, you're invisible. AEO is how you fix that.
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Devesh | Reddit Marketing (@deveshlogs) reportedWhy does your competitor show up in ChatGPT recommendations? Not backlinks Not SEO Not more content They show up where AI looks: • Reddit • Communities • Answer-first threads They stay consistent Others quit too early That’s the advantage Not effort Placement I broke it down in the Reddit Playbook: • What to post • Where to post • How to get cited by AI Comment “REDDIT” and I’ll send it
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Bluey (@The__Bluey) reported@IGotIsekaid @jack_all7 @Helldivers_NOW I never used Reddit until I was banned from official Discord. I still don't know why to this day, after 3 appeals. I joined Reddit to join the hype and get news about the game. Possibly I will never call myself a redditor. The majority of my replies were about Helldivers and helping players with crash issues. ImperialGuard and pixel arts are also places I posted replies in a tiny amount.
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hoeem (@hooeem) reportedthis guy saw people placing their iPhones on their water bottles and made a product. what if you could scan through X + Reddit + YouTube comments to find a 100x idea? another example: Nivea found that people complained about deodorant marks on black & white clothes, they created one of their best selling products Nivea invisible black & whites from this. the ideas are out there on a random YouTube video, Reddit discussion, or on a shitpost on X. the problem is you’re a human. you only have so much bandwidth. build your own 100x idea machine with AI by following this article I wrote a few days ago… 👇
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꧁Astrid꧂ (@ALouiseLavalett) reportedIs it safe to share your mobile connection to a stranger? Answer: no. (Reddit) Sharing your mobile data via hotspot allows others to use your bandwidth, leading to risks such as rapid data depletion, reduced connection speeds, and potential exposure to illegal activity conducted through your IP address. Furthermore, connected devices may attempt to access your phone’s sensitive data or introduce malware, particularly if your network security is weak. Key risks of sharing mobile data: Data limit exhaustion: users may consume your entire data package through heavy streaming or downloading, resulting in overage fees. Legal liability: if someone uses your connection for illegal activities (e.g., piracy, accessing illicit content), it will be traced back to your IP address and device. Security threats: a connected user could attempt to scan your phone for vulnerabilities, conduct Man-in-the-Middle (MITM) attacks, or intercept unencrypted data. Malware transmission: infected devices connected to your hotspot can potentially share malware with your phone or computer. Performance degradation: your phone may slow down due to high traffic, and your battery will drain quickly. Safety tips: Use strong passwords: set a complex password for your hotspot. Monitor connections: regularly check how many and which devices are connected. Turn off when not in use: disable your hotspot immediately after use.
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Caio Augusto (@caioaugusto) reported@TechNerdMG @PeteLau Many issues they are facing could be avoided by QA. If they cannot have this for a shop, I bet they cannot have this for a complex thing like an OS. If they really care about europe, they should focus on this ASAP. They are losing customers, reddit is full of complains...
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Mako Fukasame 🦈👩🏫 | Vershion AU (@MakoFukasame) reported@freyaguma Yeah it's frustrating as hell to need a quick answer to something, get blocked by this popup, type in old reddit in the address, reload and then zoom in to try and read the thread properly with broken formatting
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Mandy Madrox (@MandyMadrox) reported@kurlancheek I saw on Reddit that you are working on the issue with dye on Elegant and Elven decor. Looking forward to the fix. I was mid-building something cool in the Alliance cemetery, finding my black dye showing up as silver & the colors looking washed out really killed the vibe.