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 |
|---|---|
| Paris, Île-de-France | 2 |
| New York City, NY | 1 |
| Manchester, England | 1 |
| Angers, Pays de la Loire | 1 |
| London, England | 1 |
| Noida, UP | 2 |
| Jewar, UP | 1 |
| Braga, Braga | 1 |
| Prievidza, Nitriansky | 1 |
| Farmers Branch, TX | 1 |
| Helsinki, Uusimaa | 1 |
| Crisfield, MD | 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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TTM ⠞⠺⠊⠝ ⠞⠥⠗⠃⠕ (@twinturbomonkey) reported@egybest_1 No service that matters to me is tied to SMS any more. All the 2FA are tied to app-based auth on phone and computer. Verifications are email-based when available. Cloudflare and mail hosting are paid out of bank accounts with plenty of funds on yearly basis. 🧵
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Unofficial Washington State Wildfire Aware (@Wa_fire_watch) reported@leeshomii That would be because Cloudflare hosting is down. Not on Canvas end.
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justinmiller's cat (@___727__) reportedCloudflare blocks or challenges bad requests from hitting my website. #cloudflare
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Chris AR Blauvelt (@arblauvelt) reported@Raminson17 @Raminson17 have you had this issue again? From my team “We've tested this, and everything is fine on our end. From **** and dev servers. Could be that in that moment, CloudFlare, reCAPTCHA, or Turnstile took a bit more time to resolve, and the actual donation request afterwards timed out and didn't go through.”
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Keith Kaplan (@KeithTradeSmith) reportedCloudflare $NET just notched a new all-time high this week, adding fresh fuel to the bull market in securing the world's AI, computers, and data centers. Back in March, we introduced our Agent Supernova thesis, the idea that AI is now advanced enough to take over everyday tasks, from managing factory schedules to running financial analysis to writing software. Over the next 12 to 24 months, that list keeps growing. Within two years, the number of AI agents operating in the American economy isn't likely to grow 10X or even 1,000X. Try 10,000X. That kind of expansion needs infrastructure, security, and traffic management at scale, and that's exactly where Cloudflare $NET sits. Cloudflare is one of the world's leading Content Delivery Network firms, speeding up website content and cutting latency and bandwidth costs. Add in its cybersecurity services, AI agent management tools, and AI agent transaction services, and Cloudflare starts to look like an AI agent conglomerate. The numbers support the thesis. Cloudflare's revenue grew 29% in 2024 and 30% in 2025. Wall Street projects revenue near $2.79 billion in 2026, roughly 29% growth, rising toward $3.6 billion by 2027. After ten months of sideways consolidation, the stock broke out to new highs today. If the Agent Supernova unfolds as expected, Cloudflare's diversified position in security and agent management should keep driving growth well past this breakout.
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Pinzari Andrei (@PinzariAndrej) reported@Cloudflare Making the exception machine-readable is a meaningful improvement over silently weakening validation. Will Cloudflare publish telemetry on how often EDE 33 is returned and how long exceptions remain active? That would help quantify both operational value and the risk of temporary bypasses becoming sticky.
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Brett Clark (@smokedbaconai) reportedI let a runaway agent loose on infrastructure I didn't fully control, then tried to kill it from the outside. That was the whole spike: a self-improving system is only safe if you can pull the plug when it's running on a box you don't own. A bash-loop agent, zero knowledge it was being watched, dropped into a Cloudflare Sandbox behind a Worker. A separate stub polled its telemetry every 750ms against a hard budget: two steps. The agent blew past. The stub caught the breach at 7.5s and fired a forced kill across the HTTPS boundary in 197ms. It stopped at exactly two steps and never took a third across a 29-second watch. The honest caveat matters more than the win: this is enforcement with bounded overshoot, not synchronous gating. There's a window between breach and kill. Which is why a real budget needs both — a wrapper inside the agent that refuses to overspend, and an external brake for when it ignores the wrapper or you don't own the box. One layer trusts the agent. The other assumes it fails. You need both.
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Richard Illingworth (@RCIllingworth) reporteda GTM engineer rang my team screaming we'd ripped all his inboxes offline. we hadn't touched a thing... he was adamant we'd f*cked his entire campaigns and that all of it was our fault, so we went digging through the back end to find out what actually happened. turns out HE'D ripped all the DNS off the domains himself. he'd pulled everything out of Cloudflare, re-enlisted it over to Porkbun, then changed the forwarding settings while he was at it. so we went to reapply everything top-down from a CSV to fix it. he joined the account 10 minutes later and ripped it all straight back out again, then moaned that it had "automatically happened again." it took my team 12 hours to work out he'd been messing in the back end the whole time. that's half a day gone between me, my business partner, my ops director and my head of client success. four people chasing a problem one bloke created and wouldn't own, all because he couldn't just say "yeah, i f*cked it, that was me." GTM engineering done properly is genuinely powerful. what went wrong here had nothing to do with the function and everything to do with personal accountability. when something breaks in outbound, everyone's instinct is to blame the tool or the vendor or the inbox provider or literally ANYONE but themselves. but the most expensive failures i see are almost never technical at all. they're someone refusing to say three words: “i got it wrong.” lesson: own the mistake faster than you chase the fix.
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SoothSpider 🇨🇦🍁🧡真🔬💻Ω 🐶😼🌎 (@SoothSpider) reported@45Homelab Can I stick a PVE (zfs mirrored) at my out-of-State/Province friend's house configure some basic services with OOTB easy HA/redundancy? 🤔 Can I put that behind a $5/month CloudFlare load balancer? Can I spin up a new service from scratch knowing nothing in a few hours? 🤔
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Dat Ha (@thisisdatha) reported@CloudflareDev @Kimi_Moonshot @Cloudflare The collection of models on the service is weird. Not bad, but weird. A good amount of frontier, then just a whole lot of nothing in the cheap high parameter MoE range, then a decent amount of like 10-40B dense. I would love to see DSv4 Flash and/or MiMo v2.5!
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Joe Sadoski (@joesadoski) reported> I have a problem > Ask the agent > "Actually @Cloudflare has something for that" How does this keep happening??
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evan mercer (@EMercerCap) reportedI’ll say this once: These 8 stocks could create a $3 million opportunity before 2027. $TSLA (Tesla) — Don’t buy $AAPL (Apple) — Don’t buy $CRM (Salesforce) — Buy at $158–$166 $CRWD (CrowdStrike) — Buy at $190–$200 $NOW (ServiceNow) — Buy at $100–$105 $NET (Cloudflare) — Buy at $265–$275 $FTNT (Fortinet) — Buy at $156–$163 $ZS (Zscaler) — Buy at $140–$148 Strong companies can still be bad buys at the wrong valuation. Which pullback would you buy?
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dsad (@fuwiadsad) reportedYesterday, I mentioned that @utexocom joined the x402 Foundation. Today, I want to explain the two ideas behind it in simpler terms: x402 and the agentic economy. The agentic economy is where AI agents move beyond simply providing information and begin carrying out tasks on behalf of users or companies. An agent could search for flights, compare prices, buy data from an API, use compute, or access another digital service. For this to work automatically, the agent needs to do more than make decisions. It also needs to make payments when required. x402 is being developed to make that easier. When an agent sends a request to a paid API, the service responds with the payment requirement and the amount. The agent makes the payment, receives the data or service within the same flow, and continues with its task. There is no need to open a separate checkout page, create a new account for every service, or wait for a person to complete the payment. Another important part of x402 is that these payments can be very small. An agent can make a micropayment for a single API call, a short period of compute, a specific data package, or a small digital service. Instead of paying for a full subscription or depositing a large balance in advance, it can pay only for what it uses. The protocol was originally developed by Coinbase. It is now moving forward under the Linux Foundation through an open, vendor-neutral structure. The Foundation includes 40 organizations across payments, cloud, finance, and blockchain, including AWS, Visa, Mastercard, Stripe, Coinbase, Circle, Cloudflare, and Utexo. x402 is working toward a common standard for how agents request and make payments across the internet. @utexocom is part of the effort to connect USDT to this system and bring those payments closer to Bitcoin-based settlement. The agentic economy is a system where AI agents can carry out economic activity on their own. x402 creates a shared payment flow for those transactions and makes small micropayments possible. Utexo is focused on how USDT payments within that system can connect to settlement on Bitcoin.
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Eli Edelkind (@eliedelkind) reported@LiminalPanda @ZackKorman So, for many companies if you have to use a VPN they probably aren’t a legitimate user. But I can see some scenarios that you’re right for sure. But the other protections in Cloudflare aren’t fool proof either which is why defense in depth and attack surface minimization is always good. Also, geoblocking isn’t just WAFs. There’s many “no regret” blocks across different network capabilities.
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Glenn 'devalias' Grant (@_devalias) reported@nickgraynews @computefinx The help docs also mention D1 and R2, which are Cloudflare things