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Reddit status: access issues and outage reports

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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.

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.

  • 63% Website Down (63%)
  • 24% Errors (24%)
  • 13% Sign in (13%)

Live Outage Map

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

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Adelaide Website Down 3 days ago
Brisbane Website Down 5 days ago
Bengaluru Website Down 6 days ago
Dhaka Website Down 10 days ago
Bengaluru Sign in 10 days ago
Foligno Sign in 15 days ago
Full Outage Map

Community Discussion

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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:

  • blackknightyrre
    blackknightyrre (@blackknightyrre) reported

    @GraniRau I have contributed to this problem but also the types of media we use like Xitter, Reddit, and Tiktok don't allow for much more than quotes and soundbites

  • boislatass
    La bière c'est la vie, (@boislatass) reported

    @tiredldpdlfan A show supposedly meant to break down the themes of the episodes, yet once again everyone is acting like they are on stan Twitter or in this case, iwtv Reddit...

  • Hesamation
    ℏεsam (@Hesamation) reported

    Notion confirms that Opus 4.7 and 4.8 have degrading performance. This is a repeating pattern we're seeing so far: - Models degrade after a certain time - Users report issues on Reddit and X - Anthropic can't find the issue for weeks Meanwhile, Anthropic's "AI builds itself" and other reports proudly claim that Claude is helping write the code and train the models significantly. We saw the exact pattern with Opus 4.6. Claude Code users complained it's not as smart as it used to be, for 6+ weeks, until Anthropic found three bugs causing the issue. And you have to remember Anthropic has virtually unlimited Claude access internally, they can spend all they want on tokens, and they have billions of dollars to do so. It seems like we're watching one of the side effects of AI coding unfold in front of us, which is random problems emerging left and right, and nobody having enough touch in the codebase to troubleshoot them.

  • Avikzx
    Avik (@Avikzx) reported

    Day 2 of marketing of ThreadMiner. One more bad news: I was wrong that I can get 900 credits. It's per year 😭😭 (I know it's really dumb but I was just ****** up yesterday and didn't understand what to do). So I needed to change the plan but I got a better idea. I will target these people whose products are good for Reddit marketing and I will directly outreach these guys. I will target specially Product Hunt and Hacker News people and plan to reach around 1000 people in 1 week. But I will not bow down.

  • KidMoe42
    KidMoe 🗡️Cr: A Brides's Story (@KidMoe42) reported

    @shoebreaks "Reddit atheism" and is a problem that has been discussed for millennia. I wouldn't even consider this an atheist argument. Is more like an anti-Christian argument.

  • ridark_eth
    Ridark (@ridark_eth) reported

    How to Make $60,000/Month from the Most Boring SaaS on the Internet An IT administrator got tired of the daily grind, stopped chasing hyped-up AI trends, and built a micro-SaaS generating $60,000 a month. He didn't build complex ecosystems, and he didn't raise millions in venture capital. He took one specific, incredibly boring pain point from his own day job and solved it with a simple tool. Every single day, he followed a strict, military-like rule: laser-focus on the task, zero screen time on social media during work hours, and maximum speed of execution. He dropped the MVP for free directly on Reddit, took the initial hate and feedback on the chin, and immediately turned on a $25/month subscription to validate if the market was actually willing to pay. While the rest of the world is busy building the 100th image generator, his "boring" B2B service generates consistent cash with a near-zero customer churn rate. His main secrets: Zero tech overhead: He used basic "Bubble io" for the frontend, serverless Azure functions for the backend, and let Claude and ChatGPT handle the heavy lifting. Build where you have credibility: He didn't invent a niche out of thin air, he solved a problem he lived and breathed every day at work. Guerrilla marketing: Instead of burning cash on paid ads, he partnered with niche influencers (Microsoft MVPs) whose YouTube demos have been driving highly targeted leads for years, completely for free. Speed over polish: Features are shipped immediately. It’s always better to launch a working hotfix today than a perfect product six months late. Check out the full breakdown of this case study and the founder's exact playbook in the video below.

  • ShreyaSood20347
    Shreya Sood (@ShreyaSood20347) reported

    @thenowhereway Reddit. Find the subreddit where your user is already complaining about the problem. Don't pitch. Answer questions, add value, mention what you're building only when relevant. Costs nothing, filters for real pain

  • wyrmoscale
    adelaide 𑣲 (@wyrmoscale) reported

    1. because you're using all majorly usa apps (twt, insta, fb, reddit, threads) so americans are going to talk about usa's problems. 2. "usamerican defaultism" is a existing and very prevalent mindset with its citizens, thinking they are the standard context in all discussions.

  • cosmica_candy
    Sozos #1 Fan || Cosmica ⭐🎀 (@cosmica_candy) reported

    SOLUTION FOUND! (thanks ppl on reddit!) To fix this: File > Preferences > tablet > Using tablet service > click tablet PC And it fixed it for me!

  • CTankie1917
    Wumao Tankie / Garden Hater / Jungle Propagandist (@CTankie1917) reported

    This is an important perspective. On Reddit, a bunch of libs will say China had X,Y,Z problems, hence overthrow CCP. But it begs the question, if you do topple the government, how do those problems resolve? Most of those problems were not even caused by CCP.

  • LisaMikol3369
    Lisa_Florida_Teacher 🇺🇸 🇺🇦🏴‍☠️🇮🇱 (@LisaMikol3369) reported

    @judgeglock The problem is Platner posted on Reddit criticizing veterans for scamming the Veterans disability system. That’s my issue with this.

  • TomBilyeu
    Tom Bilyeu (@TomBilyeu) reported

    EMPLOYEE 1: THE RESEARCHER Finds the pain people will pay to fix. Most important hire. Skip it and nothing else matters. "Act like a world-class researcher who checks their work. List the top 5 urgent, painful problems faced by [your customer]. Give me proof from Reddit, Amazon reviews, and real forums."

  • PlsHoldMyHalo
    PleaseHoldMyHalo (@PlsHoldMyHalo) reported

    @AlexeyBog2025 I had a problem running it but fixed it yesterday thanks to reddit! The GGUF I downloaded from Unsloth was corrupted so I had to re-downlaod it and rebuilt latest llama.cpp master after the Gemma 4 MTP merge and it works.

  • elgermerlo
    Germán Merlo 💻 🇦🇷 (@elgermerlo) reported

    How I get early users without ads: — Find Reddit threads where people complain about the exact problem I solve — Leave a genuinely helpful reply, no pitch — Add product link only in bio or when someone asks — Repeat daily for 3 weeks Boring. Works every time.

  • ChaserCrypto_
    ChaseInTech (@ChaserCrypto_) reported

    @Tristanrhee3 Ask the community or look for problems on Reddit

  • GypsyZeek
    GypsyZeek (0 or Hero) (@GypsyZeek) reported

    @cryptodylnews this dude just found the old reddit post that gave dates accurately and is larping like he the one to figure it out. sit down lil wigga.

  • LTSmash420
    Joe (@LTSmash420) reported

    @WallStreetApes ### Reactions and sentiment on networks (X, Reddit, web) Engagement on *this specific post* is very low (only a handful of likes/reposts and one reply: “Poison.”). Broader conversation about “cooler screens,” “digital cooler doors,” or “smart cooler screens” over the past year+ shows mostly **negative or skeptical consumer sentiment**: - People call them annoying, dystopian, or pointless (“why watch an ad to see what’s behind the door?”). - Privacy/creepy factor is mentioned but often secondary to practical frustration (glitchy displays, hard to see stock). - Retail industry and ad-tech voices were initially bullish on “retail media” revenue, but recent coverage focuses on the Walgreens failure as a cautionary tale about overhyping in-store tech. - No major viral outrage spike around this June 2026 post; the topic circulates periodically with the same mix of “this is surveillance capitalism” takes and “retail is just trying to survive” defenses. Right-leaning/anti-corporate accounts tend to amplify the creepy-tracking angle; left-leaning or consumer-protection voices criticize the ad overload and failed promises more than the data collection itself. **Bottom line**: The post accurately captures what the technology *was built to do* and shows a genuine example. It’s not fabricated. However, it leans into alarmism (“what’s really going on here”) while glossing over that the biggest real-world story so far is expensive failure, customer annoyance, and legal mess rather than a smoothly rolling out nationwide surveillance pricing machine. Classic retail-tech evolution with the usual mix of innovation, hype, and execution problems. 2/2

  • dodgypatsy
    dodgy (@dodgypatsy) reported

    @SadieSEF0077 @Divyans45182195 @RightSide_Uk It is not his country. He is an arrogant know-all who is anti everything UK. He habitually criticises to suit his agenda. He said himself, his knowledge of the past was as seen on Reddit. Notice he has taken his post down.

  • atlantatech
    TheRealAtlantaTech (@atlantatech) reported

    @JasonVaughn @financedystop Student seems to want to aue on current issue, thereby my question on current damages. FYI-this looks like it may have been a fake posting on reddit—

  • BrittBrat_93_
    🎐Akame Gato 🐈‍⬛ (@BrittBrat_93_) reported

    Why is @Reddit mobile app ALWAYS down

  • mdayan24X
    Md (@mdayan24X) reported

    I totally underestimated Reddit. In less than 24 hours : • 14,000+ views • 50+ pieces of feedback • Dozens of feature suggestions • 12+ people asking for the solution • Customers before the product even existed No landing page. No paid ads. No audience. Just a problem people genuinely cared about. Most founders spend months building and then look for customers. I found customers first. Now I know exactly what to build. 🚀 Build less. Listen more. The market will tell you what it wants if you know where to look. 🎯

  • askboutmya
    MyasDigitalDiary (@askboutmya) reported

    the solutions to my problems not even on Reddit

  • KjScaled
    jay (@KjScaled) reported

    @Tristanrhee3 Idk what everyone is on in this comment section but here's what I'd do. I'd just use Reddit - goal. Rank seo for chat gpt and google search. Step 1. open Reddit and make a list of 10-50 sub Reddits where my ideal customer would hang out. Step 2. Look for specific high intent posts. Posts where people say "How do I {Topic}" "Anyone else struggling with {Topic}" Note down what they complain about directly. Word for word just copy it. Step 3. Post and comment Post your posts that use the exact complaints they have "I saw people struggling with {Exact complaints} so here's how I fixed them" then give 90% value and 10% CTA Comment on posts that complain about what your product solves. Give value again and lead naturally to either a DM or a question Step 4. Now that all the posts and comments are getting traffic I would link a free lead magnet with a free trial to the product. I would put it directly into my bio of the profile. So now the funnel becomes Views -> profile click -> lead magnet with free trail -> free trial ends -> they pay. Reddit is criminally underrated for how much money you can make with it it's actually insane.

  • Kritical_62
    Kruts (@Kritical_62) reported

    @Warlock_mohit Tbh Reddit is most Anti human platform, they have problem with everything/person.

  • synopsi
    Rasty Turek (@synopsi) reported

    @sriram3720 Yes, I am using manual setup for couple of reasons. 1. My site is 11ty and everything is a markdown 2. I run a pretty complex pipeline 3. I regularly review the actual signals to in/validate some assumptions 4. I haven't found a system that comes even close to what I am doing On my pipeline, it's pretty straightforward but not simple. It starts with 3 different sources: 1) Google Keyword Planner - through my MCP it runs keyword discovery for the target user profile 2) then Apple ASO - using mix of Astro MPC and my own ads MCP because Astro breaks down sometimes. It in/validates the keywords supplied by 1) 3) Profound-like GEO test - I do like profound but it's quite expensive. So instead just run it myself against top 5 LLMS. It takes keywords from 1) and 2) 4) Runs /last30days on the topics surfaced from 1), 2) and 3) across reddit, x, YouTube, etc. When it has signals from all 4, it puts them into daily generator. That then a) grabs keywords from all 3, b) runs adversarial test, c) figures out what stands out as the biggest opportunity, d) creates initial version of the article and then e) runs series of tools on it (I got an mcp that is trained on my emails to apply my voice, skill that removes any AI slop, generate hero image, etc). Then it translates. It then translates this article into all supported languages (I am thinking about expanding this process for each language instead, as the translation has much lower value, people do not search for the same stuff). Then, every day, it runs analytical review of existing content: - looks at posthog's data for the site - google, bing and yandex search consoles - apple performance data (clicks) and validates them against the posthog Based on this it adjusts the generator for the next run. Rinse and repeat. It validates things like this (see screenshot for today's data).

  • SRuthrasan71495
    Ruthrasankar (@SRuthrasan71495) reported

    @TTrimoreau Find people actively complaining about your problem online (Reddit, X, FaceBook). Reply with genuine help, no pitch. DM after they engage. 199 characters ✓

  • maywizy
    Wisdom (@maywizy) reported

    @zuess05 But cold DMs have terrible response rates and selection bias. You're only hearing from people willing to respond to strangers. A waitlist shows intent to exchange email for something. An MVP shows you can actually build. Reddit shows market interest. None of these alone are enough...you need multiple signals, not just one.

  • UseBackdoorOnly
    Backdoor (@UseBackdoorOnly) reported

    What the heck. I created a brand new Reddit account just yesterday, posted my very first message on r/DnD A genuine rant from a DnD player with 2 years of experience who’s already tired of DMs forcing you to make 47 skill checks just to open a simple door. And the moderators immediately removed it, claiming it was “AI GENERATED CONTENT”. Because I write clearly. Because I structure my sentences. Because I don’t make typos. A friend introduced me years ago to the “Credible Hulk” mindset (I always backup my rage with facts and documented sources...) and it stuck with me. That’s just how I naturally communicate. We really live in a time where if you don’t type with broken sentences, random emojis everywhere and zero structure, people instantly assume you’re a bot. In the NSFW artists community, my friends (who use AI to make drawings, including NSFW ones of me) have been joking for months that “Backdoor is an AI” because I write as fast as I speak (I use voice-to-text a lot). It’s always been a light-hearted running joke, and some of them even know me in real life... so I take it as fun. But when it’s my very first Reddit post on a brand new account and I get treated like a poorly coded bot and removed… that’s genuinely devaluing and disrespectful. #DnD #Reddit #AIHysteria

  • sahilyaps
    Sahil Nawaz (@sahilyaps) reported

    Most founders don't have a distribution problem. They have a visibility problem. If you're building a startup and looking for users, these subreddits can become your first distribution channel: r/entrepreneur r/startups r/SaaS r/sideProject r/indiehackers r/growthHacking r/productivity r/smallbusiness r/buildinpublic r/solopreneur r/microSaaS r/webdev r/marketing r/ecommerce r/freelance r/SEO r/socialMediaMarketing r/roastMyStartup r/alphaandBetaUsers But here's what most founders get wrong: They treat Reddit like an advertising platform. Reddit rewards contribution, not promotion. The best-performing posts usually don't start with: "Check out my startup." They start with: "Here's a problem I faced." "Can I get feedback on this?" "What would you do differently?" Tell a story. Share a lesson. Show a screenshot. Ask a genuine question. Then let curiosity do the marketing. The fastest way to get users is to participate. Save this for launch week.

  • aadbinges
    Aadit Mehrotra (@aadbinges) reported

    $RDDT is the most hated profitable company on the internet right now 🧡 Down 28% YTD. Revenue up 69%. Gross margins of 91%. 47% free cash flow margin. The stock is getting punished for slowing user growth while the actual business is absolutely cooking 🍳 And nobody's talking about the REAL catalyst: Google + OpenAI BOTH need Reddit's data to train their AI. Those licensing deals renew in 2026. Wells Fargo projects they could go from $130M → $550M per year. 📊 Reddit isn't just a social platform anymore. It's the internet's most valuable corpus of authentic human knowledge. AI companies will pay whatever it takes to keep that access. RSI near 28. Oversold. Wall Street avg PT of $225 vs ~$173 today. Sometimes the best trades are hiding in plain sight 👀 $RDDT 🚀🦊 #RDDT #stocks #investing