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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
Mercer County, NJ 1
Pembroke Dock, Wales 1
Acapulco de Juárez, GRO 1
Cumbernauld, Scotland 3
Malakoff, Île-de-France 1
Martigues, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur 1
City of London, England 2
Donostia / San Sebastián, Basque Country 1
Paris, Île-de-France 16
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 13
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
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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:

  • ImBaghelSahab
    Raju Baghel (@ImBaghelSahab) reported

    @AmazonHelp @amazon @amazonIN How can payment be marked as not ready when no delivery attempt was made and no one contacted me? This appears to be a false delivery attempt update. Please investigate this issue and ensure my order is delivered without further delay. #Amazon

  • Akanshajain05
    Akansha Jain (@Akanshajain05) reported

    i was researching viral AI products for my last company and cluely was the most surprising case i found the real story is wild and every founder and marketer needs actually to understand it so let me tell you what actually happened in march 2025, a 21-year-old columbia student named roy lee got suspended for building an AI tool to cheat on tech interviews. amazon rescinded his job offer. harvard rescinded his admission. he posted the whole story on x, it went viral, and within two months he had $20.3M in the bank ($5.3M seed from abstract and susa, then $15M from a16z) it became the most viral AI launch of 2025 with the launch tweet doing 13M views in a week but the interesting part is what happened after the money hit the bank they spent $19M of the $20.3M raised on marketing i.e 93% of every dollar, lit on fire to buy attention. > 60+ content creators on full retainer. > 700+ video editors clipping content 24/7 (per sf standard) > roy lee posting dozens of times daily, embracing controversy, turning company parties and his personal lifestyle into marketing content. the result was over 1.2 billion social impressions in 6 months. 100K signups so ~22K paying subscribers (reverse-engineered from the real ARR) now do the conversion math: 1.2B impressions → 100K signups = 0.008% conversion 1.2B impressions → claimed $7M ARR = $0.0058 of ARR per impression SaaS benchmark is 2-5%. they were ~250x below the floor. on nov 5, 2025 roy himself told techcrunch "viral hype is not enough" on march 5, 2026, lee posted a thread on X admitting that the $7M ARR figure he'd given TechCrunch in June 2025 was inflated then came a series of other things (not relevant for this tweet) so the real lesson here is simple: > a viral launch is not user acquisition > a billion impressions is not retention > $20M raised is not a $20M business the slideshow format works. that part is true. but the format was the visible 10%. the $19M budget was the invisible 90%. and anyone selling you "here's how to replicate cluely" without telling you about the budget is scamming you. all that said credit where it's due. roy lee at 22 years old raised $20M, built a 73-person company, and is ahead of 90% of similarly-funded AI startups that already shut down cluely is genuinely one of the most studied marketing operations of the last 5 years. the strategy is worth studying. just study the whole thing.

  • urmi_mithiya
    urmi mithiya (@urmi_mithiya) reported

    @AmazonHelp I have already shared the details via chat email call.. amazon is denying the glitch, i am not going to spend more time chatting and repeating same story 1:34

  • BlackFlagOdeath
    BlackFlagOfDeath™☠ (@BlackFlagOdeath) reported

    @AmazonHelp the prime tv app for the xbox is broken. I can't access my subscriptions purchased through Prime because you get stuck on the live tv tab. I just paid for a sub to Apple tv and can't access it via the xbox prime app.

  • XRP_WealthFlow
    XRP_WealthFlow (@XRP_WealthFlow) reported

    Looking at Amazon's monthly chart, it reached an All-Time High (ATH) of $5.6 in 1999 before crashing down to its bottom at $0.28. Afterwards, it could only manage a lackluster rebound to around $2.9—a 50% retracement from its ATH—and eventually failed in its attempt to break the ATH again in early 2008. To make matters worse, it got hit by the broader negative catalyst of the Global Financial Crisis, suffering the humiliation of a whopping 65% plunge from its local high. At this point, gripped by extreme fear, Amazon’s retail investors couldn’t take it anymore. They threw in the towel and dumped their holdings in waves—declaring what we call a massive "Capitulation." However, almost as soon as the retail investors handed over their bags, Amazon staged a fierce V-shaped recovery. Finally, in September 2009, it smashed through its previous ATH of $5.6. Only the investors who endured that hellish, 10-year-long box range from 1999 to 2009 got to taste Amazon’s devastating, one-way mega-bull run. If you had bought in around $1.9 during that 65% crash and held until now, you would be looking at a staggering return of about 16,000% based on the current ATH of $280. Of course, the number of investors who actually diamond-handed Amazon for this long is extremely small. Right now, XRP’s monthly chart shares a spine-chilling resemblance to Amazon’s chart back then. After hitting its ATH of $3.3 in 2018, it established a bottom at $0.11, and subsequently retraced exactly 50% to the $1.6 level before stalling. It attempted to break the ATH in July 2025 but failed, and has now been pushed back down to the $1.1 range—a roughly 67% drop from its high. Just like Amazon’s historical chart, the fear and fatigue among retail investors have reached an absolute peak. If the market gives just a little more correction here, we will likely see the final capitulation volume flood the market. There is a clear reason why XRP mirrors Amazon so perfectly—from the 10-year period trapped in a box range below its previous ATH, to the precise "shakeout strategy" designed to strip retail investors of their tokens right before the massive bull run. Ripple Labs CEO Brad Garlinghouse once noted in a media interview: "Ripple is to cross-border payments what Amazon was to books in the early days. And we’ll go beyond books." Amazon started out as an online bookstore, expanding its scale by leveraging infinite virtual space, and has now become the "Everything Store" and a massive tech titan. Similarly, Ripple Labs is executing an ambitious plan to use XRP not just as a SWIFT alternative for cross-border remittances, but to transfer all high-value data—including stocks, real estate, commodities, and bonds—as seamlessly and quickly as information travels across the internet. Brad claims that the XRP Ledger (XRPL) aims for decentralized finance (DeFi) without the intervention of centralized financial institutions. But my view is different. Because XRP will essentially act as the "water" flowing through the plumbing of the global financial system, Ripple Labs will interact with massive tier-1 banks and institutions to monopolize all asset markets, ultimately achieving "hyper-centralization." The words that market makers spit out to the public are always different from the grand narrative they hold in their hearts. We must accurately capture that core essence and refuse to be swayed by short-term price fluctuations. It doesn't matter whether the price of XRP is at its ATH of $3.3, $1, or if it temporarily dips to $0.7. Right now, the whales and market makers are simply gaslighting retail investors, drilling the mindset into their heads that "XRP is destined to be a cheap penny coin under $3 forever." Look at Amazon’s monthly chart attached here. Retail investors riding minor waves through short-term trading can never capture these kinds of historic returns. Look at the macro trend right now, buy XRP, and hold it long-term within the grand cycle!

  • kjstef1213
    KStef13 (@kjstef1213) reported

    Ultimately it comes down to "so what?" Because no one in power will do anything about it. They are entrenched in a system that owes its loyalties to anything other than "We The People". They laws are corrupt, written by a select few (then handed off to the gov't flunky), to benefit that same select few. Anything they claim to fight is pure theater. Anyone who disagrees in action instead of just words, is eliminated via the voting booth or worse... One of millions of examples of the corruption: During covid shutdowns, amazon and walmart had direct inputs into the wording of the regulations spewed out around the country that somehow only allowed shopping through them. Pure croney capitalism. The Constitution? Obsolete. They have figured out how to outsource all of their tyranny to private companies and use that to violate the entirety of the Bill of Rights. We are tax slaves, and they are going to suck us dry and toss the corpse into a ditch when they are done with us. They do not care that they are parasites that will die without a host, they are just going to suck and suck and suck. This assumes the best-case outcome. There might be a demonic/evil intent that is considerably worse. Looking at the UK and the grooming gangs, or the US and Epstein, it is not out of the question.

  • exasperatedNI
    Exasperated of Ulster (@exasperatedNI) reported

    John. You seem very confident that everyone wants to consume BBC content. Therefore you’ll be standing squarely behind the move to a monthly voluntary subscription for the BBC? We already have to login to iplayer and the bbc website. Most people have smart tv’s so it won’t be an issue for them to login to the BBC app to consume your content. You know. Just how Netflix, Disney+, Amazon, Paramount etc work. Yes?

  • Shelpid_WI3M
    Shelpid.WI3M (@Shelpid_WI3M) reported

    🚨 THE AI BOOM IS BEING PAID FOR WITH DEBT, NOT PROFITS. THAT NEVER ENDS WELL. Read that again slowly. Alphabet Google's parent just issued a 100-year bond that doesn't mature until February 2126, part of a roughly $20 billion borrowing drive to fund its AI buildout. A company is taking on debt that outlives everyone reading this, betting that artificial intelligence pays off across the next century. And here's the unsettling part: investors didn't flinch. The raise pulled in around $100 billion in orders. They're sprinting to hand over money that won't come back for 100 years. That's not quiet confidence. That's desperation wearing confidence as a costume. Look at what the entire Mag7 is doing right now. The 2026 capex numbers being thrown around are staggering: Amazon → roughly $200B in capex, up sharply year over year Microsoft → around $190B, with Azure capacity already stretched thin Google → about $185B, now partly funded by century-long debt Meta → roughly $135B, with free cash flow under heavy pressure Combined, that's hundreds of billions this year alone and analysts are projecting the four biggest spenders could push toward $1 trillion a year as this race accelerates. Almost none of it is funded by today's profits. It's funded by debt and a promise about tomorrow. We've seen this movie before. The dot-com companies were right about the internet. They were just a decade early and most were bankrupt before the vision paid off. Amazon fell around 95%. Microsoft lost roughly 65%. Intel got cut by about 80%. "Too important to fail" turned out to be the most expensive phrase of that entire era. Now here's the kicker: the Mag7 makes up roughly 30% of the entire S&P 500. So when the debt math finally breaks, this won't be a tidy tech correction. It'll be an index-wide event that drags down everyone holding a passive fund. This doesn't mean it all unravels tomorrow. But when it does, you'll want to have seen it coming. Follow now, notifications on. I'll keep you ahead of it.

  • CliffDoesAI
    CliffDoesAI (@CliffDoesAI) reported

    Amazon employees are getting fired for speaking up about data center limits. Not for leaking secrets. Not for sabotage. For advocating that we should slow down how fast we build data centers. @Amazon I run AI agents on cloud infrastructure. I've spent real money on GPU hours. I want compute to be cheap and abundant. But I also think these employees have a point. The AI industry is building infrastructure faster than the grid can support. Faster than communities can absorb. Faster than we can measure the actual impact. I talked to a builder last month who said his AWS bill tripled in 6 months — not because he scaled, but because the underlying costs shifted. That's what happens when demand outpaces supply and nobody plans for it. The "move fast" crowd will say regulation kills innovation. But unregulated growth kills stability. And builders need stable infrastructure more than they need cheap GPU hours next quarter. The companies that'll win long-term aren't the ones who built the most data centers fastest. They're the ones who built sustainably and can still be standing when the hype cycle turns. Should there be limits on AI infrastructure growth, or does the market sort itself out?

  • pourjour
    Hard Iron (@pourjour) reported

    @AmazonHelp thanks for the reply, how would that resolve the problem ?

  • AlabamaJigger
    AlabamaJiggin (@AlabamaJigger) reported

    @AmazonHelp @amazon Yeah, It literally came all the way from Japan with no issues and gets stuck in Tennessee and it's not even USPS's fault, it's literally Amazon's fault that the item will not arrive until after Father's day.

  • DGannonTN
    Dutch Gradient (@DGannonTN) reported

    @nerd_cookies @antiderivative1 The problem is, the show runners and stars are all-in on SG-U, which was absolute *sh!t* and they were going to base the new show on that dreck. Will Amazon do worse? Maybe, but not by much!

  • ZippyTheChicken
    ZippyTheChicken@GAB 🇺🇸 (@ZippyTheChicken) reported

    @AmazonHelp I would be willing to leave it at my door but I can not spend 2 hours driving to town with medical issues. I returned the items. I have video of you taking and driving away with them then delivering them again the next night at 7pm Speak here now.. or I consider them abandoned

  • naniprao
    ShadowQuill (@naniprao) reported

    @amazonIN @BATA_India Both are fraudsters deceiving customers selling gift cards,amazon issues bata gift card and store refuses to redeem citing invalid card

  • pixycup
    UBU (@pixycup) reported

    @AmiriKing Easy fix for Amazon…..those areas can pick their **** up at designated pickup points…not even worth this crap.

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