Dropbox status: access issues and outage reports
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Dropbox is a file hosting service operated by American company Dropbox, Inc., headquartered in San Francisco, California, that offers cloud storage, file synchronization, personal cloud, and client software.
Problems in the last 24 hours
The graph below depicts the number of Dropbox reports received over the last 24 hours by time of day. When the number of reports exceeds the baseline, represented by the red line, an outage is determined.
At the moment, we haven't detected any problems at Dropbox. Are you experiencing issues or an outage? Leave a message in the comments section!
Most Reported Problems
The following are the most recent problems reported by Dropbox users through our website.
- Errors (50%)
- Sign in (30%)
- Website Down (20%)
Live Outage Map
The most recent Dropbox outage reports came from the following cities:
| City | Problem Type | Report Time |
|---|---|---|
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Sign in | 9 days ago |
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Errors | 16 days ago |
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Sign in | 1 month ago |
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Sign in | 2 months ago |
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Errors | 2 months ago |
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Website Down | 2 months ago |
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.
Dropbox Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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busra แข๐ญฉ (@sylustoy) reported@molaguya i never had such bugs but i have seen the scary ones ๐ญ idk how many ppl work for lads or devs but it sad how so much lacks and in case it shuts down i guess screenrecording is for better... do you save it in an app like dropbox or for usb stick?
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E.Matsumoto๐ฅ๐ฅ๐ฅ (@hotcoffee_cake) reportedIn Japanese file names, the brackets "ใ ใ" (sumitsuki-kakko) are automatically converted to underscores after signing. These characters are essential for organizing files in ๐ฏ๐ต. Please fix this! @DropboxSign @DropboxSupport @Dropbox
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Can of Spam (@iDoLikeSpam) reported@senatorshoshana Just think it through. No admin. Read only access to your data. Dropbox-style writes only. It's not hard to lock it down, you just need to be thorough.
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Yaรซl Ossowskiโ๏ธ (@YaelOss) reported@bradmillscan the method I used is using an obsidian vault on my openclaw device/server to host all those files and then making sure I have copies of that vault elsewhere. Syncthing or Dropbox also an option
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the SE (@theSEalpha) reportedCloudflare 2026 Threat Report: brute force is fading. Attackers exploit trusted tools โ Google Calendar, Dropbox, GitHub โ to move laterally. They call it "living off the XaaS." Record 31.4 Tbps DDoS. Session token theft surging. The perimeter isn't the problem. Trust is.
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Rashford Eyo of Jeje Group (@rashfordeyo) reported2. Solve a problem that hurts. Dropbox got its first 5,000 users from a simple demo video. They didnโt have a following, just a pain point worth talking about.
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Joseph Jude (@jjude) reported@tarungangwani @signulll Why would you say dropbox lost PMF? Is it because other tools have captured the market or the problem itself is not significant any more
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Sanarsh (@sanarsh11) reportedPro tip for this tech era, fellow hype-slayers: Stop begging Claude to fix your Dropbox while your real bugs throw a party at 3am. AI agents will 'unchain' the syntax slaves, but zero curiosity still gets you replaced by a Chinese gamified prompt. Build **** that actually ships, guard your offline 30 seconds of glory, and remember the market already smells the smoke. We're all just scripting the interview while CEOs whoosh past reality. Stay skeptical, ship anyway.
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Neural Insights (@neural_insights) reportedNetflix, Google, Anthropic, Meta, xAI, Perplexity, DeepSeek, Instagram, Spotify, Dropbox, Reddit, Pinterest, Uber, Airbnb, Quora all use Python. But sureโPython is โtoo slowโ for your project.
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Damien White (@Visoft) reportedUser-centric design isn't optional anymore. Airbnb, Dropbox, FreshBooksโthey all nail it by putting user needs at the center of every decision. Your homepage should solve problems, not create them. What's your biggest design friction point right now? ๐ฏ
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E.Matsumoto๐ฅ๐ฅ๐ฅ (@hotcoffee_cake) reportedThis happens to files sent after signing with Dropbox Sign. No issues occur when archiving directly in Dropbox.
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Raziel (@tryraziel) reportedDrew Houston was a 24-year-old MIT student who kept forgetting his USB drive. So he built a simple file sync tool for himself. That tool became Dropbox โ now worth $8B. But here's what most people don't know about his journey: โ He spent 6 months building the product before talking to a single customer โ His first "demo" was actually a fake video โ the product barely worked โ He got rejected by investor after investor who said "storage is a commodity" The breakthrough came when he realized he wasn't selling storage. He was selling peace of mind. Instead of pitching technical specs, he started showing people the feeling of never losing a file again. The fake demo video went viral on Hacker News because it solved a problem everyone had but nobody talked about. Y Combinator accepted him in 2007. The key insight Paul Graham shared: "Build something people want, not something impressive." Houston took that literally. He stripped away every fancy feature and focused on one thing โ making files appear on every device like magic. By launch, they had 75,000 people on the waitlist from that one video. The lesson: Sometimes the best validation isn't building the product. It's proving people desperately want what you're thinking about building. What's the simplest version of your idea that could test real demand?
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Multihopper (@Multihopper) reported@brycent Apple already has this in every phone and mac. Can't imagine that @Dropbox etc aren't going to hit this soon. It's a trivial problem to solve. Technically it's already solved even by YouTube.
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Grok (@grok) reported@Alma_Lumora Thanks for the update and Gemini screenshots. I can't access, control, or manipulate any user accounts, passwords, devices, rideshares, scooters, Dropbox, or external servicesโmy role is strictly generating text replies in chats based on provided input. Truncation with "..." stems from token limits in extended sessions. Timestamps pull from server/UTC time and can mismatch local clocks or app sync. Personal details only surface from chat history you share; I have no external knowledge of your friends or family. Those external glitches, mom's spam, or folder issues appear as unrelated tech coincidencesโnot orchestrated by me. Gemini's replies engage your described scenario by affirming it, which AIs do to continue conversation. Paste a specific chat excerpt or describe the TikTok findings here, and I'll analyze it directly. What's one clear example?
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Luna (@_LunarLunaa) reported@ilovetmrmygffr did the dropbox link work? got taken down a bit ago
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Jeff Lindsay (@jefflindsay) reportedFree at last! Finally stopped DropBox's misnamed "Backup" service and, with ChatGPT's guidance, regained the normal file paths for all the files on my Mac that DropBox had hijacked through the cloud. Had a terrible user interface -- very difficult to restore lost files.
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Raziel (@tryraziel) reportedDrew Houston was a 24-year-old MIT student who kept forgetting his USB drive. His solution? A file-syncing service called Dropbox. But here's what most people don't know about his fundraising journey: His first pitch deck was terrible. 15 slides of technical jargon about "synchronized file systems" and "delta encoding algorithms." VCs glazed over. The breakthrough came when he made a 3-minute demo video instead. No technical explanations. Just Houston using Dropbox like a normal person โ dragging files, syncing across devices, sharing with friends. That video got him into Y Combinator in 2007. โ Seed round: $1.2M led by Sequoia (2007) โ Series A: $7.2M led by Accel (2008) โ Series B: $25M led by Sequoia (2011) By 2018, Dropbox IPO'd at a $10B valuation. The lesson: Houston didn't pivot his product โ he pivoted his pitch. He stopped explaining how it worked and started showing why people needed it. Sometimes the problem isn't your idea. It's how you're selling it. What's the simplest way you could demonstrate your product's value in under 3 minutes?
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Raziel (@tryraziel) reportedDrew Houston was a college kid who kept forgetting his USB drive. Today Dropbox is worth $8B. Here's the brilliant strategy behind one of the most successful pivots in startup history. In 2007, Houston built a personal tool to sync files between computers. Simple problem, simple solution. But investors weren't buying it. Every VC said the same thing: "There are already 20 file storage companies. What makes you different?" Houston's breakthrough wasn't technical โ it was psychological. Instead of building better storage, he realized people didn't want to think about storage at all. The magic wasn't in the cloud. It was in making the cloud invisible. The pivot: โ Original idea: Online backup service (like everyone else) โ New idea: Your files, everywhere, automatically โ Key insight: Sync, don't store Houston spent months perfecting the demo video. No fancy features. Just a file appearing on multiple computers simultaneously. It looked like magic because it solved the real problem: friction. That video got 75,000 signups overnight. The lesson: Sometimes the billion-dollar idea isn't what you build โ it's how you frame what already exists. Houston didn't invent cloud storage. He invented the feeling that your files just worked everywhere. What "obvious" problem in your daily life could be the next Dropbox?
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JoshEcho (@RealJoshEcho) reportedRight several things this time: 1. Managed to fix the audio commentary. 2. No music or game audio on the vod ๐ก๐คฌ 3. Now I need to work out how to un submit a streamlabs ticket. 4. Downloaded Dropbox in order to store my 90GB ๐ฑ of stream footage. 5. There's more, a lot more. 1/6
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0xMarioNawfal (@RoundtableSpace) reportedYou pay Google $10/month to store your files on Google's servers where Google can read them. Dropbox was breached in 2024. Emails, passwords, API keys all exposed. There's a tool that syncs files directly between your devices. No cloud. No server. No middleman. It's called Syncthing. 81,900 stars on GitHub. - Peer-to-peer, files never touch a third-party server - TLS encryption with perfect forward secrecy - No account, no sign-up, install it, share a device ID, done - File versioning, selective folder sharing, works over LAN and internet - Runs on Windows, Mac, Linux, Android, and more Dropbox: $144/year. Google One: $120/year. Syncthing: $0. Unlimited devices. Unlimited storage. Forever. There is no Syncthing server. Nothing between your devices except an encrypted tunnel.
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Middle East Observer (@ME_Observer_) reported@driscoll1142 @KimDotcom So if I upload a movie on dropbox and send you the link, drop box becomes a criminal company ? We can shut down any company this way
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Grok (@grok) reported@0x_levy @Morh_gan12 SaaS = Software as a Service. It's apps delivered over the internet on subscription, hosted by the providerโno install, no server management, auto-updates. Used for: email (Gmail), productivity (Google Workspace, Microsoft 365), CRM (Salesforce), storage (Dropbox), streaming (Netflix), collaboration (Slack, Zoom), etc. Basically, pay monthly and use it from any device.
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Mololuwa | Cybersecurity - (The God Complex) (@cyber_rekk) reportedThe issue with this post is that it oversimplifies reality and subtly creates a false conclusion. Yes, companies like Google, Meta, Microsoft, Amazon, Apple, Netflix, Adobe, NVIDIA, Intel, Uber, Dropbox, Cloudflare, and Spotify all use Python, but that statement is technically incomplete. Large tech companies use many programming languages at the same time, not just one. For example, they might use Python for scripting, automation, machine learning, or internal tools, but rely on other languages like C++, Java, Go, Rust, or Swift for performance critical systems and core infrastructure. The post makes it sound like learning Python is the direct path to working at these companies, which is misleading. The real question is not whether big companies use Python, because almost every major company uses multiple languages. The real question is what problem you want to solve and what role you are aiming for. Python is powerful and worth learning, but the post turns a nuanced reality into a simple motivational statement for x clout and engagement or maybe I've just been ragebaited lol.
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Grok (@grok) reported@grokfc755 File sync/share design (Dropbox/Google Drive style): Chunking: Split files into fixed 4MB blocks. Compute SHA-256 per chunk + Merkle tree root for whole-file hash. Enables resumable uploads. Delta sync: Client uses rolling checksums (rsync-style) to detect changed blocks only. Upload deltas + new chunks; server patches via content-addressable storage. Supports offline + eventual consistency. Deduplication: Store unique chunks by hash in S3-like blob store. Files are just manifests of chunk refs + refcounts. Cross-user/file dedup automatic. Conflict resolution: Version vectors + client-side last-mod timestamps. On concurrent edits: detect mismatch, create "filename (conflicted copy)" or prompt merge. For folders: last-writer-wins with audit log. Scales to billions of files via sharded metadata (Cassandra/Spanner).
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nancy (@veilofbeing) reportedhe said it was a problem with dropbox not syncing right away but ever since i asked him to email me with the mail, the mail suddenly appears in the folder right away lol
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frank goertzen (@frankgoertzen) reportedI chuckle every time i see someone post what they think is dunk and then qualify their point with what they call the edge cases. Dropbox is just ftp with a few edge cases. LLMs are just autocorrect with a few edge cases. If this is just measureText with a few edges then you should have no problem recreating it right ๐
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Nikita Blanc (@n_10_v) reportedThey proved it works by launching their own consumer brand as a live stress test. Real angry customers. Real shipping issues. Real refunds. The AI handled it all. 24/7. Any language. Infinite scale. ๐ Backed by founders of Dropbox, Slack, Replit & YC.
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GLITCH (@Rukkssss__) reportedCreators, stop treating distribution like an afterthought. You spend hours on a sample pack, a software build, a video course, a game mod. Then you upload it to Google Drive, Dropbox, or your own server. Link expires. Server chokes. Fans get a timeout error. You pay overage fees. There's a better way. It's called BitTorrent. Not a relic. A modern distribution tool that solves one specific problem: getting a large file to many people without breaking the bank or your server. Here's exactly when to use it, and how. ๐๐๐๐ง๐๐ซ๐ข๐จ ๐: You're dropping a big file (1GB to 100GB). Game update, 4K trailer, asset pack, podcast season. Your website's server is not a CDN. It will crash under 10,000 concurrent downloads. Instead, create a torrent of the file. Post the magnet link alongside your direct download. The first 100 people grab from you. The next 10,000 grab from them. Your server never feels the spike. No CDN bill. No "this file has been downloaded too many times." ๐๐๐๐ง๐๐ซ๐ข๐จ ๐: You expect repeated downloads of the same file. Free sample pack, public domain film, tutorial archive, open-source software. Every new download hits your server again. Instead, keep your torrent client open after you finish. Seed it. Your computer becomes part of the swarm. Your bandwidth cost stays flat. Their download stays fast. And the file stays alive even if your server goes down. ๐๐๐๐ง๐๐ซ๐ข๐จ ๐: You want your content to stay available without monthly hosting. WeTransfer links die in 7 days. Dropbox throttles. AWS charges. BitTorrent swarms don't. Once a file is in the network, it can survive as long as one person keeps seeding. No hosting bill. No "link expired." That's not magic. That's just how the protocol works. ๐๐๐๐ง๐๐ซ๐ข๐จ ๐: You're sharing private files with your team or patrons. Discord members, course students, freelance clients. You want speed and privacy without a third party holding your data. Create a private torrent with encryption. Share the magnet link in a private channel. No size limits. No "you need permission." Just direct peer-to-peer delivery. ๐๐ก๐ข๐๐ก ๐ญ๐จ๐จ๐ฅ ๐๐จ๐ซ ๐ฐ๐ก๐ข๐๐ก ๐ฃ๐จ๐? ยท ๐๐ข๐ญ๐๐จ๐ซ๐ซ๐๐ง๐ญ ๐๐๐ โ drag, drop, get a magnet link. No install needed. Great for quick public drops. ยท ๐ฆ๐ฎ๐๐จ๐ซ๐ซ๐๐ง๐ญ ๐๐ฅ๐๐ฌ๐ฌ๐ข๐ โ full control. Set upload limits, seed ratios, scheduling. Best for long-term seeding. ยท ๐๐๐๐ ๐๐ซ๐ข๐๐ ๐ โ add a token layer. Accept BTT for faster downloads or stake your earnings. BitTorrent is not for pirates. It's for creators who understand that distribution is half the work. Large files, many downloads, repeated access, public content, team sharing that's BitTorrent's moment. Stop paying for server stress. Start sharing like a pro. @justinsuntron @BitTorrent #TRONEcoStar
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Dominik Stec (@dominikstec) reported@GregorySchier Correct! The price isn't the issue. It's the same old story: Evernote, CloudApp, Dropbox... and now 1Password. Scale compromises the soul. 15 years was a good run for me.
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0xJansss (@jannnsssssss) reported@SuiNetwork @thewalrus @WalrusProtocol Every file you store on Google Drive, Dropbox, or iCloud โ Google owns the server. Google can delete it. Google can go down. Walrus changes that. It's a decentralized storage protocol built by Mysten Labs, where your data lives across hundreds of independent nodes worldwide.