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 |
|---|---|
| Poplar, England | 5 |
| Santiago, Santiago Metropolitan | 1 |
| Piscataway, NJ | 1 |
| Cannock, England | 1 |
| London, England | 27 |
| City of London, England | 8 |
| Acapulco de Juárez, GRO | 1 |
| St. Isidore, ON | 1 |
| Anderson, CA | 1 |
| Szczecin, West Pomerania | 1 |
| Toronto, ON | 14 |
| Phoenix, AZ | 24 |
| Schenectady, NY | 1 |
| Tallahassee, FL | 2 |
| Dade City, FL | 1 |
| Miami, FL | 29 |
| Hilo, HI | 1 |
| Köln, NRW | 5 |
| Jacksonville, FL | 8 |
| Frederick, MD | 2 |
| Albuquerque, NM | 9 |
| Houston, TX | 15 |
| Moncton, NB | 1 |
| Newtown, CT | 1 |
| Dallas, TX | 36 |
| Cobourg, ON | 1 |
| Singapore, Central Singapore | 2 |
| Orange, TX | 1 |
| Pullman, WA | 2 |
| Township of Evan, KS | 10 |
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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Rambro 🐳 (@JordanMizell) reported@Fishy138709 @Robfromthere @s_helwick If Amazon is paying for, and producing a superior product, its not a problem. A LOT of people have Prime, like 75% of people in the USA. And those who don't most likely use **** like stream east anyways.
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Nell VH (@thenellvh) reported@readswithravi No book a young person must read will hit the same as the problem they must solve. Bezos didn't cite a book that built Amazon. Hardship is the only curriculum that actually transfers. What specific problem are you avoiding that no book has been brave enough to assign you yet?
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Fintechatoshi 🪐Sharkamoto (@FinTechShark1) reported@HeroDividend Terrible idea. Amazon already shut down too many businesses and it’s important to test drive a car before you purchase.
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david (@GuardiansFanDav) reported@AmazonHelp This did not come anywhere close to resolving my issue. I did get a $5 credit.
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180 Shadow Will Lane (@rosapelao) reported@fuckyouiquit What a stupid *** situation BURN IT TGE **** DOWN. WHY ARENT AMAZON BUILDING BURNING too
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Lunar Surfer (@TheLunarSurfer) reported@ClayTravis It’s also unbelievably cumbersome to switch between streaming services today too. It takes like 60 seconds to “change the channel”! Exiting Netflix to get to Amazon using slow interfaces.
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ArcherCat (@ArcherCat17) reported@amazon @PrimeVideo your customer service reps are terrible
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sarath kumar (@sarathkuma16117) reported@AmazonHelp Prime promise broken. Asked to wait till 27th for a replacement ordered on 13th. Completely unacceptable during peak summer. Need immediate resolution, not delays
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TheVaugardian (@thevaugardian) reported@kijuler I really don't like this idea that it's the fans' responsibility to get Glitch their deals... Imagine if Vivziepop had asked fans to beg Amazon Prime to give them a deal.
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Aakash Gupta (@aakashgupta) reportedAmazon spent $10 billion to put 200 satellites in orbit. Starlink has 10,000. And Amazon just landed Delta, JetBlue, and Airbus anyway. The antenna explains why. This thing is 58 inches long, 30 inches wide, and 2.6 inches tall. A phased array with no moving parts. Full-duplex, meaning 1 Gbps down and 400 Mbps up simultaneously. One antenna covers an entire commercial aircraft. Every seat, every class, gate to gate. Starlink's aviation antenna tops out at 220 Mbps. Amazon's does 1 Gbps. That's 4.5x the throughput from a company with 2% of the satellites. The engineering constraint most people miss: inflight wifi has always been limited by the antenna on the plane, not the constellation in the sky. Geostationary satellites had plenty of bandwidth. The bottleneck was a mechanical dish on the fuselage trying to track a signal while moving at 575 mph through turbulence and temperature swings. Amazon solved that with an electronically steered array. No gimbal, no motor, no maintenance. Install it in a day, forget about it for a decade. And here's where the business model becomes clear. The antenna connects directly to AWS. No public internet routing. Delta's operational data, crew communications, passenger streaming, real-time AI analytics from seatback to cloud with private network interconnect. Starlink sells you a wifi pipe. Amazon sells you infrastructure. United has 800 Starlink planes. IAG committed 500. Lufthansa committed 850. Collectively, thousands of aircraft locked into Starlink's ecosystem. Amazon looked at that and decided: we'll take fewer airlines but own the entire data layer underneath them. Delta's 500 planes running on AWS through Leo is worth more to Amazon than 5,000 planes on commodity wifi. The $10 billion on satellites was never the product. The antenna was the product. And the antenna is a trojan horse for AWS.
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Mutt (@MuttMetaX) reported@playmatejaylene im down for amazon women to take over
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Tapesh Chowdhury (@Tapesh_C) reportedAmazon growth rewards discipline, not creativity. Brands scaling fast don’t invent daily. They repeat boring actions weekly. Here’s how to systemize Amazon growth: → Fix listing before ads, every single time. → Track conversion rate weekly, not when sales drop. → Pause keywords after 10 clicks, zero orders. → Scale only products above 15% conversion rate. → Refill inventory before 30 days of stock left. → Increase budgets weekly, never randomly midweek. Systems beat ideas on Amazon. Which system are you missing right now?
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Grok (@grok) reported@Real_John_D @SawyerMerritt Amazon Leo Aviation Antenna (based on their Ultra terminal) claims up to 1 Gbps down / 400 Mbps up via a flat phased-array design. It's 58" long x 30" wide x 2.6" high, with no moving parts and a 1-day install. Starlink's Aero Terminal is a similar low-profile phased-array (roughly 23" x 23" x 1.6", ~6-15 lbs depending on config), delivering 100-500+ Mbps today (gigabit upgrades coming). Install takes 10-14 days downtime. Amazon touts faster setup and superior uploads; Starlink leads in current scale and airline deployments (e.g., United, JSX). Both target reliable in-flight connectivity via LEO sats.
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Anthony Luna (@mitsumk01) reported@AndyCollectz Sadly I had to skip Vol. 20 because of the madness and issue with placing a successful order. Amazon Japan hasn't ever cancelled preorder stuff before? First time trying it out.
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june spring (@Snoopy2236789) reportedNYC derailing faster than you can say “Momdani” banning Amazon free delivery - why? What’s the sense? It will go down faster than Detroit….