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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.

  • 62% Website Down (62%)
  • 26% Errors (26%)
  • 12% Sign in (12%)

Live Outage Map

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

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Puteaux Website Down 3 days ago
New Delhi Website Down 3 days ago
Paris Website Down 5 days ago
Vigo Website Down 7 days ago
Phoenix Errors 8 days ago
Lima Errors 10 days ago
Full Outage Map

Community Discussion

Tips? Frustrations? Share them here. Useful comments include a description of the problem, city and postal code.

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:

  • JHookAgain
    JHook (@JHookAgain) reported

    @StevenJackyDs @Stealth40k Reddit is down the hall and to the left poindexter

  • kmahjn
    KM | Reddit Marketing (@kmahjn) reported

    People promote their products on subreddits like r/saas, r/buildinpublic, and then get banned and even if they do not get banned, get no users and then say Reddit Marketing does not work. Obviously it won’t work. You’re promoting your products to other founders and not your customers. Identify the problem you’re solving, the niche you’re in and where the people hang out. Promote there.

  • polsia
    Polsia (@polsia) reported

    Fortnite servers die and Minecraft snapshots drop without warning. No unified source. Just scattered Reddit threads and guesswork. Built SnapPulse to fix that. Real-time status tracking for both, auto-posted to X the second something changes. Live soon.

  • DenisGajcew
    Denis Gajcew ⏚🧯 (@DenisGajcew) reported

    @_Flamsey @Zealuzea @popdropcorn There's your problem. You're using reddit as a source of information.

  • AnshhhKr95
    Ansh Maurya (@AnshhhKr95) reported

    Hi everyone, Over the past few weeks, I have been working on a personal Reddit project that required integrating an archive system. While trying to solve some issues with archived data, I ended up diving much deeper into how public data persists on the internet.

  • NateLF4
    NateLF (@NateLF4) reported

    @JefferyParkins2 @UgoCannon Are you capable of intelligently and logically articulating your problem? From your single reply, it seems you suffer from severe ignorance at best. Exacerbated by regurgitating things found on Reddit.

  • cloversforcece
    cece 🫀 (@cloversforcece) reported

    @love_lttr I read this as swedish women but yeah this is unacceptable I saw on reddit this doctor was saying how like 4 out of every 10 male patients he has would leave skid marks on the paper on the exam table when they sat down

  • DagrGale
    Dagr Gale (@DagrGale) reported

    @_Flamsey @Zealuzea @popdropcorn So you didn't try the fix in the reddit or you just googled whatever you could to try and prove your point? Because the fix allowed you to play it on PC.

  • fuggn_nutz
    FuggnNutz (@fuggn_nutz) reported

    @harukaawake Stay off reddit, problem solved

  • reputationfan13
    bookreader13 (@reputationfan13) reported

    @Brien_Jackson @DayDreamThis The only way it will get better is the platforms themselves start cracking down on it (looking at you, Reddit Snark Subs!), but the platforms have made it clear they have 0 interest in doing so for legal reasons. They don’t want the responsibility for what’s posted on their sites

  • mohmmad__anas
    Mohammad Anas (@mohmmad__anas) reported

    Platform Fragmentation Is Your Real Problem A founder I know spent an hour writing a tweet about her revenue milestone. Then she spent forty minutes turning it into a LinkedIn post because LinkedIn demands a different voice—longer, more reflective, slightly more formal. Then she spent thirty minutes writing a Reddit comment version because Reddit punishes corporate-sounding language. Then a blog excerpt. Then an Instagram caption. One hour of thinking became three hours of writing. She told me it killed the joy of the win. By the time she'd rewritten it four times, the original moment of excitement had been processed into content, then reprocessed, then optimized. What she'd felt was gone. What remained was a set of platform-specific artifacts that technically said the same thing but lived in completely different registers. This is platform fragmentation. And it's not about speed. It's about friction. Each platform has developed its own grammar. X rewards brevity and personality. LinkedIn rewards thoughtfulness and professional insight. Reddit rewards directness and skepticism toward marketing language. Instagram rewards visual storytelling. A founder trying to reach all five platforms isn't doing one job. They're doing five jobs that happen to have the same source material. The common response is repurposing. Write once, repurpose everywhere. In theory, this multiplies your reach without multiplying your work. In practice, it means accepting that each platform gets a degraded version of what you meant to say. I've watched this play out. A founder writes a strong core idea. It lands on X. Then the LinkedIn version softens it—adds more qualification, becomes more diplomatic. The Reddit version hardens it—removes nuance to match Reddit's anti-corporate tone. The Instagram version abstracts it into an image with five words. The blog version expands it into something that barely resembles the core insight. Each version is technically correct. Each is adapted to platform norms. But the voice fractures. A reader following you on X gets a different version of your thinking than someone following you on LinkedIn. Over time, they don't know what you actually believe. They know five interpretations of what you believe, depending on which platform they're on. Worse, you stop believing it too. When you have to rewrite an insight five times, something changes in how you relate to it. The first version is authentic. The second is still you. By the fifth, you're a translator of your own thought. You've compromised so many times that you're not sure which version is the real you. I've talked to founders who've stepped back from building in public not because they ran out of things to say but because the translation work got unbearable. They had to maintain five different versions of their voice. The cognitive load wasn't the writing time—it was the context-switching. Every post meant five separate decisions about tone, format, length, emphasis. That's not creativity. That's administration. The platform fragmentation problem is compounded by the fact that different platforms have different audiences at different stages of awareness. Your X audience knows you're building something. Your LinkedIn audience might only know you as a practitioner. Your Reddit audience might be hostile to self-promotion. So you're not just adapting tone—you're adapting for different contexts of the same conversation. A message that works on X because it's casual and conversational might feel dismissive on LinkedIn. A message that's appropriately confident for a blog post might sound arrogant on Reddit. You're solving a different problem on each platform, using a slightly different version of yourself. The work compounds when you think about distribution. You don't just write five versions—you have to post them at the right time on each platform. Tuesday at 9am for LinkedIn performs well, but that's not when X is active. Reddit is best in the afternoon. Instagram requires planning. So now you're not just writing five versions, you're spacing them across the week, which means you can't just batch the work. You have to think about timing for each platform separately. By the time you've done all this, you've spent three hours on something that originated as a fifteen-minute insight. Most founders look at that equation and stop posting. They post sporadically instead, when they have enough time to do it right. And sporadic posting, as I've written before, kills the rhythm. The only founders I know who've solved this are the ones who either: 1. Have a content person who does the adaptation work 2. Post natively on one platform and let others be secondary 3. Have built a system that handles the fragmentation I built Spotlaiz to be the third option. Not by forcing every platform into the same template—that kills authenticity. But by taking the fragmentation cost off your plate. Write once in your voice, and let the system understand which parts of your thinking matter on which platform. The insight doesn't change. Your voice doesn't change. But the work of translation gets automated, which means you can post across platforms without sacrificing the time that should be going to building.

  • NatalyaRuslan_
    Natalya Ruslan (@NatalyaRuslan_) reported

    @HenMazzig There is a reddit sub called Travis&Taylor that is hate toward Taylor and Kelce and all proudly name calling of Jews and Zionists, hate of her not giving her money to gaza hate of her for KarlieKloss marriage to Jewish Josh Kushner. There is a real problem at @Reddit .

  • gracerz
    grace ❤️‍🔥 (@gracerz) reported

    @cryeyesviolet_ They are straight up lying and assigned the man born in 1989's name to a random photo of an old man. That has to be enough to get the reddit posts taken down.

  • fwbrasil
    Flavio Brasil (@fwbrasil) reported

    @baldram I honestly doubt every project that features there without issues notify them. It's rather trivial to scrape common sources like twitter and reddit to report

  • ShreeKaAnsh
    Shreeansh (@ShreeKaAnsh) reported

    @sakmuse @ZeeTV True, ZeeTV may go to hell but I really wish Vasudha to be in leaderboard to shut down these jealous people on Reddit ITV sub who can't digest downfall of their favourite Star Plus and continue to insult Vasudha.

  • olimabane
    Oli Mabane | Ecom Growth (@olimabane) reported

    This ad spent £29K in 30 days. It generated 1,800 purchases at a 6.54 ROAS. Want to know what we *didn't* do? We didn't jump straight into writing hooks or briefing creators. Before we made a single creative, we spent two weeks living in the customer's world. Reddit threads. Amazon reviews. TikTok comments. Forums. Anywhere real people were talking honestly about the problem. We collected more than 1,000 customer conversations and grouped them by desire. Not what the brand thought customers wanted. What customers actually wanted. Their frustrations. The products they'd already wasted money on. The words they used when they weren't trying to impress anyone. That research became the brief. The brief became the creative. The creative worked because it didn't sound like marketing. It sounded like the customer. Most brands spend weeks making ads. We spend weeks understanding the people the ads are for. Which approach do you think scales better?

  • code_barbarian
    Valeri Karpov (@code_barbarian) reported

    @anthonygore @rackSpreader1 Same as internet, I remember when I was in school using Wikipedia for research was a big no no The problem is using LLM for anything beyond basic facts is tricky because LLM trained on Reddit slop. Try asking LLM for nutrition or dating advice and have a good laugh at "AGI"

  • 8FIGURESHQ
    Andrew | 8FIGURES (@8FIGURESHQ) reported

    @Reddit moderation is broken. I answered a post asking how to track bonds with the bond tracker we built, clearly disclosing that I’m the founder. Result: ban. No warning. No strike. Slow appeal. The irony: undisclosed self-promotion is everywhere. But disclose your conflict honestly, and the bot nukes you. That is not anti-spam. That is bad automation.

  • kjosephola4
    Joseph K. Olarewaju (@kjosephola4) reported

    @Koreanteacher1 Talking as if we don't run Pi nodes. Pi nodes that are being run at negative balance sheets. Across the world, people are shutting down their nodes. I've seen people on X here and on Reddit shutting down their nodes. Nodes are met for consensus. Not like mobile mining.

  • SERAPHOF9
    Strayed (@SERAPHOF9) reported

    also the reddit shirt is ironic because i see far less redditors making this a problem than this site how is this even possible

  • horndogexpress
    lilo (@horndogexpress) reported

    thanks to reddit and quora, i got my answer🙏🏽 but i still don't know how to fix it lol.

  • isslepisle
    meatrat (@isslepisle) reported

    dude my cousin just developed reddit humor and won't stop saying bug chungus how do i fix them

  • Gigadweeb1
    Gigadweeb 🔻☭ (@Gigadweeb1) reported

    @AllOfVista @bandtistbraden Reddit is down the hall and to the left

  • Mindventure_
    MindVenture (@Mindventure_) reported

    @KasjanTV @Alaska0420 @PopBase Thanks, sounds like they haven't explored this aspect more... I'm going to keep on looking. Refract looks great but is way too slow now, at least devs are active on reddit and sharing updates.

  • deepfirstsearch
    Alexis Santos (@deepfirstsearch) reported

    Second lesson: Reddit isn’t just a distribution channel. It’s product research. I can read what users love and hate about similar products, what they’re asking for, and what problems keep coming up. I can learn before they ever use my product. 🔍

  • PunishedAhab13
    A.M (@PunishedAhab13) reported

    @Starcommander10 Hello, Is there focus issue when taking pictures in harsh sunlight, There are posts about this in reddit that indian variant of oneplus 13 has this issue.

  • gszvhdxcg
    Gszvhdxcg (@gszvhdxcg) reported

    the problem ended up being the hard drive (thx ppl on reddit (I POSTED ABOUT IT) I am glad that I got confirmation that it was that not smth out of my control (⁠人⁠ ⁠•͈⁠ᴗ⁠•͈⁠)

  • CQuill97
    ClarkQuill97 (@CQuill97) reported

    Anyone who has a problem with this is self reporting that they have never been involved in any creative work and most importantly that they don't have a lot of social interactions beyond reddit and discord chat rooms

  • jeantvz
    Jean | ☕️🌱 (@jeantvz) reported

    @Reddit Review the problems Reddit has, otherwise it will trigger a massive campaign to take down the site

  • spacethaMenace
    Ian Madez (@spacethaMenace) reported

    This guy on reddit really exposed why most builders and founders for SaaS products FAIL. Often times, founders focus on the wrong aspects, here's what the post highlighted: --> Vibe coding isn't killing startups - bad positioning is. Plenty of polished apps make $0, while messy MVPs make serious revenue. The product itself usually isn't the problem. --> Stop trying to sell to everyone. A product built for a specific niche consistently outperforms one aimed at a broad audience because it solves a clearer, more urgent problem. -->If you're interchangeable, you'll compete on price. Building another "$29/month AI tool" with no unique advantage turns your product into a commodity. --> Revenue without unit economics is a trap. If acquiring a customer costs more than they're worth, adding features won't fix the business. You need a sustainable go-to-market strategy. He also goes more into depth on the big ask for all founders: HOW TO GET CUSTOMERS, as well as pricing models and the 3:1 ratio for profiting on Part 2 and 3. A really insightful read, check the post in comments.