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Coinbase

Coinbase Outage Map

The map below depicts the most recent cities worldwide where Coinbase users have reported problems and outages. If you are having an issue with Coinbase, make sure to submit a report below

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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.

Coinbase users affected:

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Coinbase is a digital asset broker headquartered in San Francisco, California. They broker exchanges of Bitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin and other digital assets with fiat currencies in 32 countries, and bitcoin transactions and storage in 190 countries worldwide.

Most Affected Locations

Outage reports and issues in the past 15 days originated from:

Location Reports
City of Humble, TX 1
Houston, TX 1
Palo Verde, Coclé 2
Manhattan, NY 1
Pike Creek Valley, DE 1
East Flatbush, NY 1
Petaling Jaya, SGR 1
Denver, CO 1
Louisville, KY 1
Wix, England 2
Guayaquil, Guayas 1
Rome, Latium 1
Rancho Santa Margarita, CA 1
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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.

Coinbase Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • SirRederick
    SirRederick (@SirRederick) reported

    @CorporateLCpl @vulturetrades Really? Are you buying Tokenized Shares? ASST is a stock avaiable on most brokerages and Coinbase has been down or ironically people haven't been able to login since they laid off 15% of there workforce. Either way I hope you know its a stock, $ASST - Strive Inc.

  • armando_zonum
    Armando Muñoz (@armando_zonum) reported

    @ryancarson Didn't Coinbase do their layoff on the basis (partially) of having non-engineers shipping code to production, and then their services went down for 8 hours with many people losing their accounts?

  • marktmaxwell
    Mark Maxwell (@marktmaxwell) reported

    @RonSwanonson @billiamBTC @coinbase CB servers down again?

  • RunnerXBT
    RunnerXBT (@RunnerXBT) reported

    Coinbase is reminding me 12 times a day to update my Tax/Paper work by January 2027. Yet it didnt ask me once to sell my confidential data via some Pajeet from their Customer Service

  • SuccessUnleash1
    Lucas Adams (@SuccessUnleash1) reported

    Avoid three major pitfalls and achieve four key goals. • Do not buy $COIN (Coinbase) • Do not buy $NET (Cloudflare) • Do not buy $SOFI (SoFi Technologies) • Buy $SNDK (SanDisk) • Buy $ASTS (Ascent Solar Technologies) • Buy $LITE (Lumentum) • Buy $INTC (Intel) Stop blind trading. I can't promise you’ll become a billionaire overnight, but this approach will help you capture strong gains and avoid unnecessary losses.

  • Kimjh102709
    Kimjh1027 (@Kimjh102709) reported

    @SoSoValueCrypto On May 13, according to on-chain analyst Yu Jin’s monitoring, Bitcoin treasury company KULR Tech (@KULRTech) transferred 300 $BTC (USD 24.36 million) into Coinbase Prime two hours ago. The company announced in December 2024 that it would allocate 90% of its surplus cash to BTC. By July 2025, it had accumulated a total of 1,021 $BTC (USD 101 million), with an average purchase price of USD 98,923 per BTC. Based on the current price, its $BTC holdings are down by USD 18.25 million. Following the announcement in December 2024 about its $BTC reserve strategy, KULR’s stock price surged nearly tenfold to USD 43.92, then declined steadily to USD 3.19—a drop of 92.7%.

  • DanaFLove
    Dana Love (@DanaFLove) reported

    Morgan Stanley's head of wealth just described their crypto strategy to Bloomberg. Three words: "disintermediating the disintermediators." He wasn't talking about fees. He was announcing the elimination of the category Coinbase represents. 🧵 Thread on what that means, and why the 48% tells you it's already working.

  • TheOneandOmsy
    Omar (@TheOneandOmsy) reported

    How long until the Circle / Coinbase marriage gets messy? > historically $CRCL = issuer of USDC and $COIN = distributor. Coin pushes USDC, and in exchange gets half the economics w/ some adjustments > but w/ Circle now a pubco, it’s been forced into pitching a much broader growth story to investors -> today that’s become: be the infrastructure layer for global payments + real-world finance onchain > to make that a reality, Circle needs to supercharge itself by owning customers and having their flows live on their new venue, Arc > and the problem is that directly conflicts w/ Coinbase’s own ambition w/ Base to be the exchange + rails for everything, especially payments, settlement & FX > and if you look closely, things have started getting messy: cbBTC vs cirBTC = Circle stepping on Coin’s toes w/ the same product > but Circle / Arc post token raise is a much worse deal. With outside investors underwriting the chain, the incentive becomes drive all your assets + activity from everywhere else (including Base / Coinbase) to Arc: USDC balances, tokenized assets, payments, settlement & eventually FX > the two businesses, which were once symbiotic, are now competing H2H and have public shareholders / token holders to keep track of the scoreboard > inevitable that the relationship ultimately ends in divorce. Circle clearly growing up and planning on moving out of its childhood home

  • John_Wicp
    John W.icp (@John_Wicp) reported

    @mosesibb That would explain a lot about their recent posting. And you are correct, coinbase goes down all the time. It's annoying AF and against the whole decentralized movement. If @MEXC moves on $ICP, it would be a huge leg up on their competition.

  • twaptops
    cletus (@twaptops) reported

    anudda coinbase outage

  • samjones1337
    Sam Jones (@samjones1337) reported

    @Cryptonik__1 @CoinbaseSupport I don’t have that button. I’m working with Coinbase support and I’ve sent you them a screenshot. I don’t understand how it can happen like this. Thank you for helping me to see how it’s supposed to be.

  • FaithInElon
    American Faith (@FaithInElon) reported

    Coinbase reported $1.41 billion in Q1 2026 revenue on May 7, down 31% YoY from $2.03 billion in Q1 2025 They also missed consensus by ~$100 million while recording a $394 million net loss. The composition of Coinbase’s revenue has also shifted, with subscription and services now generating 44% of total revenue, up from ~38% last year. Stablecoin revenue grew by 11% YoY while transaction revenue declined by 40%, meaning Coinbase has slowly become less of a directional bet on BTC trading volumes Instead, they have generated approximately $750 million annualized from Circle’s yield share on USDC reserves alone, in which Coinbase holds almost 30% of USDC’s float. With the relative increase in the significance of stablecoin revenue, Coinbase has now migrated its role from out-and-out crypto exchange into a regulated rate-sensitive financial institution. With approximately 22% of their total revenue now Fed funds rate dependent via the USDC reserve share, every 100bps cut compresses that revenue line by roughly $75 million annualized. The investment thesis on Coinbase has shifted from "leveraged BTC beta" to "stablecoin issuer share + derivatives exchange + prediction market platform," making it a multi-line fintech with lower revenue volatility but greater sensitivity to monetary policy.

  • Darkfost_Coc
    Darkfost (@Darkfost_Coc) reported

    @_Checkmatey_ @cryptoquant_com James, I only filtered the Coinbase transfer, as it was too significant for me to ignore, but it’s really down to each person’s judgment and I fully understand your reasoning on that point. I tracked the on-chain movements, cross-referenced the labels and figures provided by various entities (Arkham, Lookonchain and confirmed it with SaniExp and what I personally find on chain and in CQ data) This allowed me to deduce how CQ data need to be adjusted. It wasn’t straightforward because the Coinbase transfers occurred over two days, while the table refresh was happening on a daily basis at the same time

  • auth_maan
    authmaan▫️ (@auth_maan) reported

    i don’t submit kyc because i want to, i submit it because i have to every time i open a new exchange/app; bybit, coinbase, binance, bitget,.. there’s a moment i dislike, the kyc screen uploading my id, my passport, taking a selfie, confirming my address. it all feels smooth and reassuring but somewhere behind the submit button is a system controlled by people i’ve never met, receiving documents that proves who i am, where i’m from, and what i look like. i don’t do it because i trust it. i do it because there’s no alternative every time i hit submit, something feels like it’s leaving my control. not ordinary data, my identity. handed to a company, probably accessible to their employees, stored on servers i’ll never see. that feeling isn’t paranoia. coinbase proved it’s rational, users had their government IDs photographed by a support agent and sold the breach didn’t happen because coinbase was careless, it happened because their agents had to see the documents to do their jobs that’s the architecture and that’s exactly what actually bothers me, not kyc itself because verifying identity before accessing financial systems makes sense what feels off, is that to confirm i am who i say i am, i have to hand over everything that proves it. my full name, date of birth, nationality, my documents.. the verification and the exposure are treated as the same thing, but they shouldn’t be that’s where @Arcium comes in; when kyc runs on arcium, my documents are never processed as readable data. they’re split into encrypted shares; fragments distributed across independent nodes in arxOS. no single node holds my passport no single node knows what the shares represent each one sees noise the verification runs inside an MXE, a multi party execution environment, computing across encrypted shares without ever reconstructing the original document back together the result we get is binary: verified or not no one saw my passport, no one stored my face, the support agent sees a checkmark, not a photograph i live in a part of the world where submitting identity documents to financial platforms carries a different kind of weight, not normal privacy concerns, they’re questions about who has access to information about you, what they might do with it, and there is usually no clear answer every time i complete kyc, i accept a risk i never agreed to, i accept it because the alternative is not using the app anymore and that’s not a fair trade what arcium makes possible isn’t a better privacy policy or a more trustworthy company. it’s a system where the architecture doesn’t require me to trust anyone with my privacy the verification happens my data stays mine because seeing it was not necessary that’s personally the most important use case to me know your customer without actually knowing your customer

  • Dr_Gonzo_K
    Gonzo.𐤊as (@Dr_Gonzo_K) reported

    @CoachKorey3 @realvijayk @marc02200 Kraken. Bitget. Mexc. Who gives a **** about Coinbase or Binance? They've demanded significant listing fees from a coin that doesnt have a centralized entity that can supply the coins or cover the cost. Its like asking bitcoin to provide liquidity.

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