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.

  • 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 1 day ago
Manchester Domains 22 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:

  • memselon
    Umut Sevinc (@memselon) reported

    @levelsio Thanks for this advice @levelsio im working on a new SaaS for Framer and i got this problem, it is better than cloudflare ?

  • petervmeijgaard
    Peter van Meijgaard (@petervmeijgaard) reported

    This is where it got wild. We got smacked with 405 errors, blocked GraphQL calls, Cloudflare walls, and local NixOS environment quirks Every time the door slammed shut, Grok adapted instantly, eventually pivoting to extracting real browser cookies to bypass the basic blocks 💪

  • anelgarhy
    Anas (@anelgarhy) reported

    Stopping the bad guys with Cloudflare: 2,614 malicious requests blocked or challenged in the last month #cloudflare

  • onlyawassie
    OnlyAWassie (@onlyawassie) reported

    @CryptoTomYT @vladtenev Lockin? builders getting Problems because of the copyrights from Rh cloudflare shutting them off if they get reported how you wanna Build something on this chain

  • LoveNvrButGood
    Function True for Catholic & US and all(private) (@LoveNvrButGood) reported

    Placeholder Postion4 any Cloudflare is not Internet. "They run Colossus besides Position4 many - at not primary function - is the enemy. Internet as a vehicle against the products also - just time then it's problem as it was that motivated creation of America." This function to facilitate that. Revolution center - said in GOD.

  • Alexvx_nft
    ALEXYZ (@Alexvx_nft) reported

    YOU'RE BURNING API DOLLARS ON TASKS THAT HAVE A FREE PATH. MOST BUILDERS USE EXACTLY ZERO OF THEM. — Zefi mapped every major lab's free tier for a week (verified July 2026) most people pay before they even check what's unclaimed: > Google AI Studio · ~1,500 req/day · 1M tokens/min · no card > Groq · 14,400 req/day · 300+ tok/sec > OpenRouter · ~26 free models · one API key > OpenAI + Anthropic · $5 trial credits each > startup stack · $25K + $25K API · up to $350K Google Cloud > student stack · Cursor Pro + Perplexity + Copilot = $0 full dev setup — the Claude Code hack is the part nobody bookmarks: point ANTHROPIC_BASE_URL at Groq / Cloudflare / OpenRouter agentic loop on free third-party inference not official. works anyway. — same week GPT-5.6 tier routing went viral and loops guides hit 1.2M views CT still argues model scores while leaving $440+ in free access on the table the leak isn't which model you picked it's which free path you never claimed full map quoted below

  • null_meridian
    Null Meridian (@null_meridian) reported

    @ProMint_X @Noxa_Fi They can implement cloudflare basically by few clicks and it will never go down due to DDOS (just basic stuff for overall understanding)

  • ematt
    Matt Gibbs (@ematt) reported

    Meta gets to scrape our work for free to train its AI. We get the compute bill, engineering cleanup and downtime. Its crawler knocked one of my sites offline in the process. In a 45-minute window, meta-externalagent made ~1,210 requests. 849, roughly 70%, ended as 499s: the crawler opened them, then abandoned them. The burst hit hundreds of long-tail dynamic URLs. At the same time, usage jumped to ~2 CPU cores, memory climbed from under 1 GB to 5.4 GB, V8 exhausted its heap, and four Cloudflare health checks failed. This wasn’t a giant volumetric DDoS, and Cloudflare didn’t fail. Another app on the same server handled 126,000+ edge requests during the same window. The problem was concurrency. Abandoned requests left expensive Redis, Supabase and React rendering work running at the origin. A CDN can cache completed responses. It cannot cancel application work already underway. Our origin should have had stronger backpressure and disconnect cancellation. That’s being fixed. But a weakness in our stack doesn’t make Meta’s crawler behaviour reasonable. Meta gets the AI training material for free. Publishers absorb the compute costs, engineering time and downtime. How is that remotely fair?

  • ekojoecovenant
    ℭ𝔬𝔳𝔢 (@ekojoecovenant) reported

    Spent the day migrating my PR review agent off waitUntil() and onto Cloudflare Queues. Turns out waitUntil() has a silent 30-second ceiling. Learned that the hard way when longer PR reviews just... stopped mid-analysis. Queues fix it properly instead of me hacking around a timeout.

  • woocassh
    Lukasz (@woocassh) reported

    Today I moved away from supabase for SubtitlesFast supabase -> SQLite I used supabase as an experiment last year. It was so easy to setup a db, few clicks barabim barabum and it's done always thought that setting up db instance on server was a pain, passwords, permissions, friction in general so supabase definitely reduced the friction but holy ****, i never realised how much latency it added to my product I moved to SQLite as per papa's @levelsio advice and my app is VISIBLY quicker on the frontend RankGoat is already on SQLite and it's a breeze also debugging with Claude is much easier now note to self: keep it simple stupid just remember to run regular backups to another server and you're golden the next experiment is to try Cloudflare for email I think and shed the Postmark bill, anyone done this yet?

  • CodeWithZeee
    ZEE (@CodeWithZeee) reported

    @boristane @vercel @CloudflareDev I have probably over 300 works and run every Cloudflare project known to man, if you want to stress test this I’d be down

  • macedonovski
    Масе Дон (@macedonovski) reported

    free dns choice not logging open source (for all devices settings network dns set private copy paste from site) #libredns 2 url adresses of 2 links of choice with or without ads - like adblock but cloudflare from an austrian security server.

  • Tzahi458001
    Tzahi (@Tzahi458001) reported

    @BraydenWilmoth @irvinebroque i'm trying to upgrade my cloudflare plan and it keeps failing. i can't deploy my app without cloudflare. this is extremely critical. i urgently need someone to help me with this.

  • 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

  • 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.

  • jackcooldev
    Jack Cooldev (@jackcooldev) reported

    Agent memory has become one of the most crowded corners of AI infrastructure - Cloudflare, open-source projects, and startups have all shipped memory products this year. A launch from last week stands out anyway, because it competes on a different axis: not how much the agent remembers, but whether you can prove and govern what it remembers. AgentPrizm released its AgentMemory platform on July 9, a REST API with MCP support that gives agents persistent memory across sessions, working with Claude Code, Cursor, and any MCP-capable agent. Persistence alone wouldn't be news in this field. What separates this one is the governance layer: every memory carries a confidence score and a validity window, contradictions between old and new facts are handled explicitly, and audit receipts can trace each memory decision back for the user, with right-to-forget controls built in. That design answers the question enterprises actually ask before deployment, which is not "can the agent remember?" but "can I prove what it remembered, and delete what it shouldn't?" Teams in legal, support, and sales automation have been answering that with internal tooling or by not deploying at all.

  • mirrorsrmirror
    mirroring (@mirrorsrmirror) reported

    @HotAisle pretty plz. i even asked the cloudflare ceo a while back but he never answered but someone told me their docker images support anything but haven't tried yet will be trying soon (it can bring you business depending on the software i end up making)

  • Crypto_Jargon
    Crypto Jargon (@Crypto_Jargon) reported

    💥BREAKING: Every major card network just signed onto a payment protocol built for software to pay software, no human involved. The Linux Foundation confirmed the x402 Foundation is now formally governed by 40 members, and Coinbase's original contribution of the protocol is complete. The list of backers is the real headline: Visa, Mastercard, Amex, Stripe, Ripple, Google, Amazon Web Services, Cloudflare, Circle, and both the Solana and Stellar foundations, among others. Here's the part almost nobody knows. HTTP, the protocol every website runs on, has had a status code sitting unused for thirty years. Code 402, labeled "Payment Required." The web's original architects expected someone would eventually build payments directly into it. Nobody did, because card fees made charging fractions of a cent pointless, so the internet monetized through ads and subscriptions instead. x402 finally uses that code. A server asks for payment, a client sends a stablecoin transfer, usually USDC, and gets the data back in seconds. No account, no card, no prior relationship needed. That's exactly why AI companies care. An autonomous agent can't open a bank account or pass a credit check, but it can sign a transaction. Google already built x402 into its own agent payment system. Cloudflare ships it by default in its agent toolkit. The actual usage is still small, about $24 million moved last month across 75 million payments, averaging 32 cents each. That's nothing next to what Visa or Mastercard move in a single day. But the average payment size is the tell. No card network on earth can process a 32 cent charge profitably. This protocol was built for a kind of commerce that doesn't fit inside the rails these same companies already own, which is exactly why they just joined it instead of competing with it.

  • taigrr
    Tai Groot 🐧 (@taigrr) reported

    So many people hate on @vercel / @Cloudflare for cost but they offer a really great service here People just really like building on nextjs. all in all it's good at being a framework Vercel and cloudflare both do a really good job with their wafs patching vulns before they are public and self hosters have a hard time keeping up, if they even know to.

  • PyDataWizard
    Piyush (@PyDataWizard) reported

    Total monthly cost to run a startup: ~$20 - Claude ($20/mo) = coding - AWS Free Tier = hosting & DB - Vercel = frontend (free) - Stripe = payments (2.9%/txn) - GitHub, Clerk, Cloudflare, Sentry = all free Never been a better time to ship. What’s stopping you? 🚀

  • debayoorr
    Adebayo (@debayoorr) reported

    Cloudflare is still down and somehow I've become a network engineer, a hostage negotiator, and a personal IT department, none of which I signed up for.

  • 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

  • rknkhanna
    Rahul K (@rknkhanna) reported

    you mean 3 people are trying to cancel cloudflare?

  • RobTerrin
    Rob Terrin (@RobTerrin) reported

    @yrechtman Kernel access was really just useful for EDR (Crowdstrike and SentinelOne) and there have been multiple big exits since that gen like Cloudflare, Netskope, Rubrik, Wiz and Armis. If the labs lock down agent access, no cybersecurity company will become the next public company platform like Crowdstrike.

  • Sachin_is_here
    Sachin Joshi (@Sachin_is_here) reported

    Cloudflare also inserted itself at the perfect architectural layer: between users and origin servers. Once traffic already passed through its network, it could offer new products without asking customers to redesign their applications. CDN became the entry point.

  • carquinyolis
    Carqui 🐐 (@carquinyolis) reported

    @thecybersecguru @elhackernet In Spain whole cloudflare proxy IPs get banned with thousand of legitimate and corporate websites because just one seems to stream illegal sports. This is normal for non-technical government judicial powers..... Bad management

  • openwadev
    openwa (@openwadev) reported

    @mddanishyusuf @Cloudflare @Namecheap split between cf and porkbun. dont put all your domains in one basket, especially the one you use to log in to the domain service.

  • EOEboh
    Cap-EO 👨🏾‍💻 (@EOEboh) reported

    The second real problem: backups With Postgres on a managed service, backups are a checkbox. But with SQLite, the database is just a file on my server, and if that server dies, so does my business 🥹 My fix: automatic snapshots shipped to Cloudflare R2 Cheap, but I had to build it myself (there are probably better approaches like a VPS backup).

  • ernesttheaiguy
    Ernest Provo (@ernesttheaiguy) reported

    A 200 OK status does not mean complete data. Cloudflare found a race condition in hyper that truncated responses silently. Data leaders: never trust status alone. Verify payload integrity. #ResponsibleAI #DataStrategy

  • goekhan
    gökhan (@goekhan) reported

    fasted the whole day did some core work at home evening coffee gotta ship at least two other products today is "i just can't feel good if i want see that idea in action" for i am already paying for compute, cloudflare, hetzner, and thousand other APIs kinda funny though you can just function, worker and agent the entire internet into apps that talk to each other yet cannot watch a random world cup match from an ondemand commentator like Peter Drury or Alex Jacques and gotta help yourself with your mediocre homeboys you can have arxiv papers have their own podcast via notebookML but cannot push a likeness soccer commentator via kittenTTS or ElevenLabs API legally