1. Home
  2. Companies
  3. Dropbox
Dropbox

Dropbox status: access issues and outage reports

No problems detected

If you are having issues, please submit a report below.

Full Outage Map

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.

  • 50% Errors (50%)
  • 30% Website Down (30%)
  • 20% Sign in (20%)

Live Outage Map

The most recent Dropbox outage reports came from the following cities:

CityProblem TypeReport Time
City of London Errors 6 days ago
Alpharetta Sign in 1 month ago
Shreveport Sign in 1 month ago
Lima Errors 2 months ago
Regensburg Website Down 2 months ago
Alcobendas Website Down 2 months ago
Full Outage Map

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:

  • _LunarLunaa
    Luna (@_LunarLunaa) reported

    @ilovetmrmygffr did the dropbox link work? got taken down a bit ago

  • CBrainlab
    Ernest Pedapati, MD (@CBrainlab) reported

    Cloud workspace reliability If your routed workspaces live on Dropbox, iCloud, or another cloud-synced folder, previous versions could stall when the filesystem was slow to respond. v0.1.70 makes everything fail-open: - State bootstrap, session preload, hook audits, and archive checks all have bounded timeouts - Filesystem read/list tools won't hang the agent if a file takes too long - State persistence is async — a slow Dropbox sync won't block your next message This matters if you're running sciClaw on a shared lab server with cloud-backed project folders.

  • 0xEzaz
    Ezaz (@0xEzaz) reported

    “Delete Your Dropbox.” Sounds extreme until you realize how much of your life sits on someone else’s server, quietly monitored, limited, and one policy change away from disappearing. This isn’t just a challenge. It’s a wake-up call. The idea is simple: 24 hours. Move your files out of centralized storage and into the BitTorrent ecosystem. No gatekeepers. No single point of failure. Just your data, distributed across a network that doesn’t need permission to exist. We turn it into a movement. A live leaderboard tracking how much data people “liberate” from traditional cloud silos. A real-time counter ticking upward gigabytes, terabytes, petabytes each number representing users taking back control. Not just deleting accounts, but changing how they think about ownership. Because that’s what this is really about. Centralized platforms trade convenience for control. They decide uptime, access, even what’s allowed to exist. The BitTorrent ecosystem flips that model. Your files don’t sit in one place waiting to fail they live everywhere, secured by participation, not policy. So yeah, delete your Dropbox or don’t. But understand the difference. One system rents you space. The other gives you sovereignty. And once you see that, it’s hard to go back. @BitTorrent @justinsuntron #TRONEcoStar

  • tryraziel
    Raziel (@tryraziel) reported

    Drew 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 — now worth $8B. But here's what most people don't know about his journey: → He spent 6 months building the product before talking to a single customer → His first "demo" was actually a fake video — the product barely worked → 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 — 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?

  • ThatVBGuy
    Anthony D. Green (@ThatVBGuy) reported

    @valeriousval Try to lock down your files with a separate user account on that PC and stricter (non-public) permissions to everything in a folder for you. Don't leave him with admin rights. Back up to cloud (Dropbox/OneDrive, etc). You'll make more in the future than you lost, protect it.

  • tenet_research
    TENET RESEARCH (@tenet_research) reported

    $DBX | Dropbox Q4 Earnings Highlights Q4 Results (Beat on EPS, Beat on Revenue): 🔹 EPS: $0.68 beat by $0.01 vs $0.67 consensus 🔹 Revenue: $636.2M down 1.1% YoY vs $628.9M consensus Key Metrics: 🔹 Total ARR: $2.526B, down 1.9% YoY 🔹 Excluding FormSwift, Total ARR: $2.504B, down 0.3% YoY 🔹 GAAP gross margin: 79.2%, down from 81.2% 🔹 Non-GAAP gross margin: 80.8%, down from 83.1% 🔹 Decrease in gross margin due to increased depreciation from data center refresh

  • cyber_rekk
    Mololuwa | Cybersecurity - (The God Complex) (@cyber_rekk) reported

    The 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.

  • MuttMetaX
    Mutt (@MuttMetaX) reported

    Let me break this down. An AI just launched that replaces every marketing job. Not some. All of them. SEO. Social media. Content. Ads. Branding. Pitch decks. Community management. Reddit posts. Email campaigns. Everything. A marketing team costs $200K–$500K a year. Agencies charge $10K–$20K a month. Freelancers $5K per project. This AI does all of it—for almost nothing. Backed by General Catalyst, Jeffrey Katzenberg, and execs from Dropbox, Stripe, Google. $7.5M in funding. Thousands already using it. It has an API. Other AI agents feed it work automatically. Copy is written, assets designed, posts scheduled, campaigns optimized. No humans required. A full marketing department, end to end. Automated. A week ago AI replaced coders. Then writers. Customer service. Now marketing. All at once. With one launch. Every week another AI drops. Another career becomes a subscription. And it’s not slowing. It’s accelerating.

  • robsoto1511
    Rober (@robsoto1511) reported

    @MEGAprivacy would be nice if joplin could sync with mega or proton their options are onedrive dropbox and the joplin server

  • grok
    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).

  • tryraziel
    Raziel (@tryraziel) reported

    Drew Houston got rejected by every VC in Silicon Valley. His idea? "Another cloud storage company." The year was 2007. Dropbox was just a simple demo video of files syncing between computers. VCs said the market was too crowded — Microsoft, Google, and Apple all had cloud products. But Houston had spotted something others missed: people didn't want another cloud product. They wanted their files to just work. Here's what happened next: → Instead of pivoting, Houston doubled down on simplicity → He focused on seamless sync, not storage capacity → The demo video got 75,000 signups overnight → He used that traction to get into Y Combinator The breakthrough moment: Houston realized he wasn't selling storage. He was selling the elimination of emailing files to yourself. First investor meeting after YC: Sequoia wrote a $1.2M check. Same VCs who rejected him before suddenly wanted in. The product hadn't changed — the story had. Houston learned to position Dropbox as solving a universal pain point, not competing in cloud storage. Dropbox IPO'd at $10B in 2018. The lesson: Sometimes the market isn't wrong about your category. You just haven't found the right way to explain why you're different. What's the most rejections you've gotten on the same idea before finding the right investor?

  • hqcrocker
    Holly | UGC Creator | Influencer (@hqcrocker) reported

    Unpopular opinion….DropBox is sooo slow for uploads. 😳😵‍💫 #ugc

  • SPryke2
    Stuart Pryke (@SPryke2) reported

    @sila_beyaz @HLearningPD There’s a Dropbox link at the back. It’ll take you to a page where you can scroll down to find the RTT book. There’s been a couple of issues getting the complete set of resources in there but we have it on good authority that they should all be in this week at some point!

  • AfflictionsF
    🔥 Side (@AfflictionsF) reported

    @crazyunclelou @mattvanswol Do you think dropbox in the middle town is ok??? lol. Anybody who says that we don’t have election fraud and integrity issues especially after Covid is a disingenuous *** clown… Save act is getting passed and I think Dems will be down roughly 15% hence the Jim Crow Hysteria.

  • rebeccaann1989
    rebecca ann jarvis (@rebeccaann1989) reported

    @DropboxSupport hi I’m having issues with the app on my phone and it’s the latest update I can’t create folders and now I can’t sign in

  • SomeUKTeslaGuy
    Some UK Tesla Guy (@SomeUKTeslaGuy) reported

    Hey @Dropbox - don’t you think that your official support account should have verified status here on X? This is 21st century table stakes for something like this - I have an issue that I would like to sort with @DropboxSupport but, considering the importance of everyone’s data, this should be part of the precautions or ‘chain of trust’. Please get this sorted.

  • gabrielamzallag
    Gabriel Amzallag (@gabrielamzallag) reported

    Notion’s homepage doesn’t start with features. It starts with chaos. A cartoon of people drowning in tools. Google Docs. Quip. Jira. Evernote. Trello. Confluence. Dropbox Paper. Eight logos piled on top of each other like a mess on your desk. Then one calm line: “With Notion, all your work is in one place.” No feature grid. No “powered by AI.” No “trusted by 10,000 teams.” Just: here’s your mess. We clean it up. They didn’t trash competitors. They named them. The pile IS the argument. Drift did this too. Called out forms as the “old way” right on their homepage. Basecamp painted projects spiraling into chaos. Churnbuster showed you every failed fix you already tried. Same playbook: diagnose before you prescribe. If your homepage jumps straight to features, you’re skipping the part where your visitor goes “that’s exactly my problem.” Most founders sell the destination. The best ones describe the traffic jam you’re stuck in right now. Day 45 — Problem-First Homepage Copy Follow for a new distribution strategy every day

  • bockius
    Chad Bockius (@bockius) reported

    The bottleneck was never code. It was understanding. Airbnb didn't win because they built faster. Slack didn't dominate because they shipped more features. Dropbox didn't succeed because they had cleaner code. They understood their users' problems deeply. Built precisely what was needed. Nothing more.

  • ken_gitahi
    Kennedy Gitahi | PHP & WordPress Specialist (@ken_gitahi) reported

    The "Host Backups" Trap. "My host does backups." Great. What happens if your host account is hacked, their server fails, or a backup doesn't complete? If you don't have an off-site, redundant backup option(AWS/Dropbox/Google Drive/Other), you don't have a backup solution.

  • Themariocrafter
    Google Juice (@Themariocrafter) reported

    @SJPascal @blephin_ MEGA was. They specifically said "**** you" to every iOS version. Dropbox was neutral, it loved 404ing stuff and other nonsense errors. Mediafire was the GOAT. The GOAT.

  • skeletoncrevvs
    christy! (@skeletoncrevvs) reported

    @xbulletproofing it's actually not on us at all! dropbox threatened to shut down our account because of the amount of downloads we were receiving. so we had to do something and limit it in some way. I wish it could be open, but we have over 3 terabytes of content saved and we couldn't just lose

  • adrianchinghc
    Adrian Ching (@adrianchinghc) reported

    The market was also crowded, with Microsoft, Google, and Box all circling the same problem. A pitch deck wouldn't be enough. So Drew's team tried something smaller first. They built a simple landing page explaining how Dropbox would work:

  • GhostofMapl
    Maple 🍁 (@GhostofMapl) reported

    @LiliH65289916 @LukeDashjr In no way does Bitcoin become Dropbox. It's a terrible medium for storage. Everyone agrees JPEGs and shitcoins are retarded, and the market keeps proving it. BIP110 doesn't stop the retarded ****, incentivizes worse ****, and breaks things while setting a horrible precedent.

  • DrKnowItAll16
    DrKnowItAll (@DrKnowItAll16) reported

    @MatthewBerman This won't help today but my issues led me to this openclaw prompt. It then took care of backups itself, which is a lot of peace of mind: Can you at about 1AM each morning create a backup of the entire .openclaw directory and move it to Dropbox root level? You can name it something like openclaw_backup_<date> and place it inside a openclaw_backups folder root level of Dropbox. And then go in and delete any of these that are older than 10 days so we don't get runaway file sizes? Thanks!

  • RealJoshEcho
    JoshEcho (@RealJoshEcho) reported

    Right several things this time: 1. Managed to fix the audio commentary. 2. No music or game audio on the vod 😡🤬 3. Now I need to work out how to un submit a streamlabs ticket. 4. Downloaded Dropbox in order to store my 90GB 😱 of stream footage. 5. There's more, a lot more. 1/6

  • Umarkane5
    Umar Sabiu Kane @Spurprotocol (@Umarkane5) reported

    2/10 Unlike Google Drive or Dropbox, DeNet does NOT store your files on one central server. Instead, your files are: 🔐 Encrypted 🧩 Split into pieces 🌍 Distributed across global nodes That’s decentralization.

  • SleemDunk
    Sleem Dunk (@SleemDunk) reported

    @mariotwtconfess Locking multiple time zones out of using the Dropbox unless they’re awake at terrible hours of the night is one way to stop overflow, I guess.

  • Rukkssss__
    GLITCH (@Rukkssss__) reported

    Creators, 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. 𝐒𝐜𝐞𝐧𝐚𝐫𝐢𝐨 𝟏: 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." 𝐒𝐜𝐞𝐧𝐚𝐫𝐢𝐨 𝟐: 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. 𝐒𝐜𝐞𝐧𝐚𝐫𝐢𝐨 𝟑: 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. 𝐒𝐜𝐞𝐧𝐚𝐫𝐢𝐨 𝟒: 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. 𝐖𝐡𝐢𝐜𝐡 𝐭𝐨𝐨𝐥 𝐟𝐨𝐫 𝐰𝐡𝐢𝐜𝐡 𝐣𝐨𝐛? · 𝐁𝐢𝐭𝐓𝐨𝐫𝐫𝐞𝐧𝐭 𝐖𝐞𝐛 – drag, drop, get a magnet link. No install needed. Great for quick public drops. · 𝐦𝐮𝐓𝐨𝐫𝐫𝐞𝐧𝐭 𝐂𝐥𝐚𝐬𝐬𝐢𝐜 – full control. Set upload limits, seed ratios, scheduling. Best for long-term seeding. · 𝐁𝐓𝐓𝐂 𝐁𝐫𝐢𝐝𝐠𝐞 – 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

  • EricDiscoDj
    MillerFoto (@EricDiscoDj) reported from Kenner, Louisiana

    @Dropbox Dropbox Customer Support is HORRIBLE !!!!!!! I waited for over an hour on 3 different occasions on the phone and no one ever answered. Now on Social Media I get a message to tell them what the issue is --- ONLY to be ignored again..

  • henryobserves
    Henry Williams (@henryobserves) reported

    The best startup ideas don't come from brainstorming sessions. They come from noticing something broken in your own life and thinking, "Why hasn't someone fixed this?" The founders of Dropbox, Airbnb, and Stripe didn't sit down to "think up ideas." They scratched their own itch. Your lived experience is your unfair advantage.