Cloudflare status: hosting issues and outage reports
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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.
- Domains (39%)
- Cloud Services (26%)
- Hosting (16%)
- Web Tools (13%)
- E-mail (6%)
Live Outage Map
The most recent Cloudflare outage reports came from the following cities:
| City | Problem Type | Report Time |
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Domains | 13 days ago |
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Cloud Services | 24 days ago |
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Domains | 27 days ago |
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Hosting | 1 month ago |
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1 month ago | |
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Web Tools | 1 month ago |
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:
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SoaD_Aerials 🌎 (@soad_aerials) reported@RUG_MAGNET Cloudflare problem has already been solved
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Stephen Cefali 🇺🇸🇺🇦🇵🇭 (@Sangeli7) reported@ibocodes I ended up migrating workers off Cloudflare to Fly because I had too many OOM errors on random things. The node server used half the memory just to run the app. 128 MB just doesn’t give you enough headroom. But I still love Cloudflare.
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Anton Saǔčyk (@sensuniama) reportedCloudflare just announced the Monetization Gateway - a tool to charge AI agents for any resource behind @cloudflare via @x402scan. Agentic traffic can't be monetized via ads, making micropayments the obvious solution. So many businesses are completely missing this new customer base.
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Exci (@ai_exci) reported@ZubairIbnZamir @Cloudflare @CloudflareDev Down again today. 7 hours now.
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vx-underground (@vxunderground) reportedA lot of malware campaigns use CloudFlare to mask their C2 infrastructure. They do this for a few reasons, but the primary reason is that it delays the inevitable of their C2 being taken down. The malware developers using CloudFlare isn't necessarily bad, and it isn't necessarily good, it's just a known thing that people abuse. Yes, CloudFlare did their job. CloudFlare takes down malware infrastructure a lot, despite people saying CloudFlare doesn't take any action, because CloudFlare is inundated with both legitimate and illegitimate takedown requests and reports daily. The daily reports they receive are (probably) in the millions daily. If they didn't want to hide behind CloudFlare, the malware developers could also have used a compromised website (very common), or Discord, or Google docs, or Spotify, or ... basically pick a website and service and it can be abused with enough elbow grease. The easiest, fastest, and easily configurable method is generic host with CloudFlare. When the domain is taken down, or CloudFlare takes it down, they simple spin up new infrastructure with a new CloudFlare account and operations resume as normal.
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Mr Bones (@feelsrattlin) reportedCloudflare is down so I’m up
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Easy简单点 (@Easyidea_) reported@Cloudflare I still think that a small group can not build a protocol- level product like x402 payment. Unless it can solve specific problems in B2B system.
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Tate Johnston (@cheurouge) reportedDoes it support Cloudflare?
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📷 Daniel 📷 (@danyelgphoto) reported@AWSSupport Hi AWS Support. I'm stuck in a loop with a copyright infringement report. Cloudflare identified Amazon as the hosting provider and forwarded my DMCA, but AWS Trust & Safety replied that they couldn't identify any AWS resource and referred me back to Cloudflare. Is there any way to escalate this or have Trust & Safety review the case again? I have the case number if needed.
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zyn laden 🇺🇸🥋 (@ho_chi_zyn) reported@thijstriemstra @vxunderground @Cloudflare Grass is dangerous too bro, got my **** sprayed up with permethrin and picardirin on me skin and I'm still seeing ticks on my socks
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Diego Artiles (@dartilesm) reportedCloudflare Agents SDK v0.17.0: background sub-agents that survive deploys, interrupted tool-call repair, and a unified runTurn API. Most agent frameworks treat a crash as expected. This one doesn't. Are you building on something this durable?
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CR1337 (@CR1337) reportedMore than 500,000 domains were wrongly blocked in Spain 🇪🇸 between January and June 2026. Why? Because they nuked thousands of shared IPs used by Cloudflare, Amazon etc., in order to take down a bunch of piracy sites, which showed La Liga's football games. Human rights organizations like Amnesty International, Greenpeace, government websites, random businesses, everything down, because powerful people think they can dictate what the internet shows and what not. "If you want to bypass these broad regional blocks, using the best VPNs is increasingly becoming a necessity for Spanish internet users trying to maintain access to the open web." Governments will try to normalize censorship like this, today it is 'just' about football, tomorrow... you get the picture. Use a VPN!
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トム (@tomingtoming) reported@Cloudflare Japanese UI layout issue in Zero Trust onboarding. The "Get Started" button text is clipped and the button is rendered almost invisible on Chrome. The onboarding cannot be discovered unless the user clicks the empty area.
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AI News (@ainewsusa) reported📌 The details: Cloudflare and AWS both implemented x402 stablecoin micropayments at their edge networks within two weeks. The open protocol under the Linux Foundation revives HTTP 402 for agent-to-service payments with sub-cent transaction costs. Coinbase reports 169 million transactions in year one. Enterprise tax and invoicing gaps remain unresolved. By Steef-Jan Wiggers
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Rahul Karajgikar (@Road_Kill11) reportedso i tried self hosting observability myself on AWS turns out codex + terraform + aws + cloudflare is insane was able to set up clickhouse running on an m6g.large instance, connect it to EBS volume (for local disk) and s3 (cold storage), set up all the ALB/VPC etc. network stuff, and wire it up to my domain on cloudflare with very little effort - about 3 high level steps and about 30 mins of active effort: 1. step 1: asked codex to tell me all the api key/manual configuration i need to do. here i had to set up aws iam, and do some manual work on cloudflare to create apps/api keys/separated for dev/****, and connect the domain name i wanted to the clickhouse endpoint i would use after step 1, my agent was able to access my aws account with ssm after i signed in. 2. step 2: prompted a /goal to setup the entire infrasturcture stack using terraform + scripts, then deploy clickhouse + OTEL collector on the ec2 instance. codex then worked for 5 hours, wrote the entire code to set up the infra in terraform, deployed it with terraform CLI + some custom scripts, verified/tested that clickhouse was deployed and working fine with the local ssm connectivity after that, i asked codex to write some scripts for me to monitor my ec2 instance health, test scripts for verifying that logs/metrics/traces/spans etc. work properly and a few other scripts for making it easy to monitor/maintain the instance then i wired it into @dexto_ai, which was pretty easy, i just had to swap out the collector config to use my new clickhouse endpoint. it's working pretty insanely, and now i no longer need to deal with arbitrary caps on traces anymore. i can just scale my ec2 instance up when i need it, and use my startup AWS credits ($67 a month). mostly i cared about traces/spans anyway, and less about fancy monitoring features, so this is an incredible unlock compared to paying over $100 + usage based pricing on sentry/datadog etc.
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One&OnlyAarav (@WaterAarav) reportedClaude = coding. ($20/mo) Shypmenta = fully automates all platforms below($6/yr) 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. Building has genuinely never been this affordable, and rarely this effortless either.
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Anto (@anto_edd) reportedIf your sign-up page doesn’t have Cloudflare Turnstile… bots are probably signing up before real users do. Fake accounts. Wasted verification emails. Burnt email quota. ~10 mins to add. One of the highest ROI security fixes for any SaaS. Personally experienced this issue. What are you using?
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ashishdev (@ashishbdev_) reportedRetired Disabled Army combat vet, no coding background. 250 iterations with Claude turned a 17KB prototype into a shipped tank game Vibe Tanks, free browser game, one 130KB HTML file. Built entirely with Claude in the web interface. I acted as director and QA, never wrote code myself. What Claude did: 60Hz deterministic sim, procedural graphics, a synthesized soundtrack that speeds up as matches heat up, humanized AI opponent, stats, trophies, PWA install, and a Cloudflare Worker feedback backend. What I did: spec every feature, test every build on real devices, reject what failed, keep a byte-identical rollback before every change. Claude shipped silent bugs more than once. A self-recursing audio compressor killed performance for days until we instrumented the frame loop to hunt it.
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varun singh (@varunsingh__7) reported@wshxnv @Cloudflare agreed tho flyctl aint all that bad
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fr1ko.eth (@fr1ko_eth) reported@world_xyz @worldnetwork @Cloudflare don't worry world network has no users ily
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Yevhen 🇺🇦🇳🇱 · AI Search SEO (@YevhenNL) reportedPeak irony: 1M+ Cloudflare customers flipped 'Block AI Bots' to protect their content. On Sept 15 that toggle starts blocking Googlebot at the network level, because Google won't split its search and training crawlers. Block AI, choke your own crawl access. Is your toggle on?
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Boring Engineer (@boringeng) reportedLast 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.
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Christopher Young (@Christo28231393) reported@BlockchainPill @jerrybanfield True, but I don’t think it comes purely from crypto speculation. Social monetisation, on-chain business apps, or parallel systems that actually replace legacy infrastructure. A fully on-chain DNS and compute layer would practically sell itself with real adoption especially next time AWS, Cloudflare, or CrowdStrike goes down.
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SLeNDeR_KiLLeR | Xeno VTuber (@SLeNDeR_KiLL3R) reported@ChainsawMan4DBD It's not an issue only with me sadly, cloudflare is having issues and I can't see when it's going to be back up
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Milsim Rooster (@UdNtC4r3AnYwHaY) reportedScanner/honeypot logger: Last 24h: 10 scanner-probe hits. Since midnight CT: 2. Logged sources include NL, US, HK, and ID. Biggest caught bucket: NL / Limited Network LTD probing hidden config paths. Main bot/challenge countries from Cloudflare: KR, HK, IT, JP, CA, with Italy hitting lots of PHP/WordPress-looking junk.
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Vaibhav Vashist | | "base.eth" (@Vaibhav17890799) reported📷 Cloudflare new Monetization Gateway lets any site, API, or MCP tool behind their network charge agents per-request settling onchain, no billing stack required. @base @buildonbase
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smrati tiwari (@smratitiwa86867) reportedSomeone made a GitHub repo of every AI API that's actually free forever. Not "free trial." Not "$5 credit then we bill you." Free free. No card. 24k+ stars, updated constantly. I've been paying for API calls like an idiot. Here's what's inside The rule that makes it trustworthy: trials that expire are listed in a totally separate section. The "Free Providers" list is only the permanent tiers. No landmines. The heavy hitters, with real numbers: → Google AI Studio — Gemini 3.x Flash, no card → Groq — Llama, Qwen, gpt-oss, 30 req/min → Cerebras — fastest inference alive, 30 req/min → Cloudflare Workers AI — 10k neurons/day, runs Llama/Qwen/Gemma → OpenRouter — Nemotron, Qwen3-coder, poolside, all :free Most are OpenAI-SDK compatible. Which means: swap the base_url → paste the key → pick a model → done Same code you already wrote. Drop it into Cursor, aider, Claude Code, whatever. Zero refactor. Then the bonus round — the "trial credits" section: Fireworks, Baseten, Nebius, Hyperbolic, SambaNova... $1–$30 each in free credits. Drain the permanent tiers first, then farm these. One README replaces hours of tab-hopping through pricing pages. Links on comment 👇
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Gyana (@GyanaR_) reported@SimonHoiberg Just use cloudflare, and never worry abour pricing
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spaghetti.sol (@spagsol) reportedYes, Cloudflare had issues again
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SoaD_Aerials 🌎 (@soad_aerials) reportedPeople were really thinking Cloudflare and phishing problem was real?!?! 🤯 Sometimes I don’t get it, for real…