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Cloudflare status: hosting issues and outage reports

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Full Outage Map

Cloudflare is a company that provides DDoS mitigation, content delivery network (CDN) services, security and distributed DNS services. Cloudflare's services sit between the visitor and the Cloudflare user's hosting provider, acting as a reverse proxy for websites.

Problems in the last 24 hours

The graph below depicts the number of Cloudflare reports received over the last 24 hours by time of day. When the number of reports exceeds the baseline, represented by the red line, an outage is determined.

At the moment, we haven't detected any problems at Cloudflare. Are you experiencing issues or an outage? Leave a message in the comments section!

Most Reported Problems

The following are the most recent problems reported by Cloudflare users through our website.

  • 36% Domains (36%)
  • 29% Cloud Services (29%)
  • 14% Web Tools (14%)
  • 14% Hosting (14%)
  • 7% E-mail (7%)

Live Outage Map

The most recent Cloudflare outage reports came from the following cities:

CityProblem TypeReport Time
New York City Hosting 22 hours ago
Manchester Domains 21 days ago
Angers Cloud Services 1 month ago
London Domains 1 month ago
Noida Hosting 2 months ago
Jewar E-mail 2 months ago
Full Outage Map

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.

Cloudflare Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • DFIR_Radar
    DFIR Radar (@DFIR_Radar) reported

    Kratos PhaaS is a maturing Microsoft 365 credential-theft platform active since Sept 2025, with 1,484 previously unattributed sandbox sessions now linked to the family across 20+ countries. - Kratos runs three page generations (V0, V1, V2), each with distinct exfiltration endpoints: V0 POSTs to /PTT/SOft/mini.php, V1 to next.php/nex.php/n3xt.php, V2 to save.php. The kit chains legitimate platforms (SharePoint, Canva, DocuSign lures) through Cloudflare Turnstile anti-bot checks before serving a fake Microsoft 365 login. Browser tab title is nearly always "Authentication" and an animated envelope with "Loading in progress..." precedes the credential form. - The single best hunting fingerprint: HTTP requests to both /assets/img/barr.svg and /assets/img/lg.svg in the same session. That pair yields 90% recall with near-zero false positives. Key hashes: lg.svg = cd231b895bbcd7154b81df1e065bf02f1ec667b920c8b6d23308cd509833b5ea, styles.css = c447e75f1029ed7a5882add16bcd13ad44be3bd47c93c830ff39185e23d25ebb (connects 636 tasks across V1 and V2). - Notable defanged IOCs: razen[.]online, enerdizerandtron[.]de, jumpast[.]es, abal[.]my, dufllot[.]sbs, trisrnareprjdocz[.]com; operator IP 41.128.0[.]142. URL tokens factura, dgt, and abogados signal Spanish-language affiliates. - If WebSocket activity appears alongside credential POST, treat it as a possible AiTM indicator. #DFIR_Radar

  • CherryJimbo
    James Ross (@CherryJimbo) reported

    @rayyyyyofsun @Cloudflare I'd have probably given Pages an 8/10 a couple of years ago, but can't today given its trajectory and dwindling support sadly.

  • heyiamnick_
    Nick (@heyiamnick_) reported

    I needed better media storage for the library. Cloudinary was fine, but the credit-based pricing could get expensive as bandwidth grows. So I moved everything to Cloudflare R2: - Around $0.015/GB - Zero egress fees - Works for images, videos, ZIPs, PDFs, and backups The only problem... R2’s UI is painfully basic. I had to open files one by one just to preview them or copy the URL. So I asked Claude to build a custom media dashboard. Now I can preview everything, browse folders, copy URLs instantly, and automatically sync local media to R2 after every *** commit. Cheap storage + a custom AI-built interface. That is the kind of AI development that is actually useful.

  • kimmonismus
    Chubby♨️ (@kimmonismus) reported

    Every Sunday we publish an exclusive interview in the Superintelligence newsletter. The last few: - Ahmed Awadallah, Partner Research Manager at Microsoft Research AI Frontiers, on small on-device agents that go toe to toe with the giants. - Phil Gurbacki, VP of Product for Weights & Biases at CoreWeave, on a research agent that reads your experiments and launches the next training run itself. Akshay Kothari, Co-Founder and COO of Notion, on a million custom agents. - Coming up: Cloudflare, Google Cloud, and several more I can't announce yet. - The part I still find hard to believe is that I get to sit down with the people actually building this. Every week, someone new. Subscribe for free down below:

  • indraniltiwary
    Indranil Tiwary (@indraniltiwary) reported

    @AdityaShips VPS from Hetzner - with Coolify/Dokploy - Dokploy if you want a better UI/UX and alternatively you can think cloudflare but you just mentioned compatibility issues, so I am guessing that isn't working for you. - Hetzner VPS + Dokploy

  • sorower01
    Sorower H. (@sorower01) reported

    @Cloudflare dashboard down?

  • jakemintz
    Jake Mintz (@jakemintz) reported

    Things that infuriate me on a flight - Cloudflare not letting me login - Unwanted 2FA SMS that I can't receive (I didn't setup 2FA on Doordash for instance)

  • 2xnmore
    2xnmore (@2xnmore) reported

    Right now, while your eyes move across this sentence, something out there might already be pretending to be you. Not someday. Not in some distant future. Right now, while you're reading this. More than half of everything moving through the internet is no longer human. Cloudflare put a live number on it. 57% bot. 43% human. Their own CEO expected this in 2027. It arrived eighteen months early, and by his own admission, it stunned him. Sit with that for a second. Somewhere tonight, a machine is filling out a form using a stolen photo of someone's face. Somewhere tonight, a machine is opening an account nobody authorised. Somewhere tonight, a machine is trying to move money out of an account that isn't its own, using nothing but a convincing enough copy of a human being. And here's the part that should actually scare you. If more than half of every login could already be a machine wearing a human's face, what happens the next time your bank calls to confirm your identity? What happens the next time your vote needs verifying? What happens the moment someone builds a fake version of you good enough to fool the system standing between your money and whoever wants it? Most systems built to stop that are still asking you to prove who you are with things that can be stolen. A password. A photo ID. A database entry sitting somewhere, waiting to be breached. One team already saw this coming. Quietly. Inside Bittensor. Thirteen months ago. It's already live, and almost nobody outside a small circle has heard of it yet. Full breakdown below. Most people just found out too late. @opentensor $TAO

  • memselon
    Umut Sevinc (@memselon) reported

    Question for SaaS devs: where do you store your users files? We’re building a Framer plugin for 3D mockups (still in the kitchen). Every user uploads photos/videos to display on device screens. The trap we almost missed: storage costs nothing, it’s the WAY OUT that costs. A 13MB video stored once, but downloaded by every visitor of every landing → terabytes of bandwidth → ~€500/mo on Supabase. Our fix: Supabase keeps the scene (device, color, texture , a few KB), Cloudflare R2 serves the heavy files. R2 charges nothing for outbound bandwidth. Zero. Unlimited. Result: ~$26/mo instead of 500. Would you have done it differently? #buildinpublic

  • dhlotter
    Hermann (@dhlotter) reported

    A red X sat in my CI all morning. Four deploys trying to make it pass. The test was never broken, it just can't run in CI at all. Cloudflare blocks the headless browser from GitHub's IPs. Four deploys to add one line that skips it. #buildinpublic

  • OP13
    billdozer (@OP13) reported

    Using Claude to fix my old wordpress blog theme one prompt at a time I probably should just move this to GitHub pages or self hosting (with Cloudflare Tunnels), but I’ve had this thing for 16 years and old habits die hard

  • Sherlockwhale
    Sherlock | DeFi Researcher (@Sherlockwhale) reported

    At $139.26, $SPCX is still 3.2% above the offer price, so it has not actually undercut its IPO price yet. But I still don't think it's cheap at $139. For my research, I looked at 31 major tech listings, including Amazon, Nvidia, Google, Tesla, Meta, Alibaba, Uber and Airbnb. Three of them, Spotify, Palantir and Coinbase were direct listing (not a normal IPO), so the final sample was 28 companies. Out of those 28 IPOs: 17 traded below their offer price within one year. 20 fell at least 20% below their first public close within one year. 16 fell at least 30% below their first close. 13 fell at least 40% below their first close. Only eight of the 28 held above the initial closing price during their first year: Nvidia, Google, ServiceNow, Shopify, Zoom, Cloudflare, Unity and Airbnb. Now compare that with the actual IPO price and these eight companies have never traded below it: Nvidia, Google, ServiceNow, Shopify, Twilio, Zoom, Datadog and Airbnb. Now for the actual $SPCX price levels. The median first year low among the 28 traditional IPOs was 37.76% below the first close: $160.95 × (1 - 0.3776) = $100.17 The full 31 company sample and the closest mega platform group both will give you almost the same level, around $100.90. There is also a second way to calculate it. The median first year peak to trough decline was 56.75%: $225.64 × (1 - 0.5675) = $97.59 So, two completely separate measurements converge around $98-$101 and that is why I think $100 should be your first serious bid. If I only use the IPOs launched since 2017, the typical company traded 43.4% below its first close during year one. Applying the same decline to $SPCX gives a price of roughly $91. And among the most heavily hyped listings, the typical decline was around 54.3%, which would put $SPCX near $74. Using its listing high instead gives similar levels around $86 and $79. That is why I see $75-$100 as the most reasonable accumulation zone. The valuation story is also another reason to wait. At $139.26, SpaceX is worth roughly $1.82 trillion, or 97.5 times its 2025 revenue. Even at $100, it would still carry a $1.31 trillion valuation and trade at around 70 times revenue. So, SpaceX could become one of the greatest company ever built, but even a great company can be a bad investment at the wrong price.

  • soypaulco
    Paul (@soypaulco) reported

    I genuinely appreciate @Cloudflare while working on an demo project using D1, I forgot to flip an ENV and somehow wrote ~142M rows in overusage. An impressively rookie mistake. Support cleared the charge after I explained it. Huge shoutout to Jacob from support for helping me!

  • Sophia_Crypto
    Sophia dev 🤓 (@Sophia_Crypto) reported

    @Lovable We have a bug. We use Cloudflare turnstile for our app sign in but on your windows desktop app it won’t pass / validate despite all your URLs whitelisted in cloudflare.

  • 0xbeinginvested
    BeingInvested (@0xbeinginvested) reported

    HOW NOXA PROJECT MADE $10M IN 7 DAYS AND GHOSTED This might be the most unserious project to ever make serious money. Here’s the playbook: Noxa raised $0 from VCs and launched their token on a network nobody had ever heard of Been live since 2024, and literally no one talked about them until Robinhood showed up. Then in one week on the Robinhood chain, they made $10,000,000 (10 million) In 7 days. But instead of scaling, it all fell apart. They paused new token launches to stop vamp attacks. Their main domain went down from a Cloudflare issue. Then they diverted 100% of fees to creators and pools. Launched a new site that people are calling a potential drainer. And the internal drama?Insane. The Noxa deployer and website are owned by a random dev. The Noxa fees wallet? Goes straight to the founder's wallet The deployer asked for a split. Founder said no. So the deployer turned deploying OFF, then turned platform fees OFF. $10M in a week. And now the project is a total fumble. This is crypto in 2026.

  • devsandip
    Sandip Dev (@devsandip) reported

    holy **** @Glassdoor and @indeed all i wanted was to read a few interview questions for a particular company on glassdoor. now i have spent the last 10 minutes, filling 2 otp, 5 cloudflare capthas, yes/ok/continue on like 2 dozen screens and you still want more info. **** you

  • kwakhare5
    Karan (@kwakhare5) reported

    rate limits on LLM APIs are brutal spent the last hour mapping groq 429 errors in a cloudflare worker just to return a pretty json toast instead of crashing the content scriptsmall details but necessary fr

  • yichuan_drive
    一川drive 🔴 (@yichuan_drive) reported

    @srinigoes WTF... Where have u even found that stuff? 🤯 Yeah, I heard stories that some sites can contain fake cloudflare stuff where it can steal your data... Stay SAFU man

  • sherifpeterson
    Sherif Peterson (@sherifpeterson) reported

    Bots just passed humans on the web. Cloudflare puts it at 57.5% of all traffic, a year before they expected it. Run that forward 5 years: browsing mostly disappears. Sites will turn into machine-readable endpoints with a thin human front. Agents do the visiting. Everything gets abundant except attention. Scarcity moves to the human side. Verified-human platforms. Content with a person visibly behind it. Same thing that happened to handmade goods after factories the cheap version wins volume, the human version wins price. At that point a company's personality isn't branding. It's the moat. Creating has never been this cheap. Getting noticed has never been this expensive. Most people will scroll past this stat. That's kind of the point

  • J7K_dev
    J7K (@J7K_dev) reported

    @TheThomHart damn 26 domains, i thought i was doing bad with my 20. youre giving cloudflare a run for their money here ha

  • derpy01
    Chris baker (@derpy01) reported

    @marx1verstappen @SSolarite Sure, not with the concept of DNS, but any service that uses that DNS, which is cloudflare and runs most the internet, will not work properly

  • im_payam
    Payam (@im_payam) reported

    This is the FASTEST way I've found to ship. Built for coding agents in terminal. Here’s the setup: - Get a cheap VPS (16 or 8GB) - Install Tailscale, block ALL traffic except Tailscale - Install Claude Code on the VPS - get a domain on Cloudflare - grab Cloudflare API token and pass to Claude - ask Claude to connect the domain to the server through Cloudflare's proxy (do not open ports) - Setup your site with Next.js, or vanilla JS + HTML - Use SQLite for database. (it's just a file) - ask claude: "Setup Restic to nightly backup DB and .env to R2" That's it. you are now the fastest and less error prone setup to build real products with agents. - Zero platform lock-in - no crazy bills from Supabase - no timeouts from Vercel - scales to millions with no limits - build it, restart service, it's live! just copy paste this to Claude to get started.

  • Serenity
    Serenity (@Serenity) reported

    @D3vAaron @Cloudflare do your research, many people have had this happen to them due to competition. maybe you've never had a successful business before? stick to making a ****** VPS company

  • pb_steele
    Peter Steele (@pb_steele) reported

    @jxnlco Ive used it twice now. I had to tell the model to rewrite my project in plain PHP and JS. While its cool to see it running, I don't need it up on a site like that as I run everything local until im ready to deploy. I even told it to use PHP and JS only, and it still went ahead and created a D1 database, used cloudflare workers, etc, despite my plan never saying to use it. So had to have it rewrite it all onto something that I could deploy to my shared host, which is what I told it I was going to do before it ever wrote a single line of code. I like the idea behind sites, but it shouldnt just decide to use them without me explicitly stating thats what I want. . .

  • EMYokay
    Emely (@EMYokay) reported

    @ATKINGDOM @NoirZarina is your site down? cant log in. error 502 cloudflare

  • Kaisei_Daloren
    KaiseiDeer (@Kaisei_Daloren) reported

    **** cloudflare I can't signin to any of my accounts and have tried all the suggested things I have to use incognito mode now.

  • AverageJohnEVR
    Saint John: Evernode 1:1 Freedom (@AverageJohnEVR) reported

    @BitcoinBombadil It has nothing to do with payments x) It actually originate from the creator of BitcoinJS and its purpose is to allow decentralized executions on-chain (multisign) Back in the days people wanted to automate functions, so for example, if you wanted to send fiat to a paypal account and get bitcoin automatically on your bitcoin wallet, then you would need a way to make that into an automated thing. This method would also allow to replace human beings and the human factor from standing in the way. A lot about Bitcoin originates to payments, when it came people wanted to use it for purchases and automated operations. Evernode solves these challenges without interfering with the original technology, it just executes whatever you want, based on whatever you chose. It also replaces traditional hosting with decentralized hosting (instead of having **** behind cloudflare and on jeff bezos servers, you spread it across the globe)

  • NaorisProtocol
    Naoris Protocol (@NaorisProtocol) reported

    @Weaver_Labs @Cloudflare Fair parallel. Telecom had to retrofit a live network with millions of legacy devices already in the field. A chain built with ML-DSA-87 at genesis skips that coordination problem entirely, there's no fleet of old signers to bring along.

  • 47fucb4r8c69323
    47fucb4r8curb4fc8f8r4bfic8r (@47fucb4r8c69323) reported

    Watching Codex control Chrome to copy Terminal commands from a Cloudflare support page that it then executes feels both amazing and really stupid at the same time. Like, wow, this is true AI but then also, wtf, why can’t just the one computer tell the other computer directly what to do and it does it?

  • cineplore
    Noorul Ali (@cineplore) reported

    Bots have shat on the Internet. Every website I visit does Cloudflare not-a-bot verification, wasting 10 seconds on each load. Happens in @Nature, @MerriamWebster, @CambridgeWords and more. Terrible UX.