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.
May 26: Problems at Reddit
Reddit is having issues since 05:40 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 (63%)
- Errors (25%)
- Sign in (12%)
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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Sign in | 2 days ago |
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Website Down | 4 days ago |
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Sign in | 4 days ago |
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Errors | 5 days ago |
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Website Down | 8 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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NewCanada (@NewMeYEG) reportedSaw a post on Reddit, I provided my 2 cents & got a Redditors post taken down. Not because I deliberately did anything. But because I had a voice. His comments are deleted so there’s missing context in that closed thread. They do this deliberately to stump discussion/prying eyes
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Wᴀʟʟꜰʟᴏᴡᴇʀ 🥀 (@autom8nerd) reported@aadityansha_06 there are websites out there. but I've never done this thing. you can search down reddit for there are genuine reviews out there.
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Sumit Nautiyal (@sumitrunsai) reported@rcmisk The channel gets blamed for what patience couldn't fix. Seen this pattern repeatedly, someone posts 12 times, gets nothing, declares Twitter dead and moves to Reddit. Posts 8 times, gets nothing, declares Reddit dead. The channel wasn't the problem. The timeline expectation was. What's the minimum rep count you think any channel actually needs before the data means anything?
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cristal ʚ°°ɞ | ROLO (@_lovelikeashyyy) reported@isabelfisherrrr Those people on Reddit are so toxic to the point that they will tear you down just to get the validation that they want. And it's kind of pitiful for them because they are looking for validation from other people instead of their own family.
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Nitpicker (@nitpick_on_bs) reported@paulg @ycombinator Just curious - how did many of the social apps like Reddit deal with seeding problem?
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Adela Mincea | Marketing Economist (@adelamincea) reportedA founder posted on Reddit last week that he asked Claude how to get customers. Claude told him to do SEO, LinkedIn, Twitter and Reddit. He did all four for two months. Zero customers. He thinks Claude failed him. It didn't. He asked the wrong question. "How do I get customers" produces channel advice. Channel advice is the cheapest output a language model can give, because every marketing blog written since 2010 says the same four things. You don't pay for the model when you ask that. You pay for the model when you ask something only your data can answer. The question that moves money is "who already bought from me, why did they pick me over the alternative, and what did they almost buy instead." That answer is not on the internet. It's in your Stripe exports, your support tickets, your sales call recordings, the three reviews a customer left in broken English, the email a churned account sent on the way out. A language model trained on the public web can write you a LinkedIn post. It cannot tell you that your best customers are women between 35 and 50 buying for their mother-in-law, because that sentence has never been written down. Until someone extracts it, the model guesses. The guess looks confident. The campaign built on the guess loses money quietly for six months. This is the part the "Claude failed me" posts miss. The model is doing exactly what it was built to do: average the public internet. The public internet does not contain your buyer. Your buyer contains your buyer. If you're a founder running ads, writing copy, briefing an agency, or pointing a language model at your marketing, the cheapest upgrade you can make this quarter is to stop asking the model what to do and start feeding the model what it doesn't know. Pull thirty customer quotes from your reviews and emails. Note who churned and why. Write down the one objection that kept showing up on sales calls. That document is worth more than any prompt template you'll see this year. build that document for clients. It's called a Voice of Customer audit. It takes the quotes your customers already wrote, finds the language and the objection patterns, and gives you back a brief any model can actually use. Link in comments.
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Mikhail J. Clive - Author 📚🐯 (@Tyras_Mikhail) reported@Wolfgang18842 I would agree, were it not for him bringing back decimation and executing those who retreated, when he himself ran from the front. Reddit history is annoying, but Cadorna absolutely was a terrible general.
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Muhammad Shaiz (@MShaiz9) reportedWe reduced our outbound workload by ~70%. Without sending more cold DMs. The biggest shift? We stopped chasing random leads and started replying to people already talking about their problems on Reddit + X. Now I’m curious: What’s your BIGGEST reason for avoiding cold outreach? A) Low reply rates B) Feels spammy C) Too time-consuming D) Leads aren’t qualified Reply with A/B/C/D 👇
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Jones (@0xJhones) reportedThis is why I uninstalled the damn app, they've been getting bad P2P PR these past weeks then my account started the compliance review issue. Multiple screenshots and documents submitted but still nothing. I searched on reddit, contacted support yet nothing. Goodbye Bybit.
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jeanie ☽̶☾ (@jeaniezk) reportedit's time to bring thumbs down to twitter, just like reddit
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Professor Uzair (@professoruzair) reportedWe cut our outbound effort by ~70%. Without increasing cold DMs. The real change? We stopped hunting random leads and started replying to people already expressing the problem on Reddit + X. Now I’m curious: What’s your main blocker with cold outreach? A) Low response rates B) Feels like spam C) Takes too much time D) Poor lead quality Reply A/B/C/D 👇
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Irfan Mohamed (@Irfanbuilds) reportedstarted with 0 users. no audience. reddit account got banned too 😭 so i had to figure out another way to get users for my saas. for the last 10 days i tested everything manually only in x (Twitter): • optimized my twitter profile like a landing page • commented on big accounts before the post blew up • posted 3-5 times daily • shared build in public journey honestly • gave value instead of pitching • built free tools around the product • used my own AI tool to find intent leads on X result? 50+ users in 10 days without spending on ads. $ 0 spent . comment "50" i’ll drop the full walkthrough + exact strategies i personally used. biggest lesson: people don’t buy because you “launched”. they buy when they repeatedly see you solving real problems publicly. still early. still learning.
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Lana (@Bitcoin4Woman) reportedLook up the reddit group r/decaf. It's a bunch of people trying to get off caffeine. They describe the science. I used to get anxiety and jittery after 2 shots and had sleep issues even though drank it in the morning. Much calmer now without it. It also dehydrates skin but apparently coffee is good for the liver.
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Drag0n647 (@drag0n647) reported@uzi5_55 Oh that community has been around for a little while surprisely. Reddit probably won't ever remove it but maybe the feds might since whats been going down.
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Semrush (@semrush) reportedYour buyers discovered you on TikTok. Validated you on Reddit. Got a second opinion from ChatGPT. And your attribution model has no idea any of that happened 👀 This isn't a future problem, it's already here. • Google holds 73% of discovery across 41 major surfaces (not the 90%+ most marketers plan around) • The other 27% is where opinions form, and decisions get made without you • 43% of consumers have already discovered a brand through AI Here's what the multi-platform discovery can look like 👇
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epic cat looking galaxy glasses (@FaggotLabubu) reportedjust saw a reddit comment asking the poster to cashapp him 11 dollars to help him fix a broken zipper
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Gunko (Eternal) (@Not_Eternatus) reportedI agree with the reddit moderator, its hard to keep up with something if the community aren't willing to contribute there is only so much a few staff can do, I think having your own lego wiki is cool but you shouldn't be putting other people's wiki down.
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nutty (@nuttylmao) reported@kappooth Partly because people only post on Reddit when they're having problems, and partly because the Wave Link 3 release has genuinely been rough. Not worth making a video on every minor update — will make a full beginner's guide soon after all the bugs have been smoothed out.
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Olami Lekan (@RealOlamius) reported@Supaboardai Your branding is honestly better than a lot of projects I see. The product is likely not the problem. The thing is, the right communities haven’t gotten there yet.” “Reddit is good for that because people trust recommendations more than traditional promotion.”
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GabeChalks (@GabeChalks) reported@WBGamesSupport So they team isn’t already aware of this? I posted the same thing on reddit and got a couple responses of people doing the same so just hoping there’s a quick fix. It works well for ~30 mins then the delay starts and doesn’t go away
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Hu (@huatp7) reported@MorphingReality @cafreiman It’s so much more accurate than normal searches, and you can always verify the source by clicking the source it gives you - as opposed to posts on reddit, twitter, YouTube etc which are more prone to error. There’s a reason why they score high on IQ tests
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Amin Tai (@aminnnn_09) reported@Swings27x I had exact same issue, finding audiance in your niche is itself challenging. If your domain is on nurses means medical, you won't got genuine feedback and users from X. May be you need to do cold outreach, or reddit/linkedin might get you some traction but not sure of this domain
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Stoiss (@Stoiss) reported@Saigatheunseen @Twitch Sorry for the slow response. I don't think I have ever used reddit, but I am happy that I live rent free in your unemployed head LOL Glad I struck a nerve on another junkie
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Špijun među vama (@Spijunmedjvama) reported@XhosaFact @Android @HonorAfrica I think that or may be entirely some error on the Honor servers side. From what I've been reading on Reddit and other forums there is a claim that when the screenshot is made it is also sent to Honor servers. If true, perhaps the storage error is on the server side.
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Ze'ev Mishpacha bat Bonds Wolf 🇺🇲 🇮🇱 📟 🎗🤟 (@TheSylvreWolfe) reported@EYakoby **No, @AdinHaykin1 did not admit to ****** people in 2021.** Claims circulating online (especially in pro-Palestinian Facebook groups, Instagram reels, Reddit, and similar spaces) rely on **fabricated screenshots** purporting to show tweets from May 12, 2021, where the account allegedly boasted about ****** a 14-year-old Palestinian girl (or Arab children) while in the IDF, calling it "normal." These images are repeatedly shared as "evidence" of a confession. ### Why these are fake: - **Anachronisms**: The screenshots often include a Twitter Blue checkmark, which didn't exist in 2021 (it launched in late 2022). - **Timeline issues**: The posts imply implausibly short IDF service (e.g., joining in May and referencing past service by the same month). Standard male IDF service is ~32 months. - **Adin's denials**: He has repeatedly called these out as fakes. Searches of his actual X history (including keyword searches for ****-related terms) show no such posts—only recent denials and accusations against others. - **Context**: This fits a pattern of doctored images used in online activism. Independent checks (including prior Grok responses) confirm they are fabricated. Real X activity from @AdinHaykin1 (an Israeli ex-IDF soldier with a large following) involves pro-Israel advocacy, countering accusations against Israel/IDF, and heated exchanges—often denying or mocking **** claims leveled at Israelis while highlighting Palestinian-related incidents. No genuine 2021 admission exists. These fake screenshots have been weaponized in reports (e.g., fake "war crime" letters) and viral posts, but they lack verifiable originals or archives from Twitter/X. Always trace such explosive claims back to primary sources—here, they fall apart under scrutiny.
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domestic grace (@holyhomemaking) reported@CatholicAwesome I stay far away from catholic reddit. it is a terrible place
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Harshil Tomar (@Hartdrawss) reportedThis reddit user found the 10 Step Secret Sauce to hit $15k MRR in <60 Days ! here's the full Playbook ( STEAL THIS ): 1/ every tool solved one niche pain >not multiple use cases or broad platforms >one problem for one specific audience >dog groomers, painters, trainers, boring niches >specificity made selling easier 2/ pricing stayed boring too >most sat between $15 and $39/month >$9 attracted tire-kickers >$99 needed too much approval >$29 worked at 300 customers 3/ spreadsheets were the real competitor >they didn't replace other SaaS tools >they replaced messy manual processes >spreadsheet pain made the pitch obvious >“stop doing this manually” sells fast 4/ ideas came from inside the niche >founders worked in the industry already >or had friends inside the market >or studied complaints for months >none came from shower brainstorming 5/ the math was simple >300 customers at $29 = $8,700 MRR >most niches had 10,000+ possible buyers >they didnt need the whole market >just 300 people with pain the real takeaway: >pick boring niches >replace manual work >price for easy decisions the best micro-SaaS tools are invisible and quietly print.
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Jorker of the peanuts (@LiveTwin34038) reported@pebblebricks Unfortunately Twitter seems to be the best platform my moots have had much trouble using Reddit in the past
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ğabul (@sinnersbouquet) reported@elmoqwe @UZBEKCHUD @TRAGHazL Reddit is down the hallway sir
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Timo 🌱 (@TimoBuilds_) reportedPOV: you did the marketing work and still got 0 conversions. Posted. Replied on Reddit. Sent DMs. Checked PostHog. That’s the part nobody likes to post. But it's part of the game and why marketing feels 1.000 times harder then building. This view at @posthog showed me the real problem: the top of the funnel is not the only thing I need to understand. 87 people viewed the homepage. 5 generated a roadmap-preview. That part works. But what happens after that? Do they log in? Do they open the app? Do they hit the paywall? Do they quit before checkout? Without that, I'm just guessing.