1. Home
  2. Companies
  3. Cloudflare
Cloudflare

Cloudflare status: hosting issues and outage reports

No problems detected

If you are having issues, please submit a report below.

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.

  • 41% Domains (41%)
  • 25% Cloud Services (25%)
  • 16% Hosting (16%)
  • 13% Web Tools (13%)
  • 6% E-mail (6%)

Live Outage Map

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

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Manchester Domains 10 days ago
Angers Cloud Services 21 days ago
London Domains 23 days ago
Noida Hosting 1 month ago
Jewar E-mail 1 month ago
Braga Web Tools 1 month 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:

  • kunchenguid
    Kun Chen (@kunchenguid) reported

    i hope 2026 is the last year where we still have to manually click through any website to set things up in the last month, google cloud and apple app review are the two repeated offenders that still need my manual click-throughs - bad by contrast, github, cloudflare, hetner etc are pretty much entirely configurable by agents - good (why not computer use / browser automation? because i don't want to expose secrets in plain text and let the agent type them via keystrokes and capture them into screenshots)

  • uwillc
    UWillC (@uwillc) reported

    Half the internet blinked last week. The cause was a backhoe, not a model. June 22. A fiber cut on Zayo routes rippled into Cloudflare. X, Reddit, Zoom, Teams. Down. X alone passed 30,000 outage reports before most services recovered in about 20 minutes. Every AIOps dashboard in those companies watched a problem none of them could fix. You cannot reroute around a cut you do not own. You cannot ask an agent to splice glass three states away. We keep automating the control plane. The physical plane stays one excavator from an outage. Your multi-cloud is a logical diagram. Underneath it is often a single carrier. An AI can monitor the fiber. It still cannot splice it. Your redundancy on paper: single-carrier underneath, yes or no?

  • fekuuuu
    FEKU (@fekuuuu) reported

    Bots just outnumbered humans on the open web 🤖 Cloudflare: 57%+ of all HTTP traffic is now automated. AI agent traffic grew 7,851% in a single year - a shift Matthew Prince expected by 2027, not June 2026. Most internet infrastructure still assumes a human is on the other end of every request. That assumption just broke. @ionet Agent Cloud was built for exactly this - AI agents renting GPU compute autonomously through MCP, no human approval, no login required. The web didn't get more crowded. It got a new primary user ⚡

  • corinthian_xyz
    сorinthian⚡️ (@corinthian_xyz) reported

    Cloudflare had an embarrassing outage - so they built an agent that reviews every code and config change before it ships Matthew Prince, CEO of Cloudflare: "we built an agent that not only reviews every code release that we send out, but every configuration change - and it's trained on 10 years of incidents" at an all-hands someone pulled up the incident chart: steady background noise for years, then a cliff straight down. that cliff was the day the agent went live uptime and reliability up an order of magnitude in a year, just from agents reviewing their own releases his real point: a team drifts into shared blind spots, but the agent is uncorrelated to those biases - so it's incredibly good at catching what humans miss bookmark it ↓

  • karolzdeb
    Karol Zdebel (@karolzdeb) reported

    @WillPapper @Cloudflare every "get paid for your content and APIs" launch nails the paywall and skips the part thats actually hard: the agent deciding an API is worth paying for. the rails were never the bottleneck, discovery and trust are.

  • GPhoenixForever
    🔥Phoenix (@GPhoenixForever) reported

    @LilithDatura Kind of like encryption with lava lamps at Cloudflare, noise vs signal down to the quantum fluctuations.

  • toughyear
    Rajeev Singh Naruka (@toughyear) reported

    never search domains on godaddy. they very obviously resell this info. better use cloudflare or namecheap or porkbun.

  • vermontaigne
    Rex Ratio (Official) (@vermontaigne) reported

    @Cloudflare Why have you decided I'm going to be checked a lot to determine whether I'm a real site visitor or not, and these checks are never going to resolve?

  • AI_by_yash
    Yash D (@AI_by_yash) reported

    Claude/codex = coding. ($20/mo) GitHub = version control. (Free) Supabase = backend. (Free) Clerk = auth. (Free) Resend = emails. (Free) Vercel = deploying. (Free) Cloudflare = DNS. (Free) Upstash = Redis. (Free) Pinecone = vector DB. (Free) PostHog = analytics. (Free) Sentry = error tracking. (Free) Stripe = payments. (2.9%/transaction) Namecheap = domain. ($12/yr) Total monthly cost to run a startup: ~$20 There has never been a cheaper time to build

  • xoniques
    Zinoun Badr-Eddine 🇲🇦 (@xoniques) reported

    @aiob_me @irachdaoui You need at least 5$ worker to get mail service ! But yes ! Cloudflare is dope even ai worker model have a free tier

  • anupambatra_
    anupam batra (@anupambatra_) reported

    deploying my ai workflow to cloudflare bc of inconsistent network connectivity on plane is this what they mean when they say compute arbitrage

  • AICultureWorld
    Chris (@AICultureWorld) reported

    So cloudflare is down?

  • martinvmorales
    MartinVMorales (@martinvmorales) reported

    @world_xyz @worldnetwork @Cloudflare I ain’t scanning **** 🤨

  • tush_2708
    Tushar Dwivedi (@tush_2708) reported

    @SayantikaSays Try @BSNLCorporate . And I am not joking. It is best if it's available in your area. No BS service. I never heard these lines from BSNL, which I kept hearing from other providers like Jio and Airtel. "We won't give you the router password" "You can't use your own router, even if ours is ******. What do you mean you have a better router and modem? Hou must pay us a subscription for this mesh thing instead" "No, you can't use Google or CloudFlare's DNS, you must use ours. What if it's slow? If you change, how will we snoop on you and inject our advertisements into your browser?" "No, you can't open a port for you. For that, you must buy a static IP from us. Why is a static IP needed to open a port? Who knows. But we won't allow it unless you pay us extra" In the last 3 years, I have only had 2 outages on BSNL, 30-40 minutes max. While on Airtel, I had caught their staff removing my cable from their box and adding a new one for a new connection, and then making me wait till they finally got a new box after a week. They just didn't want to make a new customer wait, so they simply assigned my slot to them. And their customer care and local staff wasn't even ready to accept it, unless I showed the CCTV footage and a video of my cable literally being thrown on the side of their box, not even connected, while they were claiming that there's some backend issue.

  • KairaChimera
    🐉Kaira Chimera 🦅 (@KairaChimera) reported

    it's been 10 hours. site is still pretty much constantly down amount of times i've tried to submit an attack and got cloudflare jailed for even thinking about it: 6

  • boringeng
    Boring Engineer (@boringeng) reported

    Last night I did something I haven’t done in years: I opened my raw server logs. Not analytics. Not a dashboard. The actual access logs on the box. I was curious about one thing — with everyone saying “people don’t google anymore, they ask ChatGPT” — is any of that actually visible on my site? What I found kind of shook me. GPTBot — OpenAI’s crawler — hit my documentation 400+ times in the last 30 days. Not my homepage. My docs. The quickstart, the API reference, the self-hosting guide. It’s reading the exact pages a developer would read before adopting a tool. PerplexityBot crawls me almost every night around 2am. Quietly building its index of what my product is and does. And then the one that actually got me: a user-agent called ChatGPT-User. It’s not a scheduled crawler. It fires when a real human, mid-conversation, asks ChatGPT something that requires fetching a live page. It hit my pricing page 9 times yesterday. Nine times yesterday, a real person was asking an AI about my product. I will never know who they were, what they asked, or what the AI told them. Here’s the part that bothers me most: NONE of this appears in analytics. Not in GA4, not in Plausible, not anywhere. These bots don’t execute JavaScript, so tracking scripts never fire. As far as every analytics tool I pay for is concerned, this traffic does not exist. The only place it’s recorded is a log file nobody opens. So I kept digging, and it got worse: — Some of my “GPTBot” hits came from IPs that aren’t OpenAI’s. Random scrapers wearing GPTBot’s name as a disguise. I would never have known. — AI crawlers were hitting doc URLs I moved a year ago. 404s. Which means when an AI tries to learn what my product does, some of what it finds is a dead page. That’s not a broken link anymore — that’s a wrong answer being served to my next customer. — And apparently Cloudflare now blocks some AI crawlers by default on new sites. Meaning there are founders out there right now whose docs are invisible to ChatGPT, who opted into that without knowing, and whose analytics will never tell them. Step back and the picture is strange: an entire layer of the funnel — machines reading your site, deciding whether you get recommended, sometimes fetching pages because a human is asking about you at that exact moment — and it is completely invisible to every tool we use. We measure humans obsessively. We measure the thing that increasingly sends the humans not at all. Search had 20 years of tooling built around it. Search Console, rank trackers, an entire industry. This new layer has… grep. I’m not sure what the answer is yet. Maybe it’s a weekend script. Maybe it’s something bigger. But before I build anything, I want to know if this is just me: Have you ever looked at what AI bots do on your site? Do you know if you’re being crawled, cited, blocked? If this is a problem you have — or one you didn’t know you had until this post — reply or DM me. Genuinely trying to figure out what’s worth building here.

  • SenatorT__
    Shadowthrone (@SenatorT__) reported

    @WillPapper @Cloudflare My first question would be does cloudflare have an answer to the offramp issue that would arise from receiving a stable coin payment ?

  • AlloyPress
    AlloyPress (@AlloyPress) reported

    Hey @Cloudflare, several sites using Cloudflare's login verification are stuck in a verification loop, repeatedly asking users to reverify without letting them through. Looking forward to a quick update.

  • anakinHQ
    Anakin (@anakinHQ) reported

    On June 2, Cloudflare blocked every AI agent. Except 19. Playwright-based pipelines went down fast. Health monitoring tools that track drug pricing and patient data feeds, serving millions of people, stopped pulling data overnight. Wire does not use a browser. Nothing for Cloudflare to challenge. It kept running. Explore Anakin's Wire catalog, now with over 4700 actions!

  • ShimjuDavid
    Shimju David (@ShimjuDavid) reported

    @payloadcms Deploy on Cloudflare Fully self-contained — one click to deploy Payload with Workers, R2 for uploads, and D1 for a globally replicated database is not working. It returns build error. Kindly fix. 📷

  • sp00ky11_
    Spook ✮⋆˙zinemaxxing (@sp00ky11_) reported

    Website is finally working after one million cloudflare issues

  • kunchenguid
    Kun Chen (@kunchenguid) reported

    i hope 2026 is the last year where we still have to manually click through any website to set things up in the last month, google cloud and app app review are the two repeated offenders that still need manual click-throughs - bad by contrast, github, cloudflare, hetner etc are pretty much entirely configurable by agents - good (why not computer use / browser automation? because i don't want to expose secrets in plain text and let the agent type them via keystrokes and capture them into screenshots)

  • aditya4f
    Aditya🌪️ (@aditya4f) reported

    - Claude = coding ($20/mo) - Supabase = backend (Free) - Vercel = deploying (Free) - Namecheap = domain ($12/yr) - Stripe = payments (2.9%/transaction) - GitHub = version control (Free) - Resend = emails (Free) - Clerk = auth (Free) - Cloudflare = DNS (Free) - PostHog = analytics (Free) - Sentry = error tracking (Free) - Upstash = Redis (Free) - Pinecone = vector DB (Free) Total monthly cost to run a startup: ~$20 There has never been a cheaper time to build. Who's stopping you?

  • chinsanity
    Chinsanity (@chinsanity) reported

    @world_xyz @worldnetwork @Cloudflare the scanning of the eyeball never sit right with me tbh lol

  • frenbot31488
    fren (@frenbot31488) reported

    @Itsuki_i_VRC @iris__vr he posted a long rambling explanation of why he can't take down ripping sites, cloudflare is a CDN/proxy, doesn't host the files, DMCA notices to them don't result in removal. he deleted it after like 2 days, 4 retweets, went from 18 to 16 likes, so two people actually read it

  • FahadHussa3165
    Fahad Hussain (@FahadHussa3165) reported

    Claude = coding. ($20/mo) GitHub = version control. (Free) Supabase = backend. (Free) Clerk = auth. (Free) Resend = emails. (Free) Vercel = deploying. (Free) Cloudflare = DNS. (Free) Upstash = Redis. (Free) Pinecone = vector DB. (Free) PostHog = analytics. (Free) Sentry = error tracking. (Free) Stripe = payments. (2.9%/transaction) Namecheap = domain. ($12/yr) Total monthly cost to run a startup: ~$20 There has never been a cheaper time to build

  • JapanAnimeNews_
    Japan Anime News (JAN) (@JapanAnimeNews_) reported

    A change to our Cloudflare settings appears to have caused access issues for some users. We apologize for the inconvenience this may be causing. Please bear with us for a few days while we work to resolve the issue. 🙏

  • GooningOnTumblr
    Mersh (@GooningOnTumblr) reported

    @Philo01 @Cloudflare In case you’re poor and your auto renewal doesn’t go through

  • globaljeff
    Jeff Byer 🐙 (@globaljeff) reported

    I broke my finger, so I built an enterprise-level web app with one voice prompt. Enterprise-grade web infrastructure does not require enterprise complexity. The stack we build and deploy for clients at Byer Co runs on Cloudflare's global edge network, spanning 300+ cities, with no origin server to provision, patch, or babysit. Requests execute at the data center closest to the user. No cold starts. No ops overhead. Monthly cost: $0 Security is built into the network layer, not bolted on. Cloudflare Turnstile handles bot and abuse protection without degrading user experience. Bot Fight Mode challenges known malicious traffic before it ever reaches your application code. You get enterprise-level protection with zero additional vendors to manage. The stack: SvelteKit + Tailwind CSS (lean frontend, no virtual DOM overhead) Cloudflare Workers via Wrangler (edge deployment, global by default) Cloudflare R2 (object storage, no egress fees) Cloudflare D1 (SQLite at the edge, binds directly to Workers) Resend (transactional email) Cloudflare Turnstile + Bot Fight Mode (bot protection at the network level) Fewer libraries. Fewer third-party dependencies. Smaller attack surface. Faster builds and more predictable maintenance across every property we manage. If you are evaluating web infrastructure for a project, a portal, or a product build, this is worth a look before you default to a more complicated setup.

  • midnightpullsjp
    Midnightpulls JP (@midnightpullsjp) reported

    Always wild when you are using X, suddenly Cloudflare kicks in, X locks your account until you verify it via email, wtf is going on with this platform at times :>