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 |
|---|---|
| Coacalco, MEX | 2 |
| Paris, Île-de-France | 17 |
| Rouyn-Noranda, QC | 1 |
| Atlanta, GA | 5 |
| Sydney, NSW | 1 |
| Hyannis, MA | 1 |
| Lyon, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes | 2 |
| A Estrada, Galicia | 1 |
| Morlaix, Brittany | 1 |
| Mumbai, MH | 1 |
| Iztapalapa, CDMX | 1 |
| Charlotte, NC | 3 |
| 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 |
| Orléans, Centre | 1 |
| Naxxar, In-Naxxar | 1 |
| Seattle, WA | 5 |
| Rheine, NRW | 1 |
| Poplar, England | 2 |
| Valréas, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur | 1 |
| Chartres, Centre | 1 |
| Valencia, Valencia | 1 |
| Warwick, England | 1 |
| Pontault-Combault, Île-de-France | 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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Ameya Kanetkar (@Ameya_Kanetkar) reported@AmazonHelp Problem is not the order delivery but there's absolutely no way to contact the delivery agent or even customer support of Amazon. While it is mentioned that a 4 digit PIN will be intimated along with 'out for delivery' status - this practice is not followed @ajassy in reality.
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Harj (@jattpablo) reported$ORCL – MASSIVE SETUP FORMING Everyone is scared of the debt. Smart money is watching the setup. TECHNICALS: • Major support holding: $135–$140 zone • RSI reset from oversold → momentum turning • Long-term trend still intact • Break above $150 = squeeze trigger • Gap-fill potential: $180–$220 range This is classic accumulation after panic selling. FUNDAMENTALS THEY’RE IGNORING: • FY26 revenue: $67B (+17%) • Cloud revenue exploding (+39%) • $500B+ backlog / RPO pipeline • AI infra demand just getting started This is NOT a declining company — it’s a CAPEX-heavy growth phase. DEBT PROBLEM (MISUNDERSTOOD) Yes, Oracle has debt — BUT: • Generates ~$20B+ annual operating cash flow • Interest coverage ~6x (very manageable) • Strategic debt → building AI data center moat • Already raising equity + structured financing (not pure debt) (Oracle Investor Relations) HOW THEY PAY IT DOWN: 1.Explosive cloud margins over next 2–3 years 2.Long-term AI contracts (recurring cash flows) 3.Partner-funded infrastructure (OpenAI / hyperscalers) 4.Equity issuance to balance leverage 5.Capex normalization post-buildout This is Amazon 2016 playbook — invest first, dominate later. SHORT TERM FEAR: • Credit downgrade noise • Heavy capex cycle • Negative free cash flow (temporary) LONG TERM REALITY: • AI infrastructure = trillion-dollar market • Oracle becoming core enterprise + AI backbone • Analysts see ~80%+ upside from here (Barron’s) PRICE TARGET (MY VIEW): • Base: $180 • Bull case: $250+ • AI supercycle: $300+ Smart money buys fear. Retail chases later.
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Han Scrollo 💫 (@HanScrollo) reportedHenry Cavill’s Warhammer 40,000 still has no trailer, no release date and no confirmed cast beyond Cavill himself. But the most important battle may already be won. Amazon and Games Workshop have finally agreed on the creative rules. That means the grimdark lore has survived its first battle. Here is the current state of Amazon’s Warhammer 40K project: ~~~ 1. THE DEAL IS OFFICIAL For months, the biggest threat to this project was not Chaos. It was paperwork. Amazon and Games Workshop had a 12-month window to agree on the creative guidelines for the Warhammer 40,000 films and TV projects. Those guidelines matter because this is where tone, story direction and the limits of adaptation are defined. In December 2024, Games Workshop confirmed that the creative guidelines were agreed and the final deal with Amazon was signed. That does not guarantee a masterpiece. But it does mean the project cleared its first major test. Warhammer is not generic sci-fi. It is religious fanaticism, endless war, body horror, cosmic evil, satire, decay, corruption and impossible scale. If you start changing things and drifting away from the lore, it stops being Warhammer. ~~~ 2. HENRY CAVILL IS NOT JUST THE FACE This is the part that gives fans hope. Cavill is not just attached as an actor. He is an executive producer, and he has been publicly positioned as one of the key people helping shape this universe from the beginning. That matters. Because Cavill is not pretending to be a fan for marketing. He has talked about Warhammer for years. He paints miniatures. He knows the lore. He understands why the Imperium is not supposed to be presented as a clean heroic empire. This is not a case of Hollywood discovering another IP and handing it to people who secretly hate the source material. At least on paper, the guy leading the charge actually cares. ~~~ 3. THE STARTING POINT IS STILL SECRET Games Workshop has confirmed that they already have a starting point for the screen universe. But they have not revealed what it is. No confirmed faction. No confirmed character. No confirmed era. No confirmed first storyline. The most interesting theory right now is that Amazon may avoid starting directly in the 41st millennium or jumping straight into the Horus Heresy. Instead, some fans believe the first project could explore the aftermath of the Heresy, possibly around The Scouring. That would make sense for one reason: It gives the show massive stakes without immediately adapting the most sacred material in the entire franchise. You can explain the fall of the Emperor, the broken dream of humanity and the birth of the Imperium’s nightmare, while still giving the writers room to build new stories without breaking established canon. But for now, that is speculation. The only official answer is simple: The starting point is locked. And they are not telling us yet. ~~~ 4. THE SCALE IS THE REAL PROBLEM Warhammer 40K might be one of the hardest universes in fiction to adapt properly. A Space Marine cannot look like a guy in expensive cosplay. A hive city cannot look like a normal sci-fi city with gothic wallpaper. A cathedral ship cannot look like a Star Destroyer with candles. The world needs weight. It needs scale. It needs dirt, machinery, skulls, incense, armor, mutation, brutality and religious madness. No budget has been officially announced, but Amazon does not buy Warhammer, attach Henry Cavill and talk about films, TV and merchandising rights just to make something small. The risk is obvious: The bigger the budget gets, the stronger the pressure becomes to make it safer, cleaner and easier for casual audiences. That is exactly where Cavill’s role matters. He is the best chance this project has of still feeling like Warhammer. Because Warhammer should never feel normal. ~~~ 5. DO NOT EXPECT IT SOON This is the painful part. The project is officially moving, but it is still early. Games Workshop has said production on films and TV can take a number of years. Warhammer Community also made it clear that “Project One” is only now going into proper development, with scripts still ahead. That means anyone expecting a 2027 release is probably dreaming. A realistic window is closer to 2028 or 2029, depending on how fast scripts, design, casting, filming and post-production move. And honestly? That might be a good thing. This is not the kind of universe you rush. If Amazon and Cavill get this wrong, Warhammer fans will never forgive it. But if they get it right, this could become one of the biggest sci-fi fantasy franchises on streaming. A brutal, gothic, insane cinematic universe built around the darkest future imaginable. No trailer yet. No release date yet. No full cast yet. But the deal is signed. The creative guidelines are agreed. Cavill is still at the center. And for Warhammer fans, that is the best update so far. The Emperor protects. Now Amazon just has to not screw it up.
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Pravin Tiwari (@PravinTiwariX) reported@AmazonHelp @amazonIN The real issue here is that the user does not control any of it. The order status changed to undeliverable and refund initiated without informing the user. Placing a fresh order denies the offer prior discounts.
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J7kc7 (@jnkc7) reported@Notwokenow @JeffBezos @amazon Yeah it’s a problem! And they throw the items on the porch which makes them need to be returned. Worst is food/drink items! You can’t hire American citizens?
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Chandra Pattnaik (@cpattnaik69) reported@AmazonHelp @amazon @amazonIN Dear Team, my request is that your X support team should have the authority to resolve delivery issues,not just share generic replies.When an order is delayed,they should coordinate with the delivery team and ensure it is delivered ASAP to customers. Thank You
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sksaxena@Lakshman Charan Raj Das(Loving&Bharatiy) (@saxenasunilk12) reported@AmazonHelp Kindly resolve the issue
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cherie (@imherenow1) reportedGovernments are for profits, not people or food security. We’re losing farmland at alarming rates Some land has been expropriated. Some farmers have given up, without supports. This is a national security problem as we can’t eat Amazon warehouses! Food security is at risk
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PrinceLD Martian (@PrinceLDCharley) reported@AmazonHelp @JeffBezos @ajassy I will be filing abbreviations for wrongful deactivation because this is totally unacceptable how my account got deactivated over app error when I been delivering for 4 years & never had this issue till now for “overbook “ routes that I was paid for
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Ava E Walker (@SeaSirenRed) reported@roseysunlotus I cant find it exactly but it came from Amazon. If you get a hot house put iit on a deck & lay down vinyl floor. It will be more efficient. I have a heater that turns on at 50 degrees I use from March thru May. My husband reinforced it will take a pic
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Gaurav kumar (@gaurav0721) reported@AmazonHelp @amazon @amazonIN I have purchased TV Order # 407-4491886-6886754 & installation fee is already paid but Xioami Engineer is saying they will visit only if mounting device is bought from them.I already have my own device so plz resolve issue asap
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Stamford Security (@StamfordSec) reported@AmazonHelp Hi Morgan You team provided a new date again They said this issue should be sorted by 12th of july and they will get back to me with an update I am tired of changing goalposts, i will try to avoid amazon at all costs moving forward and would recommend everyone to do the same
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Hellbininfo🪽💙 (@hellaversenews) reportedThis is genuinely so weird... what is Amazon doing??? This issue seems way bigger than we think and it's so confusing
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Lily (@lily_choudhury_) reportedStep 1: Learn to actually see the "Sponsored" label. Every Amazon search page mixes paid placements into the results with minimal visual distinction — a small gray "Sponsored" tag above the product title. These aren't ranked by relevance or quality at all; they're ranked by who bid the most for that search term. Before clicking anything in the first row of results, check for that tag. If you want a faster shortcut: results 1-4 on most searches are sponsored more often than not, especially for competitive product categories. The real organic ranking usually starts further down than people assume.
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Millie Marconi (@MillieMarconnni) reportedA Stanford researcher named Fei-Fei Li once hired 49,000 strangers from 167 countries to look at pictures and answer one simple question, and their answers became the foundation modern AI is built on today. Back in 2006, Li was a freshly minted PhD from Caltech starting her first job as an assistant professor. Everyone around her was chasing the same idea, that the path to smarter AI ran through smarter algorithms. Better math. Cleverer code. She looked at the field and decided they had the problem backwards. A psychologist had once estimated that the average person can recognize about 30,000 different kinds of objects on sight. A dog. A very specific species of fern. Li's question was simple and almost embarrassing in hindsight. If a computer was ever going to see the world the way a person does, shouldn't it first be shown what the world actually looks like, at real scale, in all its variety? Nobody was building that. So she decided to build it herself. She moved to Princeton and pulled in a lexical database built by linguists there called WordNet, roughly 22,000 categories of nouns organized by meaning. That became the skeleton. Then came the impossible part. She needed millions of real photographs sorted correctly into every one of those categories, and there was no way she or her small team could label them all by hand. Working nonstop, one image a minute, with no sleep and no food, it would have taken one person almost 23 years. So she turned to Amazon Mechanical Turk, a website where you can pay strangers online to do small tasks for a few cents each. Over the next three years, those 49,000 workers in 167 countries looked at photograph after photograph and answered the same simple question, over and over. Does this picture show a dog. Does this picture show a fire truck. Each image got checked by multiple workers before it counted. By the time they were done, they had sorted more than 14 million images into over 20,000 categories. They called it ImageNet. When she finally brought it to the biggest computer vision conference in the world in 2009, the field shrugged. A hundred times bigger than any dataset that existed, and almost nobody cared. They didn't even give her a stage. They gave her a folding table in the corner of a convention center in Miami, wedged between a few posters nobody was reading. So Li did something clever. Instead of just publishing the data and hoping someone noticed, she turned it into a competition. Every year, teams would submit AI systems and see whose could recognize images most accurately against ImageNet. She built the incentive that the data alone could not create. For two years, nothing dramatic happened. Then in 2012, a team out of Toronto entered a neural network called AlexNet, trained on two ordinary gaming graphics cards. Every serious entry before it had an error rate hovering around 26 percent. AlexNet came in at 15.3 percent. An 11 point jump in a single year, inside a competition that used to inch forward by fractions of a point. That one result is the actual starting gun for the AI you use today. Not a lab announcement. Not a keynote. Just 49,000 strangers on the internet answering questions about photographs, three years before anyone realized what they had built.