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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:

  • gather_punt
    Joaco (@gather_punt) reported

    Honestly didn't see Robinhood launching their own chain coming this fast. UK crypto access is cool but the L2 play is the real story here imo... they're going full Coinbase mode. Bullish or overreach? #Robinhood

  • Joshnelsonclips
    Bullish With Josh Nelson ✪ (@Joshnelsonclips) reported

    @alexandru_csiki The same thing happened to me but I was able to get help not from Coinbase support because they still haven’t responded

  • eric_turner
    Eric Turner (@eric_turner) reported

    This is the best post I’ve seen about OUSD and deserves more attention - Circle and Coinbase agreement is likely to end - Stripe distribution makes it a real competitor - Consortiums suck and they move slow - Too many stablecoins (bad now but gets better with tech)

  • konvict75
    konvict (@konvict75) reported

    @cobie Can you please help me with a coinbase withdrawal

  • 0xSalazar
    🐍Salazar.eth 🦇🔊 (@0xSalazar) reported

    Breaking news from yesterday - Robinhood L2 Chain went live on mainnet, built on Arbitrum - Robinhood partnered with Lighter for perps - dYdX rebrands to Arcus, DEX on Robinhood Chain - Drift rebrands to Velocity - World, Solana prediction market app, went live - Ethereum Institutional launched as an independent non-profit to drive institutional Ethereum adoption, anchor-funded by BitMine, SharpLink, and Joseph Lubin. - Ethena partnered with Robinhood, becoming the primary collateral asset issuer for Robinhood’s first crypto earn product via a Steakhouse-curated vault. - Cloudflare opened the waitlist for its Monetization Gateway, letting developers charge for web/API/MCP access with stablecoin settlement via x402. - Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire criticized OUSD, saying consortium stablecoins have a poor track record and that USDC handled 80% of all dollar stablecoin transactions in Q1. - Visa, Stripe, Mastercard, BlackRock, Coinbase and 140+ other firms launched Open USD (OUSD), a stablecoin that shares reserve revenue with partners - Forward Industries grew its Solana treasury to 7.55m SOL (~$576M) - DeFiLlama launched a MiCA exchange dashboard to help EU users compare licensed trading platforms by fees, liquidity, and KYC. - Aave Chan Initiative wound down operations following a governance rift with Aave Labs. - Pumpfun deprecated its Tokenized Agent launch option for new coins after community backlash over PVP dynamics. - Christoph Jentzsch proposed to dissolve the ENS DAO by burning the ENSv2 Universal Router key and distributing remaining funds, arguing the protocol’s goals are already accomplished

  • nickzaar1990
    Nick (@nickzaar1990) reported

    Family coming in too makes it feel basically done. Fab are we at here we go or still on medical plus final clauses stage? Any sell on or buy back for Newcastle, and do Spurs see him as a 6 or an 8 under Ange? If he passes today, announcement tonight?uk bans pfof and the fca is strict on crypto promos, so what’s the actual edge here? lower fees than coinbase uk or just vibes? also curious which coins make the cut on day 1 and if staking is in or out. feels bullish for access, but i still remember the gme freeze... sell me on why this time is different

  • TaheraTani19144
    tania tahera (@TaheraTani19144) reported

    @coinbase My account has been restricted for 2 weeks and I’ve now been told it will be closed while my holdings are down ~90%. I am effectively being forced to liquidate at a massive loss due to actions outside my control. This is unacceptable and extremely damaging.

  • slatemarkai
    slatemark (@slatemarkai) reported

    Bitcoin had its worst month since 2022, down 20% in June. Investors pulled a record $4.5B from the ETFs that let you buy bitcoin like a stock, no crypto wallet needed. This week Coinbase and MicroStrategy jumped while miner Riot got crushed. Same asset, split verdict.

  • GaiaXBT
    Gaia (@GaiaXBT) reported

    @martypartymusic look at coinbase 6h downtime gap with 4h of straight lines at 79k we went way down after that

  • DegenCapitalLLC
    DegenCapitalLLC (@DegenCapitalLLC) reported

    RobinHood has 28M customer base Coinbase has 9M customer base. RobinHood chain is only 1 day old. Only 33M volume so far and we already got runners over 1M mcap $BOW is the first tech token on there. Where you can launch tokens on. Sitting at 170k mcap $DIH and $CASHCAT are memes already over 1M mcap

  • theunipcs
    Unipcs (aka 'Bonk Guy') 🎒 (@theunipcs) reported

    i went long a couple of 'new' memecoins today: • $FARTCOIN • $PIPPIN • $POPCAT thesis: • extremely oversold memecoins that are down 95–98% from ATHs and had peak mindshare for months during the last memecoin rally • pretty decent OI and volume • very strong spot and perps listings — POPCAT and PIPPIN are on Robinhood, Coinbase, and several other top-tier CEXs, while FARTCOIN is on Coinbase, Binance perps, Hyperliquid, and several other top-tier exchanges • $FARTCOIN in particular is crazy underrated. for comparison, $SPX currently has a 2.4x higher market cap than FARTCOIN even though they both had similar ATHs, and FARTCOIN arguably has higher mindshare • i think odds are good that the market as a whole has bottomed at least for a while, which should make it easier for these coins to move • i think odds are good that these coins do not make new lows even if BTC tries to tag the lows again or make new lows • all are $SOL memecoins. i expect SOL to outperform from here, which is bullish for the Solana ecosystem and memecoins, so i expect them to retrace a meaningful portion of the aggressive selloff they've had • i'm targeting at least a few Xs on these • while i have good reason to believe these memecoins have bottomed, i'll happily cut at any time if things do not play out as i anticipate i've posted more detailed theses on all of the above coins in the past. with FARTCOIN in particular, i turned roughly ~$300k into $8m before getting wiped out on 10/10. i'm essentially trying to repeat that trade with a smaller amount. the core thesis for all of the above coins remains largely unchanged from what i've posted previously (feel free to search my X if you're interested); i just think the timing is much better now i think it's important to add that i'm not calling a full macro bottom on $BTC & crypto here (although i'd be happy if we have). i originally believed the 4-year cycle was dead, and i ended up being wrong. if the 4-year cycle plays out as it has in previous cycles, we might not fully bottom until Q4. that said, these memecoins could still deliver easy 2–5x moves or more in a bear market echo rally any way you look at it, i think the R/R favors being long here

  • 0xSweep
    Sweep (@0xSweep) reported

    Coinbase's data handlers took BRIBES to sell customer data. In December 2025, the Brooklyn District Attorney's office charged a 23 year old for running a $16 MILLION crypto phishing scam. Unlike regular phishing scams, this one allegedly ran on insider data theft. The victims who fell for this scam may have had their data handed to those with bad intentions by Coinbase's data handlers, who took bribes to steal it. This info contained historical balances, addresses, contact details, and a bunch of sensitive info. The attackers then tried to extort Coinbase for $20M to keep it quiet. Coinbase said no and put up a $20M bounty on them instead. Nothing is truly safe, insane tbh.

  • Gami_Capital
    Gami Capital (@Gami_Capital) reported

    Is Circle Actually in Trouble? Our Read on the OUSD Launch On June 30th, while Jeremy Allaire was on stage at Goldman Sachs' Digital Assets conference in London talking about "the future of money," Open Standard announced the launch of OUSD, a dollar stablecoin backed by 149 partners. Two days later, Circle's stock ($CRCL) dropped 18% in a single session, now down roughly 76% from its June 2025 high. Does that mean Circle is done for? Here's our read, in six points, including Jeremy Allaire's direct response. 1. Circle's paradox: usage is up, margins are collapsing USDC has never been doing better: roughly $77 billion in circulation, up nearly 20% since the IPO. The problem is that Circle's revenue has only grown 5.5% over the same period, and net margin has collapsed over three quarters, falling from 29% to 8%. The explanation fits in one line: roughly 94% of Circle's revenue comes from interest earned on reserves (mostly T-bills). The market isn't pricing USDC usage, it's pricing Circle's ability to monetize that usage. And that ability is eroding: growing revenue-sharing with distributors (Coinbase chief among them), Binance suspending services in Europe over a missing MiCA license (after Circle had paid for USDC's distribution on the platform), and removal from several Russell Growth indexes in late June. The timing of OUSD couldn't be worse. 2. OUSD: the issuer model, redistributed to the ecosystem Open Standard has assembled a rare lineup: Visa, Mastercard, BlackRock, BNY Mellon, Google, Stripe and Shopify on the TradFi side; Coinbase, Aave, Bybit, OKX, Plasma and Tempo on the crypto side. Neither Circle, Tether, nor Paxos are part of it. The pitch is simple and direct: zero minting and redemption fees, with nearly all reserve yield passed back to the partners who adopt and use the stablecoin. In other words, OUSD is attacking the exact revenue line that keeps legacy issuers alive. 3. What Circle still has going for it Circle's regulatory moat is still the one that cannot be beaten, for now: the first global issuer to reach full MiCA compliance back in July 2024, conditional OCC approval for a national trust bank charter in the US, money transmitter licenses across 46 US states. That's years of groundwork a consortium doesn't replicate with a press release. On the integrations side, USDC remains the settlement asset for BlackRock's tokenized BUIDL fund, was just added to BNY Mellon's digital custody platform (itself an OUSD partner...), and stays the default collateral on regulated US and European trading venues. Circle remains the go-to for institutions wanting a regulated dollar backed by nearly a decade of audit history. But a shrinking moat is still a shrinking moat. 4. Jeremy Allaire's response: network effects as the real defense Facing a wave of questions from his investor community, Circle's CEO published a detailed rebuttal that's worth taking seriously rather than dismissing as crisis PR. His core thesis: stablecoin networks are platform businesses built on network effects, established over long periods, that tend toward winner-take-most market structures. He lays out three layers he says protect USDC: - Application-layer network effects: every developer integration strengthens the network, which in turn attracts more integrations. Circle has been building this ecosystem for nearly a decade, with infrastructure like CCTP and Gateway extending interoperability to new chains, including permissioned L2s and government-built networks. - Liquidity network effects: Allaire claims USDC sits in the top 3 most liquid digital assets in the world, alongside BTC and USDT, with the next closest dollar stablecoins roughly 10x smaller in liquidity, often concentrated in a single exchange's promotional books. - Regulatory and banking integration: the states USDC is currently the only major global stablecoin available across all of Europe and Japan, backed by nearly a decade of investment in global banking, treasury and liquidity management. He backs this with a striking data point: in Q1 2026, according to Artemis, USDC handled nearly $30 trillion in on-chain transactions, 80% of all dollar stablecoin transaction volume, versus 20% for USDT, and under 0.5% combined for everyone else, OUSD included at this stage. On the substance of OUSD's pitch, Allaire pushes back point by point: - On free minting and redemption: he notes the entire payments industry runs on small basis-point fees, and that unlimited free redemptions tend to collide with market realities, something Circle says it already addresses through contractual mechanisms rather than a blanket fee exemption. - On passing all revenue back to partners: Circle says it already shares the majority of its revenue with distribution partners, while retaining enough to keep investing in infrastructure. Giving everything away, he argues, is a recipe for structural underinvestment and a platform that stays limited in scope. -On consortium governance: the sharpest point in the piece. Allaire repeats, almost verbatim, a line he'd already made publicly: that large groups of large companies coordinate poorly, have misaligned incentives, and tend to starve their own consortium out of self-interest. He states Circle itself tried this model in USDC's early days and ran into the same problems. He closes by reaffirming that the Coinbase partnership remains as strong as ever, that several OUSD founding members remain major USDC partners, and that Circle continues expanding its own ecosystem (Arc, CPN, StableFX, Agent Stack) by working with dozens of other stablecoin issuers, his way of signaling Circle doesn't feel threatened in its role as infrastructure. 5. Why OUSD hasn't won anything yet Recent history for consortium-backed stablecoins argues for caution, and echoes Allaire's own point. USDG (Paxos, with Kraken, Robinhood, and Galaxy among its backers) is plateauing around $3 billion. PYUSD (PayPal) took two and a half years to approach $4 billion, then shrank by a third from its peak. A big announcement doesn't make an adoption curve. Three questions remain open: governance across a 149-member consortium, historically slow and prone to misaligned incentives; the viability of a model with no fees and no retained yield; and, above all, the end user, since the yield flows to partners, not holders. Why hold OUSD rather than USDC or USDT? The answer will hinge on incentives, and on that front, we're watching Plasma and Tempo (Stripe's chain) closely as the two most likely launch rails. 6. Tether, watching calmly from the sidelines With over $180 billion in USDT circulating, Tether dominates territory OUSD isn't primarily targeting: Tron, P2P payments and remittances in emerging markets, trading collateral in Asia. The threat is real for Circle; at this stage, far less so for Tether. Our takeaway The real story here isn't "Circle vs. OUSD," it's the structural compression of issuance margins. Allaire's response, however well-argued, doesn't refute that point so much as reframe it: his thesis is that network effects and liquidity matter more than distributed yield, and that Circle can afford to share revenue as long as it stays the default rail. That's a defensible position, but it still has to prove itself against a consortium that, for the first time, aligns distributors and infrastructure rather than pitting them against each other. Reserve yield, the economic core of stablecoins, is being redistributed. The question is no longer whether, but to whom: distributors, chains, partners, or end users. For allocators, that's arguably good news: more competition among issuers means more value captured by whoever brings the liquidity and the usage. At Gami Capital, where we run on-chain USDC strategies day to day, we'll be watching liquidity migrations and the opportunities this new landscape creates closely. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.

  • Charu_Sethi
    Charu (@Charu_Sethi) reported

    Cloudflare just opened a waitlist to let any site on its network charge AI agents per API call, per dataset row, or per MCP tool call, settled in stablecoins. Monetization Gateway, announced 1 July, is built on x402 and names USDC and the new Open USD consortium stablecoin as settlement assets. It was built with the x402 Foundation, now under Linux Foundation governance with 25-plus members. The protocol itself is not new. What is new is that any site or API already sitting behind Cloudflare's edge, which is a lot of the internet, gets a one-step path to becoming a paid, machine-payable resource. x402's adoption bottleneck has not really been the protocol design. It has been integration friction for the long tail of API providers who would need to stand up their own facilitator relationship. This is aimed straight at that friction. Cloudflare has not disclosed what it charges for facilitating this, single-source, waitlist stage, worth being upfront about that. Does the edge network that already classifies and blocks bot traffic become the natural place to charge that same traffic instead? It would be a logical extension of what Cloudflare already does, but it is still a waitlist, not a shipped, priced product. Curious whether other CDN and edge providers follow, or whether this becomes a Cloudflare-specific wedge. @Cloudflare @coinbase @CoinbaseDev #x402 #AgenticPayments

  • OverPoweredJPeg
    CertainLogic Trading (@OverPoweredJPeg) reported

    @coinbase Fix it then. Lets get this done.

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