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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
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
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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:

  • BradInv94
    Brad | £8.1K (@BradInv94) reported

    @investwitheryk1 Yeah, i do need them to start climbing though, between the 4 im about £55 up, i was probably about £200 up 3 weeks or so ago but just trickled back down, they never seem to spike at once, again, long game with these but amazon is one I hold and that will stay in the portfolio for sure!

  • closingbellorca
    Closing Bell Orca (@closingbellorca) reported

    US 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.

  • Karpeltunnel
    Karp (@Karpeltunnel) reported

    @TheCryptoDaddi The reason I went with Amazon is they accept insurance so I’m paying $8/mo. I just lied and said that I had used daily tadalafil before for ED and it worked without issue.

  • AmazonHelp
    Amazon Help (@AmazonHelp) reported

    @IamCsRajput Kindly copy the link provided earlier > paste it on a 'web browser' > login to your Amazon account > connect with our Social Media team via chat. -Sindu

  • willitstimothy
    Timoteo (@willitstimothy) reported

    I’m adding my 1 cent to the Stargate tweet storm! Amazon, I was very conflicted about canceling my Prime subscription, but yesterday I went ahead and pulled the trigger. I’m not sure if it benefits the cause or not, but until you #SaveStargate I’ll be looking elsewhere for the many many many items I currently purchase through Amazon. I hope you guys have a change of heart and reinstate @martingero’s Stargate, but if not, just know that I think you made a terrible mistake canceling it when you did. I’d understand if you had spent money on it and it flopped in some way - but I honestly do not think that would happen. Stargate is among the best sci-fi franchises in existence, if not the best, and I think you would do amazingly well with an in canon revival of Stargate. I do hope to be back someday soon, hopefully. @AmazonMGMStudio @amazon

  • clyntonK1
    Clynton Keel (@clyntonK1) reported

    @Alexand70608635 @FennellJW Tax evasion dwarfs the entire welfare budget annually and for decades it has been ignored 'as too difficult' to fix. Amazon and other corporations evade tax. France Recouped 700 million euro from taxing such corporations. Bashing pensioners rather than the rich paying is unjust.

  • mainefortrump
    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

  • SummerShaddows
    Ella Boo Bella (@SummerShaddows) reported

    @WallStreetApes I hate this crap. Wish Amazon would shut down and brick and mortar businesses would thrive again. Hard to do considering how many low-life MFs think they can steal everything just because.

  • TopiaGrif
    Grif Topia (@TopiaGrif) reported

    @ShrivastavAni The real problem is OTT wasn't there, they couldn't earn any money. It is not so easy for people to simply say they do not want Amazon Prime. They continue to rake in money compiling such horseshit and then use it to make more.

  • chxnw0o
    alec🦈🇵🇸🇮🇹🇮🇳☭ (@chxnw0o) reported

    @fomite88 @snailhouse9 I've tried a couple from Amazon (Italy) but their glue was itchy, the one I've been using for close to a year and that I've had no problems with is from AliExpress :p if u need I can find the link

  • JimSiskiyou
    James Hudson (@JimSiskiyou) reported

    @MatrixMysteries @Anna36888 It’s time to shut down ALL Amazon A.I. data centers in the world. Amazon is left leaning and must be eradicated from the face of this earth

  • LOLNeverTweet
    NeverTweet (@LOLNeverTweet) reported

    @ArthurBoreman Mine got so slow on responses I just ditched it and went full Apple ecosystem. Amazon had me for a decade, bye.

  • Fatal_Jichu
    Fatal Jichu (@Fatal_Jichu) reported

    @toloveLfromVine Using the wrong HTS code has always led to this or other headaches. Problem is that DHL is trash and doesnt even bother to follow up with you or the sender to provide more information. I would avoid using DHL at all if possible has they have been such crooks during this entire shitshow. For Amazon or other store stuff, send them to a forwarder like From Japan or Blackship and have them shipped properly to you if you can afford it.

  • PressLiberland
    LiberlandPress (@PressLiberland) reported

    Artificial intelligence Why the blocking of Anthropic's AI models is so explosive+++ An instruction from the US government has ensured that the AI developer Anthropic deactivates its advanced models "Mythos 5" and "Fable 5". The decision has sparked a discussion about the access to and control of artificial intelligence. What are "Myth 5" and "Fable 5" for AI models? Both models belong to the "myth" class of the AI chatbot Claude, which is particularly powerful, called by Anthropic. In principle, "Myth 5" and "Fable 5" are the same, but they have different protection mechanisms built in. The models can, for example, take over programming tasks or analyze documents for financial controlling, for example. What are the risks? Anthropic itself had warned in the spring at the presentation of the "myth" class against exploiting the capabilities - for example, when looking for security holes in software programs. This could be abused by actors with bad intentions, for example for cyber attacks. Institutions such as the International Monetary Fund expressed concerns. The application in the economic or military field, for example, is also considered critically. Why did the US government block access? The US government had ordered Anthropic to block its latest software for foreigners. Because this is difficult to implement in the short term, Anthropic initially cut off access for all users worldwide. The US government's move was justified by security concerns, without giving further details. There is apparently a fear that the built-in protection mechanisms can be circumvented, and thus "Myth 5" and "Fable 5" could be used for illegal activities. Amazon CEO Andy Jassy has reportedly campaigned for a ban with the government with corresponding concerns. However, millions of users had already received access. It is the first intervention of this magnitude by Washington. There has been a dispute between the US government and Anthropic for a long time about the military use of AI technology. Why is the lockdown relevant for Europe? The issue of technological sovereignty is coming into focus. There is no AI provider at a comparable level in Europe. Therefore, access to the powerful models from the USA is important. Accordingly, a stronger commitment to development in Germany and Europe is also required in order to obtain even powerful AI systems with appropriate access. There have also been demands to bring companies like Anthropic, which complain about a US government intervention, to Europe.

  • xatacrypt
    Xatacrypt (@xatacrypt) reported

    Claude Fable 5 will remain unavailable for a long time Today I saw that Polymarket traders are giving a 70% chance that Fable 5 will become available again in the US > I think these odds are clearly too high The US government demanded that Anthropic completely ban access to the model for all foreign users I believe the problem is much more serious than that On June 15, Anthropic met with the US administration but couldn’t reach any agreement As we know, Amazon also found a jailbreak in the model and reported it to the authorities. > I think the US government is also demanding strong restrictions on Claude Fable 5 for all users Fable 5 was positioned as a Mythos-class model with very strong coding capabilities > If the company is forced to heavily limit the model, how groundbreaking will it stay? After heavy safeguards, it could easily turn into "just another good coding model" > Then what is the point of this "new" model? These are my thoughts. I'd be interested to hear your opinions on this

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