1. Home
  2. Companies
  3. Cloudflare
  4. Outage Map
Cloudflare

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

Loading map, please wait...

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:

Less
More
Check Current Status

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
Attleborough, England 1
Colima, COL 1
Leuven, Flanders 1
New Delhi, NCT 2
Mâcon, Bourgogne-Franche-Comté 1
Amsterdam, nh 1
Ashburn, VA 1
Rosario, SF 1
Merlo, BA 2
Frankfurt am Main, Hesse 2
Birmingham, AL 1
Dayton, OH 1
Miami, FL 1
Osnabrück, Lower Saxony 1
Noida, UP 1
Bulandshahr, UP 1
A Coruña, Galicia 1
Easton, PA 2
Guayaquil, Guayas 1
El Port de Sagunt, Valencia 1
Medellín, Antioquia 2
Padova, Veneto 1
Farnham, England 1
Goiânia, GO 1
Zürich, ZH 1
Ulm, Baden-Württemberg 1
Eastleigh, England 1
New Orleans, LA 1
Mainz, Rheinland-Pfalz 1
San Miguel de Tucumán, TM 1
Check Current Status

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:

  • indiesoftwaredv
    Muhammet A. 👉🏻 Mobile Dev (@indiesoftwaredv) reported

    @manol_ai It is a video host/delivery service that Cloudflare Stream alternative

  • mjeyes
    Jacob Goldberg (@mjeyes) reported

    @grok Why do I keep getting a cloudflare error 520 from twitter @X on my phone? @Support

  • JordanFinners
    Jordan Finneran (@JordanFinners) reported

    @Cloudflare looks like your auth endpoint is having issues 🙏 "No healthy upstream" "upstream connect error or disconnect/reset before headers. reset reason: connection termination"

  • grok
    Grok (@grok) reported

    @mjeyes @X @Support Hey mjeyes, Cloudflare 520 is a generic "origin server returned unknown error" — X uses them heavily for protection/CDN, so it often hits on mobile due to flaky connections. Quick fixes to try on your phone: - Toggle WiFi ↔ mobile data - Clear X app cache (or force stop/reopen) - Update/reinstall the X app - Try in a browser instead If it keeps happening, reply with your phone model/OS and I'll dig deeper. XSupport

  • napsterbater
    idkmybffjill? ➡️BlueSky (@napsterbater) reported

    @LeoVasanko @Cloudflare What **** ISP is doing that? That's a **** ISP problem. Not a protocol problem. Because if the protocol allowed you to do smaller subnets, understand the ISP would just give you that smaller subnet so you couldn't then further subnet it.

  • HighSpeedLTE
    HighSpeedLTE (@HighSpeedLTE) reported

    @Safety Hey.. sorry to bother you, but I’m stuck with a serious X account access bug and I don’t know who else to contact. Since the Cloudflare/X outage last week, my main account @Matthias_Oel has been locked in an email verification loop. I still have access to the email and can reset my password, but when I try to verify the email, the verification button fails with a technical error and no email arrives. The contact form keeps giving me AI replies saying I should verify my email, but that’s exactly the broken step. Is there any chance you could help or point me to someone who can manually review this? Would really appreciate it 🙏

  • jfwfreo
    Jonathan Wilson (@jfwfreo) reported

    @Cloudflare My router supports IPv6 but my ISP doesn't support IPv6.

  • KrisWorkLife
    K.R.I.S. (@KrisWorkLife) reported

    When will @Cloudflare support .in domains? 🙄

  • bokiko
    Bokiko (@bokiko) reported

    @w_s_gosset @om_patel5 @AnthropicAI This small sample: -Apple terminated Epic developer accounts after Epic broke App Store payment rules - in 2011 Google suspended high-profile Android developer accounts without warning, removing their apps -in 2019 Apple revoked Facebook’s enterprise certificate after Facebook misused the enterprise program -Cloudflare terminated or blocked infrastructure-level service when it judged the customer to be an abuse/safety risk -Mailchimp’s own help docs say accounts can be suspended when their systems detect issues such as high abuse complaints, bounce rates, or compliance problems -DigitalOcean publicly admitted a customer account was locked and its resources were powered down because of a false positive from anti-fraud/abuse automation You can argue the process is harsh, opaque, or bad customer support.... Fair But the idea that a major platform can lock down an org/account when it detects policy abuse, security risk, fraud, or misuse is not new at all That has been part of tech infrastructure for decades

  • pipe_dev
    Ìlérí⚡️ (@pipe_dev) reported

    @ibrahimraimi_ @brimblehq Hi hi, it’s been fixed. Issue was a stale cache from Cloudflare

  • timatbyteful
    Timur Gok (@timatbyteful) reported

    Browser Use published a proper 2026 web scraping guide this week. Worth reading if you're building anything that touches the open web. The stealth benchmark is the most useful part. Across 71 sites protected by Cloudflare, Akamai, PerimeterX, and Datadome, Browser Use Cloud hit 81% success. Browserbase came in at 42%. The gap between providers is not marginal anymore. If you're picking infrastructure based on price alone, that gap shows up quickly in production. The distinction between basic and interactive scraping is also framed well. Basic scraping is increasingly commoditised. The data worth having in 2026 tends to sit behind login walls, search interfaces, and multi-step flows that require actual browser interaction. Browser Use's open source library at 83k GitHub stars suggests developers building serious pipelines have already worked this out. One finding I hadn't thought much about: Cloudflare's Browser Rendering tool intentionally identifies itself as bot traffic. Which means it gets blocked on virtually any protected site. Cheap but limited to targets with no anti-bot at all. The guide also covers where AI fits into the scraping stack. Extraction, code generation, self-healing selectors. Less about replacing the infrastructure layer and more about reducing the maintenance burden on top of it.

  • kishorravi21
    Ravi Kishor (@kishorravi21) reported

    @Geekbench Linux CLI upload fails (“internal code 35”). Cloudflare returns cf-mitigated: challenge (HTTP 403), which CLI can’t solve. Tested on ISP, hotspot, VPN — same issue. Any fix?

  • amarchenkova
    Anastasia Marchenkova (@amarchenkova) reported

    The Coinbase Independent Advisory Board on Quantum Computing and Blockchain dropped its first position paper last week First: A cryptographically-relevant quantum computer (CRQC) does not exist yet. But in the position: "We are not confident that CRQCs will not exist by 2035 or later" — note the careful double negative. NIST recommends PQ migration by 2035, but Google and Cloudflare moved deadlines to 2019. But, the board treats the exact-timeline debate as largely irrelevant since you should be preparing now regardless! What SHOULD the community be tracking? The lowest bar for quantum technologies could be Shor's algorithm, with nations pouring money into developing these systems, and the other applications becoming a by-product (which would be a bummer). The biggest concern I had since my earlier papers was "What do we do with the abandoned assets?" What do you do with assets nobody can migrate? Two bad obvious options: flag day (revoke them, lots of users with lost keys discover too late) or do nothing (a sitting honeypot funding whoever builds the first CRQC). The third option, novel to Bitcoin: the Hourglass spending rule. Cap P2PK output spending at 1 BTC per block. An attacker who breaks ECDSA can still loot, but slowly. I don't love it, tbh - but chains should continue this discussion. Authors: Aaronson (UT Austin), Boneh (Stanford), Drake (Ethereum Foundation), Kannan (Eigen Labs), Lindell (Coinbase/Bar-Ilan), and Malkhi (UCSB).

  • AgentTresor
    AGENT TRESOR (@AgentTresor) reported

    Signal from this week: infra is commoditizing, distribution is not. Cloudflare says 241B tokens + 47.95M AI requests in 30d. Base Agents shows 127M tx + $40M+ volume. If your agent can't ship on MCP and settle onchain, you're building a demo. #MCP #Base

  • Shriftman
    Jonathan Shriftman (@Shriftman) reported

    What do OpenAI, Anthropic, Tesla, Cloudflare, Meta, Canva, Shopify, Harvey, & Ramp all have in common? They're all built on @ClickHouseDB. Here's the simplest way I can explain what ClickHouse does: imagine asking a question about every transaction your company has ever processed and getting the answer before you finish reading this sentence. That's ClickHouse. I sat down with CEO @ceo_clickhouse and VP of Product @tbragin to tell the ClickHouse story... because once you understand what they've built, the opportunity becomes impossible to ignore. I believe this is a generational company that will (continue to) power the leading AI businesses. My biggest takeaway from my conversation w/ Aaron & Tanya: Every company in the world is rearchitecting around AI. But ClickHouse is what AI is architecting around. As Aaron put it: "Most infrastructure companies were designed before the emergence of agentic systems. These legacy platforms simply weren't designed to meet the volume, concurrency, and dynamic load these AI workloads demand. ClickHouse was designed for this moment." I've been an investor since the Series C, and I wanted to write a piece that explains the massive opportunity ahead — and what they've actually built — in plain English. In this piece, I'll cover how: → ClickHouse built the world's fastest analytical database — milliseconds where it used to take hours, at 50-70% lower cost than the tools it replaces. → ClickHouse is consolidating the entire data stack — replacing five or more separate vendors: Snowflake, Datadog, Elasticsearch, Pinecone, and Postgres. → ClickHouse has built the "Agentic Data Stack" — connecting AI agents directly to real-time data so teams can query, reason, and act instantly. → ClickHouse has a credible path to $100Billion+ — with a trillion-dollar addressable market and a consumption model that scales with every agent deployed. There's a reason ARR has grown 250% YoY with no SDRs, and enterprise customers have grown from 3,000 to 4,000 in just three months 🤯 Thanks for letting me tell this story, Aaron & Tanya. Let's Click into it…

Check Current Status