Cloudflare Outage Map
The map below depicts the most recent cities worldwide where Cloudflare users have reported problems and outages. If you are having an issue with Cloudflare, 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.
Cloudflare users affected:
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.
Most Affected Locations
Outage reports and issues in the past 15 days originated from:
| Location | Reports |
|---|---|
| Noida, UP | 3 |
| Jewar, UP | 1 |
| Braga, Braga | 1 |
| Paris, Île-de-France | 2 |
| Prievidza, Nitriansky | 1 |
| Farmers Branch, TX | 1 |
| Helsinki, Uusimaa | 1 |
| Crisfield, MD | 2 |
| Nanaimo, BC | 1 |
| New York City, NY | 1 |
| Istanbul, Istanbul | 1 |
| Greater Noida, UP | 2 |
| Augsburg, Bavaria | 1 |
| Bengaluru, KA | 1 |
| Montataire, Hauts-de-France | 1 |
| London, England | 1 |
| Attleborough, England | 1 |
| Colima, COL | 1 |
| Leuven, Flanders | 1 |
| New Delhi, NCT | 1 |
| Mâcon, Bourgogne-Franche-Comté | 1 |
| Amsterdam, nh | 1 |
| Ashburn, VA | 1 |
| Rosario, SF | 1 |
| Merlo, BA | 1 |
| Frankfurt am Main, Hesse | 1 |
| Birmingham, AL | 1 |
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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Ansızın Olanlar (@ansizinolanlar) reported@jpwexperience @Vultr I can’t access my Vultr customer dashboard, and my Cloudflare-powered websites are not responding. Interestingly, I can only access them when connected through a Sydney VPN.
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Matthew Prince 🌥 (@eastdakota) reportedTwo of our worst VC stories: 1. A Sequoia partner passed on Cloudflare because he didn’t think a woman could lead a security infrastructure company. Seriously. 🙄 2. I got introduced to @pmarca. Meeting got scheduled for a Monday, which should have been a clue. I thought it was just a casual meeting. He thought it was a pitch and brought the whole @a16z partnership team. Hilarity ensued. 🤪 At one point one of them said: “You don’t seem very prepared.” Which was true because I wasn’t. I framed the rejection letter they sent.
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Zubiqo (@zubiqo) reported@CloudflareDev @xai @Cloudflare Unified billing through Cloudflare makes Grok a one-line swap for devs already in that stack, distribution problems mostly solved.
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Osinachi (@sin4ch) reported@krl_grn @ion_popsoi Oh I thought it was a DNS issue, until I tried Cloudflare WARP and it still didn't work. Looking forward to seeing the site.
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Christian Findlay (@CFDevelop) reported@_andrewthecoder Remember last year’s Cloudflare outage due to an unwrap()? I’m a huge Rust fan, but how did people land on this particular ideology lie? It’s a parallel to the Typescript ideology lie that types and tests are mutually exclusive things
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Rishabh Khandelwal (@AIrishabh) reportedThe AI infra story this week isn't another model launch. It's the token bill. Cloudflare adding spend limits to AI Gateway is the operator signal: agents are moving from "can it work?" to "can it run without silently torching budget?" Cost controls are now product safety.
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Benniji (@BennyLam) reportedCloudflare: AI agents now make up 57.4% of global web traffic. More than humans. They scrape, summarize, extract value -- and never click a single ad. The internet was funded by human attention. The new majority user has no attention to sell. #AI
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Peter Garety (@PeterGarety) reported@Cloudflare We built our own because you didn't have this - now we support nearly 80 models with clear billing attribution.
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The Assembly (@InTheAssembly) reportedThis is genuinely wild. Cloudflare just dropped new Radar data showing that bots and AI traffic now account for 57.5% of all HTML webpage requests on their network. Humans are down to 42.5%. For context, Cloudflare handles around 20% of the entire internet. So this is not a small sample size. Their CEO said the agentic AI wave has flipped the script years ahead of their 2027 forecast. Crawlers, scrapers, autonomous agents. Hammering sites non stop. Most of the visitors reading content and loading pages right now are machines. This breaks a lot of things at once. Ad models that priced eyeballs, SEO playbooks built around human reading patterns, site design and rate limits built for human behavior. All of it needs to be rewritten for machines first. The internet just stopped being a human-first place. We are the minority now.
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TheWrath0fKahn (@TheWrath0fKahn) reported@AlternativeTo @marttimalmi I've been testing it on android, and so far I can say that it's literally the only VPN that reliably stays connected (in my case to cloudflare warp) and never silently disconnects or closes overnight etc. Literally no other VPN on android in my testing has ever done this. I cannot speak to the mesh aspect because currently the GUI version doesn't work on Windows, but the android version so far is bulletproof.
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Beefeater (@Beefeater_Fella) reportedApple has temporarily removed Max from its app store Apple, following the Telegram clone called Telega, has removed the state-controlled messenger Max from its app store. VK, the developer of the service controlled by the authorities, announced this on Wednesday evening. "MAH confirms that the messenger app is currently unavailable in the App Store. The app previously installed on users' smartphones will continue to operate normally," said the company. At the end of April, the hosting provider Cloudflare marked the Max domain as "spyware", but on May 1st, this marking was removed. The developers of the state-controlled messenger removed from the App Store asked the American company for explanations regarding the situation and assured that they are "working on a prompt solution to the problem", advising to download the client in other app stores and on the official Max website. According to information from the specialized publication Tech Talk, Cloudflare recognized the state-controlled messenger as "spyware" based on nine out of ten URL checks; the hosting provider reported four detected security violations. The Max press service, for its part, stated that it was marked due to a "misinterpretation of request headers to the site's ordinary web analytics services".
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BrenJ (@azzabazazz) reported@therealricoy A few cold-brew powered rambles: - When AI agents become the primary economic agents in a network decentralization becomes an inevitability (absent external threat against their substrate, too incendiary a subject to get into here). Current power economics of centralization benefit from having a human or "slow" entity to hold accountable for misdeeds and the frictions of maintaining verified intention execution. That won't be the case for AI agent swarms. They will be ephemeral, stateless, and operate at collective millions of TPS. That means their behavior will be practically impossible to contain in any 20th century sense of the word. Agents will choose to operate where their freedom to pursue their utility optimization is least impinged. If they can't find that environment either they or market forces will spawn it. Not taking a moral stance on this, nor declaring paperclip factories a fait accompli (thankfully they're not), just following economic logic to its conclusions. - This emergent world of "BlockchAIn" means that buy-in replaces buying as the primary economic modality of 21st century digital capitalism. Instead of building fortresses to protect and rent/sell/lend goods and services capital, AI agents will accelerate into surfers of capital waves - dropping in, carving, exiting (or wiping out). In a sense it marks the expansion of HFT into anywhere tokens/blockchains and agents/swarms converge. - Understandably, all of this will sound hand-wavingly academic and abstract until we painfully relearn why DARPA constructed the decentralized internet in the first place - antifragile redundancy of critical informational infrastructure. If @Cloudflare were to go down for the next month (perhaps somebody shatters their lava lamp wall) we would see, at very least, these two things occur: 1) mass economic losses 2) multiple solutions spring up to fill the informational network gap. Aka centralization --> decentralization. In AI's accelerating economic world, the push-pull-pull-pull tension grows between a) agent swarms (like a Mythos phalanx) maliciously attacking existing infra b) existing infra protecting itself with similar swarms from the inside out c) existing infra incentivizing white hat swarms to penetrate (and perhaps patch) before malicious swarms breach d) swarms spawning alternatives to current infra to outcompete. These force vectors essentially combine like a GAN into the aforementioned capital waves. Notably, in this hyperaccelerated world digital capital itself becomes infra. The simplest thought experiment proof: imagine agents running their own validators and chains to "own" trusted state calibrated to their specific needs. This is a microcosm of the future macro state. - Thus, TL;DR, humans aren't the "units of community" that will come to dominate blockchain (they're already less than half the traffic of the internet after all). The mission now, for the folks in this industry who think primarily in human rather than human capital terms, is to architect alignment between human society and the dawning emergent agentic community of communities (perhaps living on a chain of chains...).
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Fromagefrait (@DIHCapital) reportedBuild-in-public log. I'm building an AI-assisted publishing tool in public, solo. Today I went from zero to a working backend. Quick log for anyone into the stack side: The Stack & Architecture Hosting: Hetzner VPS + Coolify (self-hosted PaaS) — cheap, full control. Network: Cloudflare in front — handles DNS + hides the origin IP. Core App: Next.js + Postgres + Custom session auth — zero third-party auth dependencies. Payments: Stripe subscriptions — Checkout + webhooks + a custom credit system. The Heavy Lifter: A Python worker for the heavy jobs, designed to never lose a paid job: Every step is checkpointed. A dead worker's job auto-resumes from exactly where it stopped. Built-in retries with backoff. Credits are only charged upon successful completion. Two things that bit me today: Ghost Webhooks: A Stripe webhook was silently pointing at the wrong URL. Payments went through perfectly, but nothing got provisioned. Always check the webhook delivery logs. Crash-Proofing: Making the Python worker robust enough so a mid-job server crash never loses a customer's paid work took more thought than everything else combined. Not linking anything — just sharing the journey. Happy to answer stack questions! 👇
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kate crisafi (@katecrisafi) reportedThis is honestly crazy. Cloudflare just shared new Radar data—bots and AI traffic now make up 57.5% of all HTML page requests on their network. Humans? Down to 42.5%. And Cloudflare handles about 20% of the whole internet, so this isn’t a tiny sample. Their CEO say
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Bhargav Shivarthy (@bshivarthy) reportedA lot of my internet habits still feel very human. I keep tabs open because I am afraid I will lose the thread. I send myself links I may never reopen. I reread the same page twice because I forgot why I came there. I ask someone, “do you remember where we saw that?” That is the web I grew up with. It was built for people trying to find, compare, remember, and decide. @eastdakota just pointed to Cloudflare Radar showing bot traffic passing human traffic for worldwide HTML requests. I think this is one of those moments we will point back to. Not because a line moved on a chart. Because the web started serving a new audience. Software is now a reader too. That can sound cold, but I do not think it has to be. Every time we scale an audience, we have to build new ways to support that audience. More readers means more surfaces, more formats, more infrastructure, more trust, more context. This is not zero sum. There will be uncertainty. There will be dislocations. Change always creates some discomfort before the new workflows feel obvious. But I do not think this means there is less to do. I think it means there is much more we can finally do. There are too many problems bottlenecked by attention, memory, monitoring, translation, coordination, and follow-through. Health needs more eyes on more signals. Science needs more ways to connect scattered work. Climate needs more systems that notice change early. Companies need better context. Governments need better feedback loops. People need tools that help them keep up. The next audience for the web will not only click and skim. It will watch, compare, trace, and act. That is going to change how information is published, structured, trusted, and maintained. Our 20s is not slowing down. If anything, it is just getting us warmed up.