Reddit status: access issues and outage reports
Some 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 4: Problems at Reddit
Reddit is having issues since 01:40 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.
- Website Down (62%)
- Errors (26%)
- 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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Website Down | 1 day ago |
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Website Down | 2 days ago |
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Website Down | 4 days ago |
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Website Down | 6 days ago |
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Errors | 6 days ago |
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Errors | 9 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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armynnnn (@armynnnn176309) reported@GinGan_Rigarudo What a scam of a mod. $20 for a buggy mess with zero reimagined style? Pedro only backed down because of the Reddit backlash. Profiting off stolen IP should be banned. Paywalls have completely ruined Xenoverse modding.
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sonic forces fan (@SonicForcesFam) reportedDon’t worry Linus tech tips told me I have the right to repair this so I can fix this for just a few hundred dollars more (which is nothing for a Reddit Linux user like myself) All hail valve
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Jacky Chou (buying online businesses up to $1m) (@indexsy) reportedapparently 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 ↓
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Yurbitx (@Yurbitx) reported4. Enterprises are integrating it. Nike, Starbucks, Reddit, Visa. Not because it's trendy — because digital ownership and on-chain verification solve real problems.
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alex (@ATomsyck) reported@G27Status PlayStation is down so bad they are deleting people's posts on reddit that expose they are lying about the digital to physical ratio lol...
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Minerva (@Minerva39987475) reported@KemiBadenoch @andyburnham Reddit isn't a main platform - excludes many who want regular comms & access. Why doesn't the Mancunian pretender reach out to wider 🇬🇧, appear on regular media & answer questions? We're being sold an unknown entity without a mandate. His arrogance knows no bounds. Trouble ahead
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Sarthak Rawool (@sarthakcore) reportedstarted cold dming on instagram today. not because i like dms. because that's where my customers actually are. coaches, agencies, med spas. they're not on reddit or x. they're posting reels all day. so i stopped waiting to get found and went to them. slow, manual, doesn't scale. but it's the most direct line to a real conversation i've got. Time to close this 🔥
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Joe Valachi (@Joe_Valachi777) reported@MartinDaubney @andyburnham @Reddit Andy Burnham isn't going to last as PM for very long. Starmer, at least, welcomed uncomfortable questions as he showed by shutting his supporters down when they turned on journalists.
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Bennersdoodledo (@Bennersthedoggo) reported@MartinDaubney @andyburnham @Reddit I see the problem here, to prevent these types of actions taken against you, you cannot use Reddit...
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Raven (@heyraven_io) reported@DeepStarts chatgpt for the code, reddit for the error, god for the rest
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Feng Liu (@fengfengnew20) reportedWindsurf went #1 on LogRocket's rankings. then rebranded to Devin Desktop. then Reddit exploded with uninstalls, broken SSO, and users asking what to switch to. best-in-class product. community trust: zero. tool quality and platform trust are two different things. developers are learning this the hard way in 2026.
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Felix Josemon (@Felix_Josemon) reportedEveryone wants the compounding. Almost nobody wants to put in the year it takes to get there. Had an interesting panel at our KPH Kochi meetup last Sunday. Shan Abdul Salam, who built The eCom Show into one of the most followed D2C and ecommerce communities in Kerala, broke down on how founders should leverage content. Here are his top points, and where you can see them playing out in the real world. ➔Content reduces trust friction before a sales call even happens. It explains your thinking, makes your company easy to understand, and builds visibility that compounds without constant ad spend. The Whole Truth Foods is a clean example. Shashank Mehta built an entire newsletter, Truth Be Told, exposing misleading food labels in the industry. Customers did not just buy his products they bought into a founder who was transparent before he ever asked for a sale. ➔For software and services, content shortens the entire buying cycle (in some cases). It matters most when your product is new, buyers need education, your market is geographically spread out, or your service is expertise heavy. If you look at SAAS/AI companies in the US where they grow through short-form content instead of traditional sales. Many such companies make content daily, and many have admitted that social content is what actually converts for them in many cases. ➔The strongest part is self-qualification. By the time someone reaches out, they already understand the problem and trust you can solve it. Fewer tire-kickers, more high-quality inbound conversations. ➔Creating content means nothing without distribution. The real question is where your audience already spends time and discovers things. That is why platforms like Reddit, LinkedIn and Instagram matter because they are where real conversations, visibility and conversions sometimes happen. The reality is small teams win by turning ideas into trust, and trust into distribution. That flywheel beats any single campaign.
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Philip Dren (@PhilipDren) reported@Swings27x Either writing them down into my notes if I need to get it down fast, or I create validation reports for the idea where write up what problem it's trying to solve + I also make Dia do some research on the subject via Reddit threads.
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Lord Vulkan (@LordVulkan84) reported@MartinDaubney @andyburnham @Reddit That’s down to Reddit moderators nothing to do with Burnham.
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Frank Castle (@FrankCa52742356) reported@MartinDaubney @andyburnham @Reddit You failed because you asked serious questions. You should have stuck to the theme, and asked whether he prefers bunny rabbits or hedgehogs? And what is his preferred way to cook eggs? A schoolboy error, Martin.
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Kai4ik (@KaiOrozobekov) reported$SHOP down 30% YTD and quietly executing. 15 shares. Not adding yet. What happened in Q2: - $5B share buyback authorized (was $2B) - AI search orders up 13x year over year - Reddit partnership live - 150+ AI platform updates rolling out The stock is getting punished. The product keeps improving. Classic Shopify. 52-week high: $182. Now at $115. The buyback signals management thinks it's cheap. At what price does $SHOP become interesting again?
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Le_Joo (@Le__Joo) reported@LcplAnimeGuy @PhrogPollen @asteerpet Not an atheist & what ******** is Reddit? Just be normal, it’s not out of context at all- citing historical facts is actually creating context. You need to put down the **** pipe and register for summer school kiddo
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Common sense (@Commons13289002) reported@MartinDaubney @andyburnham @Reddit yeh Mr down with the kids... kool aid ..Burnham ... doesnt like to be held to account What an ab 🤡!!
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The Wise Investor 🧠 (@TheWiseIC) reportedA lot of people know me here for being an $UBER bull which is awesome because I am generally bullish on Uber. But I’m far more bullish on $RDDT (2x the size of my Uber position) because I don’t think anyone can disrupt what Reddit is doing (niche advertising, Reddit search, user growth, transition to short form content). Reddit is a one of one business and if I learned anything about investing it’s that investing in the platform is usually better than investing in the commodity (AI), like the picks and shovels play. Uber solves the commercialization issue for autonomous vehicles (CapEx heavy) and Reddit solves the need for authentic human experiences and sells its data to train AI models. Reddit is a platform just like Uber is. Both will host users who transact and interact. Their data is then sold and monetized to advertisers while the core user keeps within the ecosystem and the cycle continues. What can possibly stop that? Autonomous vehicles? You don’t think Uber is transitioning to that already? Convenience is the currency, not the technology. AI slop? Reddit has already navigated towards authentic human conversations and uses AI to enhance search and user retention. So again I ask - What possibly stops both of these businesses from using AI and technology to accelerate their businesses? Bear case to Uber and Reddit exist but I find them highly improbable to materialize to what the general consensus seems to be, anytime soon. I am long both $UBER $RDDT.
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Joshua (@fullautocult) reported@benlsage reddit brain is a serious social problem.
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basedweeb (@basedweeb1991) reported@DelusionPosting Science is about trail and error and results the scientific method including falsifiability exists for a reason because contrary to reddit science isn't a belief system
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Pigs & Proles 🇬🇧 (@PigsandProles) reported@FraserNelson A Reddit Q&A is a terrible idea. His advisers need advice...
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Matirno (@Matirno) reported@idonotexistelol The Reddit mods take down all negative post
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CosmosFlareBora (@CosmosFlareBora) reportedOk so someone hacked my Reddit account and had access to it for the day. GREATT!!! Thank Reddit flagged it for suspicious posts and locked my account down. But this person still had access and the stuff they posted on MY account 🤢🤢
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BigJig88 (@omgprotoss) reported@WETTOinthatTRX Reddit is a site of social control. It's manipulated from the top down to propagate the values they want and to attack those who go against it. It's obvious that SB changing their direction has marked them to be arbitrarily attacked by echo chambers.
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BorealisShore (@myFluffy63) reported@zx81chic @Bootsie18404080 Im trying to find the post that had a link to Reddit, and it was a very long piece from a lawyer that had broken everything down on the summing up of Harold's case.
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Vikram Pai (@vikpai) reportedI shut my aeo and Reddit agency down because SEO agencies are basically a scam
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CircadianMess (@Hehe131305) reportedKoi senior ho koi bi ho pls help. I am a mess right now!!! Reddit pe some people told ke reject bi ho sakta. I can’t imagine losing the seat due to this error😭🙏🏻😔
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Cormac 🇵🇸 (@yungpapist) reportedI can’t get into mls bc the only people I encounter who really deeply care about it are so Reddit that there are no stakes to me. That’s really all it comes down to
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Danica McLellan (@danicamclellan) reported@peatearwoodmen @nationalpost I’m laughing at what you seem to think women are like. Not everyone is as online and deep down weird Reddit threads as you seem to be.