Amazon Outage Map
The map below depicts the most recent cities worldwide where Amazon users have reported problems and outages. If you are having an issue with Amazon, make sure to submit a report below
The heatmap above shows where the most recent user-submitted and social media reports are geographically clustered. The density of these reports is depicted by the color scale as shown below.
Amazon users affected:
Amazon (Amazon.com) is the world’s largest online retailer and a prominent cloud services provider. Originally a book seller but has expanded to sell a wide variety of consumer goods and digital media as well as its own electronic devices.
Most Affected Locations
Outage reports and issues in the past 15 days originated from:
| Location | Reports |
|---|---|
| Paris, Île-de-France | 17 |
| Troyes, ACAL | 2 |
| Hastings, England | 1 |
| Fareham, England | 1 |
| Isles of Scilly, England | 1 |
| Pierre-Bénite, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes | 1 |
| Purley, England | 1 |
| Township of Evan, KS | 15 |
| Hammersmith, England | 2 |
| Halle (Saale), Saxony-Anhalt | 1 |
| North Port, FL | 1 |
| Miami, FL | 4 |
| Filer, ID | 1 |
| Belvidere, IL | 1 |
| Templeuve, Hauts-de-France | 1 |
| Minneapolis, MN | 2 |
| Apex, NC | 1 |
| Milwaukee, WI | 2 |
| Las Vegas, NV | 4 |
| Pune, MH | 3 |
| Longview, WA | 1 |
| Ashburn, VA | 6 |
| Millsboro, DE | 1 |
| Vancouver, BC | 3 |
| Milford, OH | 1 |
| Township of Bradley, AR | 1 |
| Rogers, AR | 1 |
| Xalapa de Enríquez, VER | 3 |
| Ione, CA | 1 |
| Newark, NJ | 3 |
Community Discussion
Tips? Frustrations? Share them here. Useful comments include a description of the problem, city and postal code.
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Amazon Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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JoknobWoozy (@JoknobWoozy) reported@BPs5each @ARCRaidersNews My son uses an S. I use an X Can’t stand the S personally, the idea of not having hard discs for games irks me. Plus when you buy a digital game you’re not buying the game you’re buying a temporary license to play it. If it the company lapses on the license you can lose the game even if you “bought” it. Same concept with streaming apps like Amazon. If you buy a movie it’ll only be available as long as Amazon has the license to stream it from their platform. The game just crashed last night outta nowhere, I emailed embark and talked to them about it and they said they know it’s an issue and they’re trying to fix it but they don’t replace gear or anything lost due to bugs or crashes, they will restore it if you get ratted by someone cheating though; I have had that happen.
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Nilkamal Ltd. (@nilkamal_ltd) reported@TyagiSheenu Hi! As this order was placed on Amazon, we suggest contacting their customer support for further assistance. They'll be able to help you with this issue.
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Closing Bell Orca (@closingbellorca) reportedUS Market Commentary | 6.16.2026 1. On June 16 the US market caught its breath ahead of new Fed Chair Kevin Warsh's first rate decision a day away. The S&P 500 fell 0.57% and the Nasdaq 100 1.89%, while the Dow rose 0.64%, a split, mixed session. On the surface it looks like a pullback, but open it up and it was less a decline than a changing of seats. Money flowed out of the semiconductors that had led the market and into cyclicals like banks and industrials. In other words, today was less a day the market fell than a day leadership began to change. 2. The drop in semis was too large to call mere profit taking. $INTC fell 8.5%, $AMD 7.3%, $MU 6.2%, and $AVGO 4.4%, while the equipment names $KLAC and $LRCX dropped 7.5% and 5.0%. To collapse this much in a day is not because fundamentals worsened but because the positions stacked on the most crowded winners unwound all at once. BTIG noting that the semiconductor index has fallen on five of the last nine sessions and that momentum is weakening points the same way. A stock setting record highs yesterday falling the most today is the kind of reversal of crowding that often appears late in a bull market. 3. Look at where that money went and you can read the market's mind. As oil and yields fell, money moved into banks and industrials. Falling oil lowers corporate costs and consumer burdens, brightening the earnings outlook for cyclical sectors, and falling yields revives the appeal of the value names that had been left behind. This rotation reads two ways. One is a healthy signal that the narrow rally carried by technology alone is broadening across sectors, the other a defensive signal that money is fleeing the most expensive momentum. Which is right will be decided by whether semis get bought again or this changing of seats hardens. 4. The bigger picture today is that the epicenter of volatility has shifted. What shook the market over the past month was the Middle East war, but once the 60 day deal pushed that uncertainty back a step, the market now stands before a new variable, the Fed. The same risk has a different character. War was an exogenous shock that could not be predicted, but the Fed is an endogenous variable that delivers its message on a set date in a set format. The market catching its breath today without direction is closer to the quiet just before the act of war closes and the act of rates rises. 5. At Warsh's first meeting tomorrow, a hold is all but settled, so the market's eyes are not on the rate number but on the dot plot. The dot plot gathers the rate level each Fed member sees as appropriate, and it is a projection at that moment, not a promise. The market expects its median to rise from 3.375% to 3.625% for 2026. That means erasing the chance of one cut this year and shifting the Fed's gaze toward keeping rates higher for longer. It is a move of a single notch, but because it withdraws the hope of the cut the market had counted on, it does not carry light weight. 6. Layered on top is the variable of Warsh himself. Bloomberg sees that, unlike his predecessors, Warsh may not submit his own dot to the plot, and there is talk that the quarterly Summary of Economic Projections itself could be streamlined. This is not a mere matter of form. A change in how the Fed communicates with the market means a change in the map investors use to read the Fed's next move. A new chair's first meeting matters more for what it reveals about how he diagnoses inflation and talks to the market than for the rate decision itself. 7. The most favorable ingredient for the market this week is the fall in oil. Brent dropped below 80 dollars for the first time since March, and Goldman Sachs cut its fourth quarter forecast from 90 to 80 dollars. Normally a fall in oil pulls down headline inflation and eases the Fed's burden. But Nomura offered an interesting counterargument. A steep drop in oil slows inflation in the near term, yet with consumer sentiment already healthy, cheaper fuel fattens consumers' wallets and stimulates demand, which can in turn become kindling for inflation again. In other words a fall in oil can press down one channel of prices while opening another. That is why good news is not purely good. 8. While the indices hover near record highs, the real economy's data sent a different signal. May housing starts came in at 1,177K, far below the 1,430K expected. Since housing is the first place high rates press, this plunge shows the accumulated weight of tightening. New employment data released the same day also softened, while import prices actually rose. On one side a signal that the economy is cooling, on the other a signal that inflation is sticky, both at once. This mismatch is exactly why the Fed cannot easily set its direction, and it is the homework Warsh must solve tomorrow. 9. The other face of today's market was $SPCX . Up 49% after listing, it passed Amazon with a 2.65 trillion dollar market cap to become the world's fifth largest company, and briefly topped Microsoft intraday. There is a structural reason for this surge. The float released to the market right after listing is only 4.2% of total shares, making it a low liquidity stock whose price swings hard on even modest buying. Add the start of options trading and hopes of index inclusion that could draw passive money, and the fire grew. A surge built on such low liquidity and crowding is both the vitality of a bull market and the classic late cycle scene of a price set by flows rather than value. 10. To sum up, today was a day of transition in which the Fed began to fill the space the war vacated. The rotation from semis into cyclicals could be a signal that the market is broadening or a signal that money is leaving expensive ground. Falling oil has two faces, pressing prices down while stimulating demand, and beneath it lies the mismatch of a cooling economy and sticky inflation. The knot of all those threads is Warsh's first message tomorrow. At the crossing where the era of war as an exogenous variable fades and the era of rates and the economy as endogenous variables opens, the market is catching its breath and waiting for the next direction.
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We Have your back🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸 (@mainefortrump) reported@hexclad Bad warranty used less then 7 times coating damaged advised not to use Amazon said it would be replaced never happen as hexclad said no on warranty lost $120. Our first purchase of HC no problem went back to old salad master 50 years old
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Newslit News (@newslit) reportedMicrosoft is turning to Amazon Web Services to handle GitHub's AI-driven capacity crisis. GitHub faced dozens of major outages in 2026 as AI-generated code pushed commit volumes from roughly 1 billion in 2025 to a projected 14 billion this year. Microsoft originally planned to migrate GitHub fully to Azure by 2027. That plan is now on hold. This is a remarkable admission. Microsoft owns GitHub. Microsoft owns Azure. And it still had to call its biggest cloud competitor because its own infrastructure couldn't keep up with demand that AI generated on its own platform. AI didn't just create a product problem for Microsoft — it created an infrastructure emergency that Azure couldn't solve alone.
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The fiery but mosly peaceful grouch (@CyberWarDoc) reported@BudLightSadness Those boards are super easy to replace. I had one go out during the pandemic and no one could come and fix it so I ordered one off Amazon. For 200 bucks and less than an hour of my time, the thing was back up and running.
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Timoteo (@willitstimothy) reported@verkiwho @AmazonMGMStudio I think it should be Teal’c. He’ll just sit down, raise an eyebrow, and we’ll have Amazon swearing to make ten seasons of a new show plus spinoffs. #SaveStargate
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Guru (@KamathGurudutt) reportedAwesome review of Raakh (Amazon Prime) series. I gave up after 30 minutes. Too slow for me. Interesting: Words to the effect - we always knew Rakesh Bedi was an exceptional actor. Er, I noticed him only in Dhurandhar. Here he was truly exceptional.
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SUPREME media (@SupremeOba38641) reported@HurupayApp I see how you are about this kdp. Please do not take advantage of amazon publishers who are already under pressure. We are counting on a smooth and fair payout process for our royalties without issues. Thank you
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Sarthak Chawla (@29Sarthak) reportedMultiple customer service chats, multiple promises, same result: no delivery. @amazonIN @AmazonHelp if there was an issue, customers deserve transparency instead of repeated assurances that don’t happen.
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Born to gamble (@borntogambles) reported$10,000 in 10 days. A brand-new Shopify store. The creator says Claude AI did 90% of the work. The product nobody would guess: snake shin protectors. He started with hard criteria. Solves a problem. 4.5+ on Amazon. $35 minimum profit. Rising demand. 3 to 5 active competitors on Facebook or TikTok. Then he handed the search to Claude. He ran Claude Opus 4.8 in the desktop app's co-work mode, wired to Winning Hunter's MCP, an ad library pulling live spend data from the biggest dropshippers. He set it to act without asking. Ten minutes later Claude returned 10 products with ads dated between May 30 and June 9, each with the name, the problem, the price, the store, the competition. The reason he trusts the machine over himself: humans pick products with their feelings. The creator says beginners drown in options and freeze. Claude doesn't freeze. It chose the snake gaiters off the data and named the buyers: hikers, dog walkers, people scared of snakes. A small niche older buyers shop, where AI video ads read as real because the audience doesn't know what AI looks like yet. He cloned a winning Facebook ad inside Higgsfield's marketing studio, generated an avatar from a prompt (a gray-haired man in his 50s who looks like he works outdoors), pulled a voice off ElevenLabs, and assembled the spot in CapCut. The original creative cost a studio. His cost a prompt. Facebook strategy on a Miro board: $50/day, 3 broad ad sets, 3 ads each, 9 total. His dashboard from April 26 to May 11: gross sales over $11,000. Average order value $47. Conversion rate 3.6%, above industry standard. By June 8 the store was clearing roughly $1,000 a day. A product 99% of beginners would never touch made $11,000 because a machine had no taste to get in the way.
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Sabrius (@Sabrius) reportedI'm an electrical contractor. So maybe I can speak here a little. Very often pricing is a mafia structure between very few vendors. Here in Florida, lighting is ridiculous. For the same build-out, I will get a $23k lighting quote as "alternatives to spec" that are legit the same products, just a different brand, and the spec'ed lights will get quoted at $64k. Now for your breaker. I personally will not buy a breaker from Amazon or eBay. This is personal. There's likely no issue, but I will pay 3x more through my vendors due to relationships with them, trust with them, certain guarantees through them. Yes, this will get passed onto the customer, but generally 3 phase bigger breakers like this control things that cost money each time they're shut down or require scheduling to shut down. Imagine if I send an employee into a... Grocery store..or something overnight since they can't shut down during the day. My Amazon/eBay breaker fails during this overnight shut down. Now I'm just the cheap *** contractor trusting Amazon and eBay to save a couple hundred $, that now costed me thousands and will require another shut down, logistics etc etc. It sucks, sorry you had to deal with this. My hyperbolic story isn't always true, but I've ran into your breaker price range a few times and usually.. it's the electrical wholesale mafia setting the price because they know we'll pay for it.
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John Smith (@smith_john96806) reported@redpavement Took one buspar and the side effects were horrendous never ever again. Did a generic study from Amazon and discovered I am mtfhr and slow comt. Used ai to study and deep dive the mechanisms of that and its cascades. Hacked it with simple methylfolate and amino acids. Improved
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CathieZimmerer (@CatZimmerer) reported@GavinNewsom Not true. Gas still not as high as it got u see Biden, not even close. And despite tariffs, I’ve got pages and pages and pages of items on amazon where prices have gone down. Grocery store items aisle pix where prices have gone down. Not as much as I would like but hasn’t gone up
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Star S.⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ (@DominguezH31015) reported@mitchellvii When oil is down everything comes down. Oil is the lifeblood of the modern economy. Lower oil prices directly cut transportation costs (trucking, shipping, air freight), which make up a huge chunk of what you pay for everything from groceries to Amazon packages. It also slashes production costs — petroleum is used to make plastics, chemicals, fertilizers, and countless other inputs. Factories, farms, and power plants run cheaper, so those savings get passed along the supply chain. GOLDEN ERA on the horizon🌟