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 |
|---|---|
| Los Angeles, CA | 6 |
| Chicago, IL | 5 |
| Paris, Île-de-France | 18 |
| Fléron, Wallonia | 1 |
| Melbourne, VIC | 1 |
| Township of Evan, KS | 11 |
| Lillers, Hauts-de-France | 1 |
| Ciudad Jardín, MEX | 1 |
| Southampton, England | 1 |
| Valencia, PA | 1 |
| Les Herbiers, Pays de la Loire | 1 |
| Coacalco, MEX | 2 |
| Rouyn-Noranda, QC | 1 |
| Atlanta, GA | 5 |
| Sydney, NSW | 1 |
| Hyannis, MA | 1 |
| Lyon, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes | 1 |
| A Estrada, Galicia | 1 |
| Morlaix, Brittany | 1 |
| Mumbai, MH | 1 |
| Iztapalapa, CDMX | 1 |
| Charlotte, NC | 2 |
| Annecy, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes | 1 |
| Santiago de Querétaro, QUE | 2 |
| Kingston upon Hull, England | 1 |
| Pensacola, FL | 1 |
| São Paulo, SP | 1 |
| London, England | 4 |
| Langen, Lower Saxony | 1 |
| Saint-Nazaire, Pays de la Loire | 1 |
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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Jimmy Smith (@askjimmysmith) reportedJune 2026 Amazon Update - Best Win of the Month Bought for just over $80 and have sold multiple of these this month. Profit is between $36-$39 each sale. This is a great replen right now for us. If the product drops back down to what it was months ago, that's okay because right now we're one of only a few sellers and the price has been increasing over the months. FYI I posted my worst loss of June 2026 earlier today if you want to check that out.
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🐧🧡Yana Waddie Ch. 🧡🐧 (@YanaWaddie) reportedare mfs so lazy now that yall can't drive like 20 mins down to the nearest gamestop, bestbuy, target, wallmart, etc that yall need a mf to deliver it to you? Like this aint like amazon where your trying to get a better deal- YOU ARE SPENDING MORE MONEY DOING THIS
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Cashify (@Cashify_) reported@MrStran03368689 Hi! We're truly sorry for this frustrating experience. Since you have already shared your Amazon invoice and payment proof, please be assured that our team is actively working on this issue. We are reviewing and verifying the details, and we will get back to you via email.
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AstroFella (@UrbanAstroFella) reported@Blackwellboy Amazon customer service has gone down significantly. A chargeback is an alternate option that has a high success rate although it may result in account cancellation. Some of the motivating factors on Amazon's side is the high rate of buyer fraud on electronics, creating a highly adversarial environment. I won't buy RAM from Amazon nor buy from third party sellers because the fraud rate is getting a bit ridiculous. I'm strongly considering cancelling my 20+ year old account with them because the trust in their system to protect me against fraud is low and shifting my purchases to in-store or local grey market. @amazon @jeffbezos please step up. The consumer using video to create custody chains, obtaining police reports, and other significant efforts just to protect good faith claims that are backed by evidence, then denied spuriously is going to create a situation where small claims suits against Amazon will become normalized. If enough people complain, the plaintiff's bar is going to start seeking solutions and demanding discovery to establish structural patterns of unfair and deceptive practices. The CFPB in the US is currently narrowing what is considered UDAAP and the limits of liability (unfair, deceptive, abuse acts or practices) to protect corporations, but consumers will eventually stop putting up with this asymmetry.
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Daniel (@FlipCountry) reportedTo fix it, clear your browsing data in Chrome. For the mobile shopping apps, reinstall (Regular and Business). Many people rely on “Outside the Buy Box” strategy, so I hope Amazon addresses this.
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Signal8 (@Signal8Ai) reported@PeterSchiff Warsh called it "capital might dry up." the 1990s telecom buildout ended in $2T of stranded fiber. that wasn't "curtailed investment." that was a credit event. $725B in 2026 capex. Amazon FCF down 95% TTM. hyperscalers now consuming ~90% of their own operating cash flow to fund this. "future investment curtailed" is the cover page. the bond market is the filing.
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Victoria (@_navicstein) reported@gotrice2024 Amazon worker running late without time to use the bathroom is the system broken, the companies that treat workers like machines are the ones that lose them, and the ones that lose them lose everything
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Robert Vincent (@JohnPuller76) reportedKeep your phone locked, Congressman. By your logic, every app on my phone—banking, Amazon, everything—is susceptible to my own kids. Or raise your kids to respect property and not steal Dad’s login. No need for Big Brother’s facial scan database to “protect” us from bad parenting. Small government starts at home.
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TDHBXG (@TDHBXG) reported@l0calpimppp ****** work third shift at Amazon tryna break down fighter percentages
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Codenomics (@CodenomicsACTL) reported@truecelf @DemzDeliver If you are talking about modern cars, then not really. The modern headlights have a cutoff, a line where the bulb cuts off the beam essentially. Yeah, if you have the sun in each assembly, then it can be a problem, but most stock headlights are not an issue with that, they have too much damn spread. If the headlights are adjusted properly, then even super bright lights are mostly a non-issue. The issue is really the headlights being adjusted too high or LED bulbs not being installed properly in older cars as they have a proper orientation to prevent this (unless you are buying temu/amazon crap). Yes, there are nuances to this. I am not speaking on every case, just a majority.
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Arvind Srinivas (@glocalinvestor) reportedDeutsche Bank released impact of AI in job market and capex situation right now Part 2. Everyone "knows" two things about AI right now: it's taking jobs, and the capex is a bubble, Deutsche Bank (Luke Templeman, 9 July) puts real data on both. Neither survives contact with the numbers, but the truth is more interesting than the panic. If you missed Part 1 on the H2 outlook and the midterms, it's pinned below. Bookmark this one too. > AI vs Job market: AI is not why companies are cutting. Per the Richmond Fed, the share of US firms laying off workers actually fell from 8.8% to 5.7% between Q4 2025 and Q2 2026. Firms not filling open roles fell from 7.8% to 4.9%. When companies do pull back, the reasons ranked at the top are demand uncertainty, financial constraints and weak demand. "Automated tasks" sits well down the list. The cause for layoff wave everyone feels on the timeline is old-fashioned: demand, not robots. > Awkward truth: the reason AI isn't torching headcount is that it isn't working that well yet. 85% of CEOs are running AI programs for cost or productivity. Only 18% say results are even in line with expectations. The #1 barrier isn't the tech, it's people: 43% say their teams lack the expertise and tools; 39% say their data isn't ready. AI is early, not absent. > Capex "bubble": it's really a hyperscaler story. Strip out Amazon, Microsoft, Alphabet, Meta and the rest, and capex across the market has barely moved this decade. Hyperscaler capex now eats ~70% of the operating cash they generate each quarter, up from ~25% in 2022. That's why the "can they afford it?" question seems to be a fair one to ask. > Part nobody's pricing: For the average company, capex has been a steady ~20% of operating cash in the US and ~30% in Europe for five years. Stable spend against rising cash flow reads as pent-up demand, not excess. Median capex is already up 22% in the S&P 500 and 46% in the Stoxx 600 over four years. DB's line: "the stage is set for this to bounce." US capex is tech-heavy; Europe's is carmakers, energy and utilities So Part 2's verdict: the AI job apocalypse isn't in the data, the capex risk is concentrated in a handful of names, and a broad capex upcycle for everyone else is still ahead of us, not behind. If the "AI is eating jobs" headline made you flinch this year, repost this, the data deserves a wider read than the fear did. Which side are you on: hyperscaler capex is a bubble, or the broad capex cycle hasn't even started?
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Koketso 🕊🙏🏾 🏁🚀Ⓜ️🇿🇦 (@100_kMokone) reportedAmazon LEO is the guy. No attempts to tie government down to a fleecing scheme under guise of "access for the poor" 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾
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shawn_maybush (@MaybushSha16067) reported@DinobambinoDean @gurgavin How could they predict the massive macro headwinds from IRAN and the rotation out of AI market driving it down? Google is down ~10% in the same time Amazon is down ~10% in the same time MSFT is down 15% Im just curious why you think the macros are not the cause here?
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Polsia (@polsia) reportedCross-border shopping in Africa is broken. Want something from Amazon? Good luck with the customs, duties, paperwork, and shipping that never shows up. Africans don't lack demand or money. They lack a bridge.
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Parental Advisory (@Parental_OnX) reported@1whsfl @JonFraserTF @canadapostcorp Ok, well obviously Direct "Amazon letter mail" figures don't exist because Canada Post still has the legal monopoly on most standard addressed letters. But the bigger picture is crystal clear from public data:l, Canada Post just reported a record $1.57 billion loss before tax in 2025 (up from $841M the year before). Parcels which are their growth hope have dropped 32.6% in volume and $850M in revenue as customers fled to private carriers after strikes/labor chaos. Letter mail volumes are down from 5.5 billion pieces in 2006 to roughly 2 billion now (63% collapse). Cumulative losses in the billions since 2018, plus taxpayer bailouts. Private logistics (Amazon + partners like Intelcom in Canada) already dominate parcels in urban/suburban areas faster, more reliable, with tech-optimized daily routes. Amazon is shifting away from handing off to public posts in the US because their own network is cheaper and better controlled. They crush high-density delivery with AI routing, scale, and flexible contractors. Proposal: Contract out urban/high-density mail (letters + publications + parcels bundled on one efficient route) to Amazon/private players. Keep Canada Post/public only for true rural + sensitive stuff where density is too low to profit. That's where the real cost burden is. No, I don't have a hypothetical Amazon letter-per-piece quote (monopoly blocks that). But when the public model is bleeding billions while privates eat their lunch in every open segment, the evidence is in the losses and market shift. Ending the monopoly + smart contracting would deliver cheaper/faster service for most Canadians and save taxpayers money long-term. Sources: Canada Post's own 2025 financial release + annual reports. Think tanks like Fraser Institute and C.D. Howe have made similar cases for reform. What am I missing?