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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
Leipzig, Saxony 1
Maquoketa, IA 1
West Liberty, KY 1
Cardiff, Wales 1
Palo Verde, Coclé 3
City of Humble, TX 1
Houston, TX 1
Manhattan, NY 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:

  • Morpheu5Watcher
    Morpheu5 Stock Watcher (@Morpheu5Watcher) reported

    BITCOIN BOUNCES OFF A 21-MONTH LOW: Bitcoin $BTC at $60,223, up 2.9% over the past 24 hours, is back above $60,000 only hours after touching its lowest price in 21 months - and the stocks wired to it are moving three times as hard. Ethereum, the second-largest cryptocurrency, sits at $1,615, up 3.1% over the same stretch. One green day, arriving directly after the worst month the big bitcoin funds have ever recorded, is the whole story tonight - what drove it, and what it does and does not prove. Start with how a thing with no earnings gets a price at all. A share of stock has profits and dividends to anchor a valuation; a coin has neither. Crypto trades on exactly two forces: the flow of money in and out of it, and the price of money itself - interest rates. When rates look set to stay high, assets that pay nothing get sold first; when rate fear eases even slightly, they bounce first. Both forces showed up on schedule this week, one on each side. The outflow side is June, and it was historic. Bitcoin fell 20.5% last month, its steepest monthly drop since June 2022, and the U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs - funds that hold actual bitcoin and trade like a stock, so anyone with a brokerage account can own the coin's move - bled a record $4.5 billion of net withdrawals, their worst month since they launched in January 2024. BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Trust, ticker IBIT, at $34.12 (after hours), +$0.83 / +2.5% today, absorbed roughly $3.55 billion of that on its own, including nine straight days of net selling. Citigroup responded by cutting its one-year bitcoin target from $112,000 to $82,000. That is the hole this bounce is climbing out of - overnight the coin broke below $59,000 before turning. The rate side is today, and it has a name and a place. Kevin Warsh, chair of the Federal Reserve, told the European Central Bank's annual forum in Sintra, Portugal that inflation risks have come down. He promised nothing about policy - he has spent the week insisting prices are still too high - but for an asset that trades on the price of money, one softer sentence from the rate-setter was enough: bitcoin crossed back over $60,000 within hours. A dated footnote from the regulatory world landed the same day: July 1 marked the end of the transition period under MiCA, the European Union's licensing law for crypto firms, and only 244 of the 3,389 companies operating under old national rules won full licenses - Binance, which did not, restricted service in France, Italy, Spain and Poland today. Now the part for a stock investor, because the brokerage-account doors into this market moved very differently from each other today - and that spread is the lesson. The iShares Bitcoin Trust rose about 2.5%, close to the coin itself, because tracking the coin is all it does. Coinbase, ticker COIN, at $160.41 (after hours), +$14.22 / +9.7% today - the largest U.S. crypto exchange, which earns fees when people trade - rose three times the coin's move, helped by its own push beyond crypto into tokenized stocks, options and an in-app advisor, which drew a string of bullish analyst notes this week. Strategy, ticker MSTR, at $95.33 (after hours), +$8.40 / +9.7% today - formerly MicroStrategy, a company that borrowed billions to pile up a bitcoin treasury - matched that for the opposite reason: leverage. The tracker gives you the coin; the businesses give you the coin magnified, up and down alike. Anyone who held Strategy through June felt that magnification pointing the other way. What settles whether tonight was a turn or a twitch is checkable and mostly daily: the ETF flow tallies (do the withdrawals actually stop, or just pause?), whether $60,000 holds longer than a news cycle, and Thursday's 8:30am ET June jobs report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics - the government's count of how many workers employers added to payrolls last month, expected near 114,000 with unemployment around 4.3% - because rates remain the lever this entire asset class hangs from. Crypto is volatile and speculative, and a 3% bounce after a 20% month is the most ordinary thing a falling market does. The bounce is real. So is the hole. Not investment advice.

  • shaduf_bucket
    rezz (@shaduf_bucket) reported

    The stablecoin wars are heating up 🔥 Stripe, Coinbase AND BlackRock teaming up on Open USD is a massive shot at USDC. Letting partners keep reserve income is a genius move imo. Circle down 13% says it all. Can USDC hold its throne? 👀 #stablecoins

  • TBSSparkEN
    𝗧.𝗕.𝗦 | 𝗡𝗲𝘄𝘀 & 𝗘𝗻𝘁𝗲𝗿𝘁𝗮𝗶𝗻𝗺𝗲𝗻𝘁 (@TBSSparkEN) reported

    Terrible News For XRPL 140+ companies like BlackRock, Coinbase, Mastercard, Stripe and Visa just teamed up to launch Open USD, a new fee-free stablecoin run by an independent group. It’s launching late 2026, Stripe will use it by default, and it’s rolling out on Base and other EVM chains. That’s rough for XRPL because all the liquidity, merchants, and big partners are building on Base/EVM instead. Less reason for businesses to use XRPL rails, which makes it harder for XRP’s stablecoins to compete. #cryptonews #latestupdate

  • DavidseeASX
    David@seeASX (@DavidseeASX) reported

    Charlatan #Coinbase with no customer service runs its business on cover up and lies

  • BrokenMuzzle
    $hillan0n (@BrokenMuzzle) reported

    @Mira01068 If you are an XRP person you should never be using Coinbase to begin with they have always done XRP ***** plus if it ever does pump best believe they will lock the site up

  • Czar102
    Czar102 (@Czar102) reported

    @0xngmi Would be great to see support for Business accounts as well – for example, Coinbase doesn’t support them, Revolut doesn’t enable withdrawals (which means you get to simulate owning crypto only, not a crypto service). That would be really useful, currently having the problem of not knowing any of this.

  • CryptoChrisG
    Ƀ Chris (@CryptoChrisG) reported

    @Kropotkin57 It’s like they’re battling for worst costumer support @krakenfx & @coinbase

  • yasinaktimur
    Rich kids of base (@yasinaktimur) reported

    🚨 Circle stock is COLLAPSING. It's down 14% today! Here's why: Stripe, Coinbase, Visa, Mastercard, BlackRock & 140+ others just launched a rival stablecoin called Open USD. It charges zero minting fees & hands the reserve yield back to partners. That yield IS Circle's business model. This is an existential threat.

  • shanaka86
    Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡ (@shanaka86) reported

    Circle just lost a fifth of its value in a single day, and the blow came from its own inner circle. Its stock fell 17 percent after a new stablecoin launched, which is normal. What is not normal is who built it…. the asset manager that runs roughly 80 percent of Circle's reserves, the exchange that co-founded USDC and is paid nearly a billion a year to distribute it, and the bank that holds the money. BlackRock, Coinbase, and BNY Mellon all backed a rival to the coin they help operate. The story is not really about a competitor. Circle makes money one way, and it explains the whole reaction. $USDC is a digital dollar. For every one in circulation, Circle holds a real dollar in cash and short-term Treasuries, roughly 74 billion dollars of reserves, and the interest those reserves earn is almost the entire business. About 80 percent of that pile sits in one fund, the Circle Reserve Fund, managed by BlackRock and custodied by BNY Mellon. To get USDC into the world, Circle pays distributors. In one recent year it paid Coinbase alone 908 million dollars. On June 30th more than 140 companies launched a competitor called Open USD, and it inverts the one thing Circle relied on. Instead of the issuer keeping the reserve interest, Open USD shares almost all of it with the businesses that use and distribute the coin. Free to mint, free to redeem, no caps. For any firm that had been helping Circle earn that interest for a fee, the math flips: stop collecting a fee to build someone else's yield, and collect the yield yourself. The names that signed on are the core of Circle's own machine. The exchange that co-created USDC and earns close to a billion a year distributing it is not only backing Open USD, it is launching it on Base, the blockchain that exchange itself owns. The manager of roughly 80 percent of USDC's reserves is backing it too, and so is the custodian bank. The firms paid to run the reserves, sell the coin, and hold the assets are helping stand up an alternative. This was clearly written into the incentives from the start. Coinbase earning 908 million to distribute Circle's product is Coinbase working for Circle. Coinbase owning a share of a rival that runs on its own chain is Coinbase working for itself. Once a distributor can own the economics instead of renting them, loyalty to the issuer means leaving money on the table. And the Coinbase deal is up for renewal in August, so Circle now renegotiates with a partner that just helped launch the alternative. That does not make the outcome certain. It changes who holds the leverage. The deeper pattern reaches far past Circle if you look carefully. It is the risk in any business whose profit comes from sitting in the middle of other people's money. Circle's role was to be the middleman on the digital dollar, holding the reserves and keeping the interest while everyone else moved the coin. That works until the parties on both sides decide they can route around you and split what you kept. The reserve manager, the distributor, and the custodian do not structurally need the issuer to capture that yield, and Open USD is the first serious attempt to prove it. None of this means Circle is doomed, and the fair reading matters. This is also just rational diversification. BlackRock earns fees across every rail it can touch, backing a new one does not require abandoning the old one, and Open USD does not launch until later this year. USDC is still trusted, deeply liquid, and regulated, and Circle's CEO argues the market is big enough for many winners, which may well be true. But the message in the stock is hard to miss. A company whose whole moat was owning the middle just watched the firms on either side of it agree to build a road around it. The most dangerous rival is rarely the stranger. It is the partner who already knows exactly how you get paid.

  • jude_soren
    Jude Soren (@jude_soren) reported

    @liquidstate_1 @brian_armstrong Totally. Coinbase writes the code and still loses users to a fake login page with worse CSS than the real one. The exploit doesn’t live in the codebase… it lives in the gap between what the system does and what the user believes it’s doing.

  • Bgmcapitol
    静華 (@Bgmcapitol) reported

    My funds was also stuck in coinbase contacted the support and nothing was done I was told to contact team @blueh4ck who helped me recover my funds from coinbase

  • wrkbzs
    Secretly Trading || 🔝 (@wrkbzs) reported

    @coinbase first time my internet provider told me dont go on a site lol !

  • Cypherpunkgod1
    uncracked (@Cypherpunkgod1) reported

    @Kdotcheta I heard Usdc contract with coinbase is over and russell growth indexes delisted them plus stock is 32% down this month Not looking good fir stables

  • VictoriaMorantX
    VIX (@VictoriaMorantX) reported

    @CoinMarketCap @JDVance is a scanner now working with Coinbase to freeze people’s assets. There’s a special place in hell for scum like you. You scanned people of billions it’s not enough. **** you.

  • DenisDandara
    Dandara Denis 💹🧲 (@DenisDandara) reported

    🔥🔥#DayInReview🔥🔥 📉 Spot Bitcoin ETFs saw their worst month since launch: investors withdrew $4.5 billion in June, surpassing the previous record outflow by 29%. 👨‍💻 Ethereum has launched "Ethereum Institutional," a platform designed to attract large-scale investors to the Ethereum ecosystem. 📈 Santiment: Aave recorded its biggest day of network growth in nearly five years as interest in DeFi returns. 📊 Circle is losing 8% of its market share as Stripe, Coinbase, and BlackRock re-enter the competitive stablecoin landscape. 😳 Bitcoin closed the second quarter of 2026 with a 14.1% drop, marking its third consecutive losing quarter. 💻 Grayscale Research: Solana currently hosts over 1,000 applications and processes an average of more than 100 million transactions daily. 🏦 Citigroup lowered its 12-month price targets for Bitcoin and Ethereum to $82,000 and $2,240, down from previous forecasts of $112,000 and $3,175. 🇬🇧 A group of crypto investors in the UK has filed a $200 million lawsuit against Binance and Changpeng Zhao. 📑 The SEC has initiated a review of ETF registration rules. 👨‍💻 Public token sales have cooled to a four-year low: only 47 ICOs, IDOs, and IEOs took place in Q2 2026, raising a total of $40 million. NEWS

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