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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

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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:

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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
Dallas, TX 2
Seattle, WA 5
Barcelona, Catalonia 1
Oak Lawn, IL 1
Castelsarrasin, Occitanie 1
Salzburg, Salzburg 1
Fort Smith, AR 1
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
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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.

Amazon Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • archanakeshri05
    Archana Keshri (@archanakeshri05) reported

    @JioCare @amazon It's been 3 days, the recharge is still not credited, no refund has been processed, and customer care is not responding. Please resolve this issue immediately or initiate the refund.

  • Phil1UpCollects
    Phil1Up Collects 🪙🍄 (@Phil1UpCollects) reported

    Make your joke but when other online stores like Walmart Target Best Buy Amazon start doing this then you won't be laughing. You'll be crying as you're nickeled and dimed just to shop online at every store. When it becomes a serious problem it'll be too late. Best to end it NOW!

  • tayosansan
    Tayo🌞 (@tayosansan) reported

    @PokemonDealsTCG Amazon just prepared my 2 Pitch Black booster bundles for shipping They didn't do the preorder price guarantee and kept it at $60. I canceled them. They did this before with the First Partner Illustration series 2 and I paid $60 for that. No one else is having this problem?

  • DanaLeaB1
    Helga Von Tippler (@DanaLeaB1) reported

    @notasheeple7 @USPSHelp They wonder why they’re broke? Shut it down and let Amazon take over.

  • cruelsardaukar
    The Last Great Arrakian Dynasty (@cruelsardaukar) reported

    @_JeanLeon Right? For a while, Google managed to produce a steady stream of new hits by the method of “if we hire incredibly talented people and then encourage them to waste company time in a *truly unstructured* way, maybe great products will be created by accident” And then Apple / Amazon managed to solve the principal / agent problem by having two of the greatest obsessives of the last 50 years exercising tyrannical control

  • dailyhubranx
    Daily HUBRANX Official (@dailyhubranx) reported

    GameStop has closed over 5,000 stores globally over the past decade alone. At its peak, the retailer operated more than 7,500 locations worldwide, but massive shifts to digital game downloads and e-commerce forced a rapid shrinking of its physical footprint. The numbers are not skewed. People are just not leaving the house to buy games anymore. Sure a $10 physical Triple A game looks nice on Amazon and second hand market. Now ask yourself why are these physical discs are so cheap? They're leftovers. And some of these shots are carefully selected. They're also already on Gamepass and PS5 Plus. Watching GameStop and other retailers, closing tens of thousands brick and mortar stores over the past decade proves a very important point. Remember the 360 and PS3 era? I remember. I remember mofos camping out with tents in front of a game stop for a Halo or CoD game. It was an awesome era... Almost 2 decades ago. The numbers are not skewed. People stop going out to buy physical games at launch. Just like they stopped going out to buy a new music album or a DVD at blockbuster. Of course there are still people that go out of their way to buy a music album or a Blu ray movie. But where are the billions? Spotify, Netflix, streaming services. It's a sad thing to admit but most gamers are addicted to ps plus, gamepass and even gamepass on PC. It's just so damn convenient to have them even when we don't take advantage if the service every month. I also see these comparison screenshots with a physical game on Amazon vs a digital game price differences. They are not wrong. Those shots are not fake. But let's not pretend Xbox store and PS store doesn't have mega deals every month on games. Steam has awesome deals too. And there are website that sell digital codes for PS5, Xbox and Steam for stupid prices... Like as low $3 for a triple A game. I'm not gonna quote the websites as I'm not doing free sponsor spots, but a simple google search will take you to where u wanna be. I'm not defending the death of physical games. And I'm not defending Sony for a second for their decision. I think it's really sad what's happening to the die hard physical gamers collector. But hey... The numbers are not skewed... The data shows it..... The trail of money shows it. Physical stores literally shutting down year over year. GameStop has been pivoting for the past 8 years or so to selling more gaming merch and collectibles rather than selling physical games. Those shelves became smaller and smaller every year. That's why they made a statement saying " Sony ending physical games production doesn't affect us at all".. ofc it doesn't affect them... Nobody goes to games stop to buy physical games. C'mon... We used to have massive long shelves, sometimes multiple rows of just Xbox , PlayStation, Nintendo physical games in various supermarkets and malls. those shelves have shrunk to microscope levels year over year.

  • arayyye
    Raye (@arayyye) reported

    On $NFLX: $NFLX remains a cautious bull for me. The underlying business is still financially strong: Q2 revenue grew 13.4% year over year to $12.56 billion, operating margin reached 33.4%, and management still expects roughly $3 billion in advertising revenue this year. Netflix also expects operating income to grow more than 20% in 2026. The company is not broken, but the growth profile is clearly maturing, with Q3 revenue growth projected to slow to 11.7%. Netflix may now be entering a phase where it can continue growing revenue and profit even with slower customer growth. Price increases, advertising, paid sharing and improved monetization can raise revenue per member, while content amortization grows more slowly in the second half. That could preserve high margins even if some price-sensitive customers leave. The danger is that this strategy gradually transforms Netflix from a growth platform into a mature media company dependent on pricing and cost discipline. Competition makes that transition more difficult. Disney has globally recognized franchises, theatrical distribution, sports and physical experiences that reinforce its streaming platform. Prime Video is supported by the broader Prime bundle and Amazon’s commerce-driven advertising system, while Apple continues building a smaller but increasingly credible catalogue of premium originals and live sports. Amazon says its ad-supported entertainment ecosystem now reaches more than 300 million US consumers, while Prime Video’s ad-supported customers are watching 17% more hours than a year ago. These companies do not need to replace Netflix completely. They only need to take a larger share of household attention and reduce how much pricing power Netflix can exercise. My concern as an actual Netflix user is more qualitative. Netflix does not necessarily lack content; it increasingly feels like it has too much content designed as inventory. Many ideas that could have worked as focused two-hour films are stretched into six- or eight-episode series. It feels like pure product-management thinking: more episodes, longer runtimes and more opportunities to keep the user inside the application. That approach can maximize measurable engagement while reducing creative density. Management correctly argues that not every viewing hour has equal value and that quality, variety and quantity all matter. Yet my experience still feels optimized for quantity. I can scroll through hundreds of titles without finding something genuinely unique, while competitors increasingly offer fewer but more recognizable franchises or prestige productions. A platform can generate more total viewing hours while producing fewer titles that audiences remember several years later. Netflix reported that viewing hours increased only 2% during the first half of 2026 despite continued membership, pricing and advertising growth. The company will also reduce its detailed viewing-hours report from twice annually to once annually beginning in 2027. This does not prove that engagement is deteriorating, but it makes engagement quality increasingly important to watch as financial growth becomes more dependent on monetization. The market reacted cautiously to the latest outlook, sending the shares down around 8% after earnings. I would therefore remain bullish, but I would not chase the stock. A lower share price could create an attractive accumulation opportunity because Netflix still owns the strongest global streaming distribution network, a powerful recommendation system and a proven ability to monetize audiences. However, a cheaper stock does not automatically solve the product problem. The long-term bull case requires Netflix to create something bigger than another large content slate: a major franchise ecosystem, a genuinely differentiated live-entertainment business, a successful creator platform, or another habitual entertainment format. That is possible, but it will be difficult. Netflix is already expanding into live sports, video podcasts, creators, advertising and cloud games, yet every one of those categories contains deeply entrenched competitors. Until one of those initiatives becomes a meaningful new growth engine, I see $NFLX as a strong business facing a harder stock setup: high margins and solid cash generation, but slowing growth, rising competition and a content experience that increasingly feels optimized rather than inspired.

  • StvndingCynic
    Thomas Albin (@StvndingCynic) reported

    @williamhalford @Drodro77 @LibOrNormal Will, this non english speaking **** shouldnt even be here to begin with. I could give a single **** where he chooses to piss because amazon chooses to treat their employees worse than slaves. If you have such a problem with it, dont ******* buy anything from amazon. Id love to see how often you or your household uses amazon you boomer cuck. **** off.

  • Sarah_StrTN
    Sarah S of TN (@Sarah_StrTN) reported

    @JaniceDean I have been there. Pharmacy costs are the same. The difference in pricing to order some of our medication from Amazon Pharmacy for example, is a lot cheaper than going down the street to the pharmacy counter at our local big chain grocery store!

  • BowTiedBroke
    BowTiedBroke (@BowTiedBroke) reported

    I've tried to be straight with you guys. My pest control days, my side hustle Amazon biz that turned into a multi million dollar biz, my Airbnb biz that turned into a construction company. But I need to be upfront once again...it is nearly IMPOSSIBLE to make money on Amazon anymore for small third party sellers. The good ole days of easy flips on Amazon are now long gone. I started flipping crap on Ebay in 2006. Toys, auto parts, oil of olay creams (don't ask). That morphed into Amazon by 2012. 2012 - 2022 were the glory days. Around 25-30% fees on each sale from Amazon meant you could buy an item to flip for $20, sell it for $50 on Amazon and still have a good return. Repeat that times thousands of transactions per year and it was a nice little side hustle that helped me walk away from my corporate job. But with any publicly traded company, they often find ways to start to nickel and dime you to no end. Then, with the influx of Chinese sellers that I wrote about below (even got a response from Elon on that one), it's just become a bear of a place to make any money in. Prior to 2023, my rule of thumb was that an item needed to sell for 2.5X what I paid for it to be worth my while (time wise) to do all the work necessary for the profit (research, buying, sourcing, bagging, barcoding, shipping off to a Amazon fulfillment center...yes it's a lot of work). Now, it's almost to the point where the item needs to sell for 5X what was paid for it to be worth your while to sell on Amazon. As you can see from this screengrab of one particular item I sell Amazon now grabs nearly 50% of my revenue with their "Fees". Granted, in 2012 this was around 25% in total fees. In 2020 yrs it hit around 37%, but now, they’ve just added so many superfluous fees which whittle away at any potential profit a third party seller can make. And keep in mind this screenshot doesn’t even have a returned item, which now proliferates the site (Buyers purchase an item, it gets delivered, they take it out of the box, do a return via Amazon but put some old broken item in the box claiming that’s what came, send the said item back and keep your new item..and Amazon refunds them from your account). A single return like that on a high dollar item will just crush your margins. A few years ago I recommended starting a side hustle with amazon. Today, I don’t recommend it AT ALL. Sure, it can be done, but looking at how the landscape has changed and the number of sellers from China that have infiltrated the site as I outlined in the below post, it’s just not even worth attempting at this point.

  • bangles65
    Sandeep (@bangles65) reported

    @amazonIN @AmazonHelp The support team has been unable to resolve issue, pl check DM

  • poecidebrain
    poecide (@poecidebrain) reported

    As I was driving around an Amazon delivery truck today I had a thought. What if, instead of running up to a house, leaving a package, taking a picture of it and running back, they simply handed the package to a delivery robot that did it? If they had 4 delivery robots, then when they have deliveries that are close together (my neighbor often gets deliveries right before I do), they could be loading up the next robot while the first one did the delivery. Four robots to a van could speed things up and spare the driver sore feet. It's not the dumbest idea I've ever had. Power for the bots might be an issue. And weather. But it's still worth considering. Right?

  • MgtmMoisan
    🇨🇦🌻🤔🌈 (@MgtmMoisan) reported

    @CodBorg @amazonca @AmazonHelp I've never had a problem with returns.

  • CoryC14809
    Cory Jankoski🇨🇦🇨🇦 (@CoryC14809) reported

    @killemall2024 @Emanrocks1000 The Boreal forest is the same size as the Amazon or to frame it another way more than twice the size of Mexico, Canada won't burn down anytime soon

  • MrsGoresDiary
    Mrs. Gore (@MrsGoresDiary) reported

    My husband decided to go analog this year and his second cheap watch from Amazon has already broken. I would love to replace it with a surprise! @KeepWatchCo thanks for the opportunity! 🙌

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