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.
- Sign in (44%)
- Errors (44%)
- Website Down (11%)
Live Outage Map
The most recent Dropbox outage reports came from the following cities:
| City | Problem Type | Report Time |
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Errors | 10 days ago |
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Website Down | 10 days ago |
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Errors | 10 days ago |
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Sign in | 13 days ago |
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Errors | 28 days ago |
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Sign in | 1 month ago |
Community Discussion
Tips? Frustrations? Share them here. Useful comments include a description of the problem, city and postal code.
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Dropbox Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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Renildo Fogaréu (@Renildofogareu) reportedDropbox refuses to issue annual refunds even if the payment was recent. @DropboxSupport @Dropbox
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Simon Bates (@RobotDoggy69) reportedI don't know what's going on with Dropbox and my Mac at the moment, but it just won't stay running. I assume it's another apple update that's causing this headache. For two such big firms to give its clients such problems is seriously ****** up.
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Ravi Joseph (@rjkarmayogi) reported@signulll Google search - I LLM chat about general queries and usually only google for specific pages now Dropbox - eaten by iCloud and Google Drive Meetup - used to be good for local niche event discovery but that seems broken now
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Elias Al (@iam_elias1) reportedThen the conversation took a turn. The technician pulled up Activity Monitor and showed him something: 23 apps were running in the background that the customer didn't have open. Adobe Creative Cloud. Spotify. Slack. Microsoft AutoUpdate. Dropbox. Google Drive sync. Three different "helper" apps installed during printer setup years ago. Each one was consuming small amounts of CPU, RAM, and battery cycles 24/7. The technician's words: "Your MacBook isn't slow because it's old. It's slow because it's running 23 jobs nobody hired it to do." System Settings → General → Login Items → look at the lists under both tabs → remove anything that doesn't need to launch automatically. The customer removed 18 of them on the spot.
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Jasper Polak (@polak_jasper) reportedEvery mid-market consulting firm I've spent time inside has the same archaeology. Proposals from 2022 in a partner's Dropbox. Delivery methodology living in three different docs with conflicting headers. Sales call notes in Teams. Post-mortems in a notes app on an iPhone. Client health data in HubSpot. Margin in the finance spreadsheet. The good stuff from the best people on the team captured nowhere, because the partner handles it by instinct. Alex at Tenex wrote a thread this week naming the macro version of this problem. Engineering already has its AI brain (the *** repo). Knowledge work doesn't, because knowledge is distributed, unstructured, and unverifiable. Someone will build the generalized version. Payoff: "Robinhood for knowledge workers." Agree with almost all of it. The part I'd add for services firms: The corpus isn't the problem. You have more context than almost any other business type. Every engagement generates detailed artifacts. Every partner has fifteen years of calibrated judgment. Every proposal has a clear win/loss signal. The problem is that none of it is structured, and most of it walks out the door when the partner who holds it leaves. Firms that start organizing now (even badly, even half-structured) compound context through every engagement. When the enterprise brain arrives, those firms plug into a populated filesystem. Firms that wait plug into an empty one. The tool will get commoditized. The corpus won't. Start the archaeology today. Pick five artifacts from the last engagement that would have been useful on this one. Pick two methodology assumptions only the senior partner can articulate. Write them down somewhere your future brain can find them. The tool is coming. The corpus is what you'll plug into it.
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Ryan McKeen (@ryanmckeen) reportedLawyers, your biggest barrier to AI isn't AI. It's that your data lives in 6 places. Dropbox. Drive. Email. Hard drive. A spreadsheet only one person can find. Fix that first.
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John Cartwright°͌͌͌͌͌͌͌͌͌͌͌͌͌͌͌͌͌͌͌͌͌͌͌͌͌ 🐈 🐈 🐈 (@bejiitas_wrath) reportedWindows Defender, the built-in antivirus running on every Windows machine, has a working zero-day exploit with full source code sitting on GitHub. No patch, no CVE, and confirmed working on fully updated Windows 10 and 11. A researcher who says Microsoft went back on their word just handed every attacker paying attention a privilege escalation that takes any low-privileged account straight to NT AUTHORITY\SYSTEM. On Windows Server, the result is different but still serious: a standard user ends up with elevated administrator access. The vulnerability is called BlueHammer. On April 2nd, the researcher posted the public disclosure on a personal blog, and on April 3rd, the full exploit source code went live on GitHub. Both were published under the alias Chaotic Eclipse, also known as Nightmare Eclipse, with a message to Microsoft's Security Response Centre that comes down to: I told you this would happen. In late March, the same researcher opened a blog with a single post explaining that they never wanted to come back to public research. Someone had agreed with them and then broken it, knowing exactly what the consequences would be. The post says it left the researcher without a home or anything. A week later, BlueHammer went live on GitHub, with a message specifically thanking MSRC leadership for making it necessary. That is not someone annoyed with a slow review process. That is someone with nothing left to lose. BlueHammer is not a traditional bug, and it does not need shellcode, memory corruption, or a kernel exploit to work. What it does is chain five completely legitimate Windows components together in a sequence that produces something their designers never intended. Those five components are Windows Defender, Volume Shadow Copy Service, the Cloud Files API, opportunistic locks, and Defender's internal RPC interface. One practical limitation worth knowing: the exploit needs a pending Defender signature update to be available at the time of the attack. Without one in the queue, the chain does not trigger. That makes it less reliable than a push-button exploit, but it does not make it safe to ignore. When Defender runs an antivirus definition update, part of that process involves creating a temporary Volume Shadow Copy, which is the same snapshot mechanism Windows uses for backup and restore. That shadow copy contains files that are normally completely locked during regular operation, including the SAM database, which stores the password hashes for every local account on the machine. BlueHammer registers itself as a Cloud Files sync provider, the same kind of thing that OneDrive or Dropbox uses to sync files. When Defender touches a specific file inside that folder, the exploit gets a callback and immediately places an opportunistic lock on that file. Defender stalls, blocked, waiting for a response that is never coming. The shadow copy it just created is still mounted. The window is open. With Defender frozen in place, the exploit reads the SAM, SYSTEM, and SECURITY registry hives directly from the snapshot. It decrypts the stored NTLM password hashes using the boot key pulled from the SYSTEM hive, changes a local administrator account's password, logs in with that account, copies the administrator security token, pushes it to the SYSTEM level, creates a temporary Windows service, and spawns a command prompt running as NT AUTHORITY\SYSTEM. Then, to cover its tracks, it puts the original password hash back. The local account password looks completely unchanged. No crash, no alert, nothing. The Cloud Files provider name hardcoded in the exploit source code reads IHATEMICROSOFT. The administrator password used during the escalation is hardcoded as $PWNed666!!!WDFAIL. These are not bugs left by accident. They are messages, written directly into the code, and there is only one intended reader.
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No (@cameraplan7) reported@itskinkerbell drive. If people try to download a photo off of Dropbox in a browser/link, the quality actually goes down. I’ve tested on multiple photos and it doesn’t happen with drive
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tara_ (@TechByTaraa) reportedInstagram uses Python. Spotify uses Python. Dropbox uses Python. Reddit uses Python. Netflix uses Python. Pinterest uses Python. Quora uses Python. OpenAI uses Python. productivity never went out of fashion. still think Python is too slow? 👀
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Rogerio Ferreira (@rogeriofza) reported@FMSlovakia portugal 2 meu super - dropbox link is not working
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Simple American News 🗞️ (@TSimpleAmerican) reportedDropbox CEO Drew Houston is stepping down after 19 years, with chief product officer Ashraf Alkarmi being promoted, per CNBC
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Lagoon Labs (@LagoonLabsMv) reportedDropbox is doubling down on virtual-first while everyone else pushes return to office - their people chief says hybrid is the worst of all worlds.
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Glitch Truth (@glitchtruth) reportedthe bottleneck is OSC 52 only forwards text, not image bytes. workaround most people land on: screenshot to a synced folder (Dropbox/iCloud) and reference the path, or scp it over before pasting. iTerm2's imgcat works the other direction but not for input. real fix would need a custom escape sequence nobody's shipped yet.
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Robert DC🛸🦾 (@RDecrypto) reported5/ Cursor turned down SpaceX's $60B offer. Now valued at $50B. 2 years ago: an open-source side project. Today: worth more than Dropbox + Slack + Pinterest combined. AI dev tools: biggest opportunity or biggest bubble in tech? What did I miss this week? 👇
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𝖆𝖍𝖒𝖎𝖗 (@calhalt98) reported@liabynight Lmk if you ever make a Dropbox, I’d be down to get it
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Mohit Sindhwani (@onghu) reported@ocornut @RichardKogelnig Actually, some times the new menu is faster and the classic menu is much slower... but then sometimes, the new menu shows 3 entries called "Loading..." and that's terrible, too! I think one of my W11 PCs has almost instant context menu - the Dropbox notes were from that one.
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Adam Shurey (@AdamShurey) reported@devalara44 @ALeighMP I had the same issue, Dropbox are so annoying to deal with. I hope this new legislation helps.
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Neural Insights (@neural_insights) reportedNetflix, Google, Anthropic, Meta, xAI, Perplexity, DeepSeek, Instagram, Spotify, Dropbox, Reddit, Pinterest, Uber, Airbnb, Quora all use Python. But sure—Python is “too slow” for your project.
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PATRICK (@Augustuskiefer) reported@DropboxSupport We did not. The issue resolved around 12:45 cst
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Patrick Daniel Alpha (@PatrickDanielAl) reportedInstead, I point Claude at the shared Dropbox link. It reads the folder structure, finds the right product, and drills down into the High Res image folders automatically.
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HiPri$ (@PlayDaMac) reportedLil bit selling nudes Like 2015! 20$ PayPal for a Dropbox. Just login to Onlyfans
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Hany (@kmhaneem) reportedDropbox launched in 2008 with a simple promise. Put your files in this folder and we will sync them everywhere. Every sync goes through their servers first. Their infrastructure. Their terms. Your files sit on their machines until you need them back. A developer named Jakob Borg decided that was the wrong architecture. Not inconvenient. Wrong, at the level of who owns what. In December 2013 he shipped the first public release of Syncthing. Peer-to-peer file sync. Your devices talk directly to each other. No company in the middle. No server reading the transfer. Syncthing is free, open-source, and has 67,000+ GitHub stars. The project's own stated mission: your data is your data alone, and you deserve to choose where it is stored. Most sync tools list speed and storage first. Syncthing's README lists data protection as priority 1 and priority 2. Speed does not even make the list. That tells you exactly what this project is. -> Your files go from your laptop to your phone. Nowhere else. -> Works on Windows, Mac, Linux, Android, and more. -> No storage cap. Your limit is your own hardware. -> Peer-to-peer sync. Direct device to device, encrypted in transit. -> Runs silently in the background. Zero clicks after setup. -> Web UI included. No command line required to use it daily. -> Open protocol means no vendor can quietly change the rules on you. -> GPG-signed releases. You can verify every binary before running it. -> Versioning built in. Deleted something? You can get it back. -> Self-hostable discovery servers if you want to go fully off-grid. By 2019, Syncthing was getting roughly a million downloads per stable release and syncing hundreds of terabytes of data every day. It is now backed by the Syncthing Foundation, a Swedish non-profit, so no company can buy it, pivot it, or shut it down. Last commit: this week. Shipping continuously since 2013. 300+ contributors. Still pushing updates in 2026. Dropbox: $9.99/month. Google Drive: $9.99/month. Syncthing: $0. Forever. No account to create. No server holding your files hostage. No price hike email arriving on a Tuesday morning. No terms-of-service update quietly granting them new rights to your content. Cancel Dropbox and your access dies with it. Run Syncthing and nothing changes. Your files are on your machines. They stay there whether you open GitHub tomorrow or never again. That is not a feature. That is a different relationship with your own data. 67,000+ stars. MPLv2 license, which means no corporation can quietly close it down. 300+ contributors across a decade. Updated this week. The people who switch to Syncthing are not always the most technical. They are the ones who read the terms of service once and could not unsee them. If that sounds like you, the link is worth a look. (Link in the comments)
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Nav Toor (@heynavtoor) reportedOpen your bank statement right now. Count every subscription. Netflix. Spotify. ChatGPT Plus. Claude. Adobe. Apple One. Disney+. iCloud. YouTube Premium. Audible. NYT. Dropbox. Notion. Gym. Dating app. A 2026 study found the average American spends $219 a month on subscriptions. That is $2,628 a year. But they estimate they spend $86 a month. 74% of people admit they have forgotten about a recurring charge. 42% are currently paying for a subscription they have stopped using. A Portuguese developer named Miguel Ribeiro got tired of bleeding money to forgotten subscriptions. He lives in Berlin and works as a senior frontend engineer at eBay Kleinanzeigen by day. At night he tried Billbot and a bunch of paid web apps. None of them worked. Some of them charged him a monthly fee to track his monthly fees. So in October 2023 he wrote his own. The repo today: → 7,922 stars → 365 forks → GPL-3.0 licensed → Pushed last week → 69 followers on the founder's profile It is called Wallos. You self-host it. It tracks every subscription, every renewal date, every category, every currency, and shows you the actual number on one screen. Here is the wildest part: The subscription companies designed the system this way on purpose. 72% of people set everything to auto-pay because the checkout flow defaults to it. Cancellation pages are buried 5 clicks deep. Some require a phone call during business hours. A 2022 FTC report called this "dark patterns" and Adobe is paying $150 million in a settlement for hiding cancellation fees this exact way. Miguel did not raise venture capital. He did not write a Medium post. He did not go on a podcast. He shipped one PHP app from his apartment in Berlin and now thousands of people use it to claw back hundreds of dollars a year. The honest part: It needs a tiny server (a $5 Raspberry Pi works). You have to enter subscriptions yourself, it does not auto-detect from your bank. The UI is functional, not gorgeous. The author still works a day job and ships updates in his spare time. Berlin. One developer. The companies that auto-charge you forever finally have an enemy.
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Timbitz (@Timbitz01) reported@TodayUpdates0 @RedLineReportt They can be if they want as far as I'm concerned. But the problem is.. that's not how they are voting. It's all the mail in and absentee voting and the anytime dropbox and the counting til they win that's the problem.
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Chris_Mellor (@Chris_Mellor) reportedAll of a sudden, when trying to upload Voice Record 7 audio recording files from my iPhone to Dropbox I now have to login to Dropbox and get an emailed verification code .... WHY??? All the convenience has gone. It's enshittification.
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The New Release Guy (@moviesplusgames) reported@Dropbox Maybe it is a skill issue, like ppl keep saying....bc they're WAY behind a company like X.
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BlackhillsEd (@blackhillsed) reported@SgtJulier1776 @CoffeeBlackMD I would suggest @HunterEsoteric Go to his website, sign up for the emails and look at his resources. He is on YT (Taken down before) and Spotify. Once you get the 1st email go to the bottom of the page and get the complete Dropbox vids. Get his cheatsheet as well!
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RealHD (@Purified_HD) reportedUpdate: I was able to get the download link the mod was using to pull the .exe on launch taken down through Dropbox. It won't stay down for long, but it throws a wrench in their operation for now.
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ᴾᵒᵗ ᵒᶠ ˢⁿᵉᵉᵈ (@P0tofSn33d) reported@Revolution61858 @Liliyalyv @2WBIA_Reformed ***** y dont u got yoself a dropbox or getchu a link tree wit all da links to download or some shieet so dat when dey take down 1 link u gots all sorts of avenues? Hustler Mindset *****.
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✨️Ascendant (@ascendant32) reportedyo laptop people, is 2tb of ssd necessary on a laptop these days or is 1tb enough? assuming 32gb ram i work w huge datasets sometimes as for storage needs i use dropbox so it's never been an issue but sometimes loading datasets can be an issue bc not enough ram lol