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 |
|---|---|
| Manchester, England | 1 |
| Angers, Pays de la Loire | 1 |
| London, England | 2 |
| 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 | 1 |
| Augsburg, Bavaria | 1 |
| Bengaluru, KA | 1 |
| Montataire, Hauts-de-France | 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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DownWithBigBrother (@DWBB1984) reported@ultrasxiv Fair on bandwidth being a real cost, but the 2GB figure is a long way out. Cheapest DO droplet includes 500GB+ outbound, Hetzner 20TB+. At 600-700GB household use you’re a pound or two over on DO, zero on Hetzner. Stays around the base £4-5 for most, not £300. And “un-bannable” was the precise word, not hyperbole. A commercial VPN is bannable because it’s a named brand with known IPs, a company that can be pressured or blocked. That’s the weakness. Self-hosting removes the target entirely. There’s no technical category called “a VPS used as a VPN.” It’s a rented server running standard encryption (WireGuard, IPsec), the same protocols carrying every bank settlement, ATM link and corporate tunnel on earth. To ban it you’d have to block those protocols (killing Visa, every corporate VPN, all remote work) or blacklist the datacentre IP ranges (AWS, Hetzner, OVH) that host the actual internet: payment gateways, banking backends, Stripe, Cloudflare, gov services. You can’t separate “server someone might tunnel through” from “server running the shop you’re buying from.” The second and third-order effects would cripple e-commerce, open banking and logistics, all riding the same cloud backbone. That’s the sovereignty point. You can ban a brand. You can’t ban the capability of renting a server and encrypting your own traffic, not without taking modern commerce down with it.
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Arda (@onurardaoz) reported@Cloudflare Warp ui sucks for macs now. Please turn it back.
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Tom Talks Cars (@TomTalksCars) reported@EddCoates Cloudflare AI Crawl Control is pretty decent at cutting things down
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Pushkar Mishra (@Pushkarm029) reportedJust install Cloudflare WARP. No login. One click solution. No ads.
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David Herrmann (@herrmanndigital) reportedMeta ads in 2015: 1. Take a photo of product with iPhone. Open Power Editor, launch ad in under 2 mins. 2. Refresh PE and see 1:1 conversions in under an hour, scale within 3-4 hrs. 3. Spend the rest of the day coming up with fun ideas for new offers, new landing page ideas, new product ideas, new copy ideas. Meta ads in 2026: 1. Hire creative strategist -> Who hire creative agencies / editors -> who build batches of creative. 2. Open ads manager, go through 25-30 prompts of things you have really no clue about, but Meta is insistent it'll lower your CPA by 7.9% based on a study from 2 advertisers in 2022. Click publish after 1 hr of building out 10 new concepts. 3. You're then hit with an error publish with messages like: "you have no shops select," or "you don't have page permissions," or "this creative has expired, please try a new one" you finally are able to hit publish. 4. Finally, you can go on with your day. But wait, client sees that they are getting discounts on the ads you just launched coming in. You open up ads manager and go to ad level to go through multiple areas to figure out why. 5. Ah, Meta has randomly turned the promotions automatically on. No worries, you pause it. On with your day. 6. Someone who knows someone at the company for whose ads you just launched flags to friend that the ads are appearing with a dubstep version of a Beethoven song and seem out of touch for the brand. You're then texted to go pause the music. 7. Open ads manager, navigate to ad level, pause music. You're then hit with a prompt from Meta: "WHY ARE YOU TURNING THIS OFF?!" You hastily respond, "BECAUSE IT SUCKS!" 8. Visibly irritated now over Meta you finally settle in to do the other part of your job, analysis! 9. But wait, there appears to be an outage! Everyone texting, "Is Shopify down?," "Is it Cloudflare?," "Is it AWS?," "No! It's Meta!" Ok, well now you're in fight of flight. Should we wait? Should we pause? Let's wait, yeah let's wait. This is just a minor blip. 10. Meanwhile you're not left refreshing things every 5 min instead of doing analysis and research. Finally, it is night time and you can relax (not)! On this particular day you managed to launch 10 ad sets and do nothing else. Feeling defeated because what once took 2-5 min to do now feels daunting. It feels like you now spend the majority of your day in defense mode. Not because the work has changed or the people, but the process for doing it all has. And that's why you're feeling burnt out media buying friends and creative friends.
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bigdatachads (@bigdatachads) reportedI've been building AI phone agents on @Cloudflare for a while now. v1. a Python container, fighting for every millisecond. v2. no container, the whole call on the edge. that was the real work. now that I have the stack down, I spent last weekend messing around. this is v3, a cartoon you talk to that remembers you and gets heckled by a second AI. all on Cloudflare primitives. three teardowns, first one tomorrow. follow along. @CloudflareDev
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Jasper Disney (@jasper_disney) reportedAs an unsuccessful app builder, I only need to pay 5 dollars to Cloudflare each month. Life is not that bad.
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POKE6900 (@poke6900gg) reportedWe are aware the website is down and due to this the apps aren't working as they should. This is due to a Cloudflare issue and we are working on a solution to get everything back online a.s.a.p.
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Jay (@jaypopat0) reported@FredKSchott Btw, would Flue support something like "Cloudflare Think"-style cloud agents as well? Curious if there are nice integrations with Cloudflare primitives (Workers, Durable Objects, Queues, etc.) for workflows and the overall agent harness.
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Special Situations 🌐 Research Newsletter (Jay) (@SpecialSitsNews) reportedNew Activist Name: Shares of $MTN are trading up 13% at $141.65 on Thursday, rebounding sharply from their 52-week low of $118.51 hit earlier this year, as the Semafor scoop circulates across trading desks. The intraday move lifts the company's market cap to roughly $5.05 billion. According to Semafor, Vail's bankers are tasked with assessing vulnerabilities across a broad front: labor unrest, weather-related demand swings, and the specific pressure campaign being waged by Prince, who co-founded Cloudflare (NET). Prince told a local Colorado publication in June 2026 that he is willing to invest $500 million in Park City Mountain Resort and admitted he has already fielded calls from activist investors probing Vail's weaknesses. His preferred blueprint would see Vail pivot to an asset-light model, acting as a partnership facilitator rather than a direct mountain owner, a structure that would almost certainly require carving up the company's core real-estate holdings. The timing is awkward for management. Vail reported fiscal Q3 2026 earnings per share of $8.81, missing the consensus estimate of $9.09 by 3.1%, while revenue of $1.21 billion came in roughly $10 million below forecasts. The company subsequently cut its fiscal 2026 net income guidance to a range of $128 million to $162 million and trimmed Resort Reported EBITDA guidance to $735$755 million, down from the prior range of $745$775 million. Net debt has climbed to $2.65 billion from $2.24 billion a year earlier, pushing net leverage to 3.5x trailing twelve-month EBITDA as of April 30, 2026, while cash on hand stood at $371.4 million. Into that environment, the board moved in May 2025 to recall Rob Katz, the executive who originally built Vail into a multi-mountain empire, ousting his hand-picked successor in the process. Katz has since focused on the operational grievances that drove customer dissatisfaction, particularly lift-line congestion and chronic labor shortages, introducing products like Epic Friend Tickets and discounted super-advanced lift tickets that are showing early traction. The move signals that Vail's board views operational credibility as its first line of defense against any activist pitch centered on mismanagement. Management also has a financial lever to highlight in any proxy fight. The company pays a quarterly cash dividend of $2.22 per share, with the next payment scheduled for July 9, 2026, equating to an annualized yield of roughly 6.6% at current prices. That yield argument, steady cash returns while the turnaround plays out, is a standard defensive talking point, though it carries less weight when leverage is rising and guidance is being cut. Investors will get a clearer read on whether Katz's operational fixes are gaining traction when Vail reports fiscal Q4 2026 results, tentatively scheduled for September 24, 2026. The setup is challenging: consensus EPS for that quarter stands at -$5.05, with eight analyst downward revisions in the past 90 days and no upward revisions, reflecting the structural headwinds Prince and any allied activist would likely exploit.
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丁飞龙 (@mishuba) reportedDamn its almost like cloudflare doesnt exist and robot.txt must be nonexistent for this to happen. Vibe coders discovered ai thinking thats all they need to build a website like networking doesnt existing. Fix ya servers, networking and use cloudflare.
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./can (@shcansh) reportedAdding validity checks for Azure and Salesforce tokens is the real win in the latest secret scanning updates. Instead of chasing ghosts, devs can now see if a leaked credential is still active. But with 11 GitLab token types added and new blocks for Cloudflare, we are putting a lot of trust in automated regex. Are active validity checks actually enough to stop the leak crisis, or are we just treating the symptoms of a broken secret-management culture?
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Sulabh Puri (@sulabhpuri) reportedA lot of problems with @Cloudflare today.
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Shimju David (@ShimjuDavid) reported@payloadcms Deploy on Cloudflare Fully self-contained — one click to deploy Payload with Workers, R2 for uploads, and D1 for a globally replicated database is not working. It returns build error. Kindly fix. 📷
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dmsimon (@dmsimon) reported@EddCoates I had the same problem and moved to @Cloudflare and am using pages and workers. Pages is free on a free account for a ridiculous amount of volume. Keep you host running the dB and move the front to CF. I also think it is much better than gh pages.