Reddit Outage Map
The map below depicts the most recent cities worldwide where Reddit users have reported problems and outages. If you are having an issue with Reddit, make sure to submit a report below
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.
Reddit users affected:
Reddit is a social news aggregation, web content rating, and discussion website. Reddit's registered community members can submit content, such as text posts or direct links.
Most Affected Locations
Outage reports and issues in the past 15 days originated from:
| Location | Reports |
|---|---|
| Da Nang, Da Nang | 1 |
| Chhindwāra, MP | 1 |
| Puteaux, Île-de-France | 1 |
| New Delhi, NCT | 1 |
| Paris, Île-de-France | 1 |
| Vigo, Galicia | 1 |
| Phoenix, AZ | 1 |
| Lima, Lima | 1 |
| Indio, CA | 1 |
| Rosenau, ACAL | 1 |
| Pélissanne, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur | 2 |
| Adelaide, SA | 1 |
| Brisbane, QLD | 1 |
| Bengaluru, KA | 2 |
| Dhaka, Dhaka | 1 |
| Foligno, Umbria | 1 |
| Odessa, FL | 1 |
| Guayaquil, Guayas | 1 |
| Atlanta, GA | 1 |
| Helsinki, Uusimaa | 1 |
| Lübeck, Hansestadt, Schleswig-Holstein | 1 |
| Craiova, Dolj | 1 |
| Nanaimo, BC | 1 |
| Chicago, IL | 1 |
| Pāhoa, HI | 1 |
| Pittsboro, NC | 1 |
| Buffalo, NY | 1 |
| Minneapolis, MN | 1 |
| Ocala, FL | 1 |
| The Hague, zh | 1 |
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.
Reddit Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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Chunga (@LuvChunga) reported@LucarioProject There is literally a server on plutonium that removed the ability to steal enemy care packages and move sentry guns... the server mods on plutonium are reddit mods
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just andrey (@andreyiscoding) reported@1Umairshaikh built a product nobody wanted first. spent 6 months perfecting it. got nothing. flipped it. spent weeks sharing online and being helpful with my reddit tool. using it got myself 3 paid users now trying to help others get their customers. the product was never the problem.
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Shanmukh (@0xRegressor) reportedhow many accounts do you have? i have : twitter : 2 discord : 2 facebook :10+ ig i dont use it anymre snapchat : 1 tiktok : 1(banned) twitch : 1 youtube : 5 spotify : 2 pinterest : 1 reddit : 1 gmail : might get in trouble if i say it instagram : 5 telegram : 1
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icen (@icenquon) reportedThere's a quiet trap in how people respond emotionally to a downvoted Reddit post, and it's worth knowing about before it happens rather than after. The instinct is almost always to delete the post, to make the embarrassment disappear. What actually happens underneath is that the karma loss from that post is already counted by the time deletion crosses anyone's mind, and the deletion itself, especially if it becomes a pattern, gets read by spam detection as a separate warning sign of its own. This means the damage from a post that didn't land isn't really fixed by removing it. It's already happened. The account that lets an unsuccessful post simply sit there, learns from why it didn't work, and moves on tends to fare better over time than the account that reflexively deletes anything that gets a lukewarm reception, since that deletion pattern compounds into its own kind of red flag. There's something worth taking from this beyond the technical detail. A post that doesn't land isn't really a crisis. It's information, and reacting to it with panic or erasure tends to create more of a problem than the original lukewarm reception ever did on its own. Learning to sit with an unsuccessful attempt, rather than scrambling to hide it, turns out to matter more here than most people expect going in.
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heka (@hekaaaaaaa1) reportedReddit organic is completely insane. You post in a hyper-targeted community, get qualified traffic, and convert without paying for every click. The problem is the SaaS tools built around it. Engain, Ranqer, and the others. Hundreds a month in subscription, then you still pay per comment and per post. You’re renting Reddit. And the bill never stops. The smarter play is owning the accounts yourself. But not random aged accounts. Ultra trust ones. High karma, multi-year history, natural activity, already credible in the communities that matter. That type of account is genuinely hard to find. Most of what’s sold online is junk that dies in a week. You pay once. Post and comment as much as you want. No per-action tax. Those tools rent you access. Accounts give you distribution. I sell ultra trust Reddit accounts built for this exact use case. DM if you want ones that actually hold.
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Ebloodsports (@ebloodsports) reported@reddit_lies We need to shut down Reddit
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Elisabeth D’Armiento (@thedeadlydonald) reported@KweenInYellow Party elites didn't do this and it's the last thing anyone wants because they need to win the seat. If they wanted to intervene they could have done it with the tattoo, reddit posts, infidelity, abuse allegations, maybe people in ME, average age 52 have an issue with ****? I do
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PASSIVE INCOME ANNA (@PassiveAnna) reported20 Unhinged things to try, it gets more unhinged down the line: 1. Read Negative Reviews 2. The "Grandma" Test: Explain your industry to a 70-year-old. 3. Infiltrate Private FB Groups: Join groups for stressed-out professionals (nurses, lawyers, etc.). 4. Scroll Reddit "Help" Subs: Search "How do I" or "I hate it when" in niche subreddits. 5. Find projects that reached 100% funding but failed to deliver. 6. The "Boredom" Method: Sit in a room for 2 hours with no phone, no music, and no pen. Your brain will start hallucinating ideas just to escape the silence. 7. Look for tutorials with 1M+ views but terrible audio. Remake them with high quality and better SEO 8. Audit Your Bank Statement: Look at what you've paid for every month for 2 years. If you’re paying for it, thousands of others are too. Can you do it better/cheaper? 9. Sit in a high-end hotel lobby or airport lounge. Listen to what wealthy people complain about, their "rich people problems" pay the most. 10. Reverse Engineer Your DMs: What is the one thing people always ask you for advice on? 11. Scan Job Postings: Look for companies hiring 5+ people for one role. It means they have a problem. Build a software or agency that solves that specific bottleneck. 12. The "Argue" Method: Go on Twitter and post a slightly wrong take about a niche. The experts who come to correct you will give you all the high-level info you need for free. 13. Check Craigslist "Gigs": See what random, weird tasks people are desperate to outsource. If it’s recurring, it’s a business model. 14. The "Expired Domain" Hunt: Search for popular websites that died. They still have traffic and backlinks; you just need to put a new offer on the old "land." 15. Stalk "App Store" Search Trends: See what people are searching for but can't find. If there's no app for a high-volume search, you just found a gap you can fill. 16. The "Annoyance" Journal: For one week, write down every single thing that mildly irritates you. 17. Analyze Foreign Markets: Look at what’s blowing up in Brazil or China that hasn't hit your country yet. Be the one who imports the trend. 18. The "Refund" Inquiry: Call a big company’s customer service and ask what people most frequently ask for refunds on. 19. Search "Hacks" on TikTok: Find "life hacks" with millions of views. Most hacks are just manual versions of products that should exist. Build the product. 20. The "Delete Everything" Mental Model:If you lost your job and your house today, what’s the first thing you’d do to make $100? That’s your most viable business.
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Ricardo Nunes (@RicJFNunes) reported@DoesItPlay1 I think the problem is that even if we buy physical games, the rest will probably not. Twitter and Reddit are echo chambers..it’s sad but I realistic don't see them revert the decision. We should in fact fight for better digital protection laws.
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ChivalryIsUndead (@undead_is) reported@bjones306 @IanCarrollShow @SaltyCracker9 I’m gonna break this down point-by-point, as a rational argument should be, all of my data taken from the actual pre-trial proceedings, without ad hominem because I don’t know you, I just disagree with you. Your Argument 1. 1. “They have video of him all over that campus. Everything from mulling around, to climbing the stairs to that rooftop, to jumping down moments after the shot was fired.” Response 1. FALSE: FACT: They have absolutely NO video presented as of yet that clearly distinguishes Tyler Robinson. Instead, it’s the same videos and still images we’ve already seen, distant or grainy video of a person vaguely fitting Tyler’s build and clothing (sometimes different clothes which is accounted for by a “clothes changing” theory). Robinson was never identified as the suspect until he turned himself in. Your Argument 2. “They have his car on video. They have the plate registered in his name on video.” Response 2. Clarification: His car being in Provo on that day is circumstantial. IN FACT, a lead investigator stated under oath when questioned in cross-examination that the woman who owned the ring camera with footage of Tyler’s car told him she saw A BALD MAN in the driver’s seat of the car along with 3 OTHER MEN. That’s officer testimony of an eye witness who saw multiple people and a bald man driving in “Tyler’s car”. Your Argument 3. “They have his DNA all over the screwdriver on the roof and towel the gun was wrapped in.” Response 3. Incomplete assertion: They also have another person’s (Twiggs) DNA on the screwdriver and towel, and possibly a 3rd person (the analyst’s initial report concluded 3 people and it was agreed upon by a reviewer, but then a 2nd reviewer came to her later and convinced her it was 2 people, not 3). In addition, the ATF lab identified a total of 5 different people’s DNA (Robinson + 4 others) on the actual gun itself. Your Argument 4. “They have a text exchange where he literally admits he did it. They have a Redditt thread where he admits he did it.” Response 4. No Reddit Confession. Twiggs Testimony Contradicts Prosecutor Texts. Witness Could Not Be Cross-Examined: - There is no Reddit confession. There is a Discord confession that took place from the account “zealous_monkey_55095” at 8:57PM on 9/11/2025. However, Tyler was already in Washington County Sheriff custody at 6:25PM that same day. - Twiggs testified Tyler contacted him ONLY ONCE at 11:00PM on the day CK was shot. That contradicts his OWN texts presented by prosecutors that show Tyler texted him at 4:33PM (Interesting side-note, Twiggs’ phone coincidentally has a circular screen crack in the upper left corner, obscuring phone time). - The defense requested but was not permitted to examine the phone or its meta data or gps data, and were only allowed to view the screen shots of Twiggs’ screen second-hand on a pic, so could not confirm text authenticity or possible alteration. - The Defense was not allowed to cross-examine Twiggs under oath. Twiggs was also granted limited immunity by The State to testify for the prosecution against Robinson. Incentive. Argument 5. “There are verbal confessions to both his lover and his father that he did it. (those will come out in the actual trial)” Response 5. Alleged by Twiggs Prosecution, Not By Tyler’s Father: There is no affidavit where Tyler’s father states his son confessed to him. There is only allegation from Twiggs and allegedly by the officer “friend of the family”. Argument 6. “There was no reason NOT to pave over the scene. The investigation of said scene was already done. There was no evidence left to collect. That sort of thing is wrapped up in a matter of hours.” Response 6. FALSE: The lead investigator testified it takes up to a week or more of for this kind of high profile case to wrap up forensics. The investigator also stated UVU did not even inform him when they pulled up the grass and paved over the crime scene, and he first learned about it on the news.
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TEXIMEKS (@teximeks) reportedAlibaba reportedly bans employees from using Claude Code China’s Alibaba will ban employees from using Anthropic’s programming tool Claude Code, starting on July 10, according to multiple reports. Anthropic already prohibits Chinese companies, as well as foreign entities owned by those companies, from using its models. The company has reportedly been working to close loopholes that allow Chinese users to access Claude. According to a recent Reddit post, some of that loophole-closing involved a version of Claude Code that could secretly identify Chinese users. Anthropic’s Thariq Shihipar said in a post on X that this was “an experiment we launched in March that was meant to prevent account abuse from unauthorized resellers and protect against distillation.” (Distillation is a practice where AI models are trained on the outputs of other models.) “The team has landed stronger mitigations since then and we’ve actually been meaning to take this down for a while,” Shihipar said. Nonetheless, Alibaba has reportedly classified Claude Code as high-risk software and is instructing employees to use the company’s Qoder tool instead.
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kiska kasparov (@COOCHIECOWGIRL) reportedI really don’t like craig hill’s whole identity on social media but im not sure if i could pin down why. Feels very Reddit every day carry energy
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Interested_in_stocks (@talkingstocks81) reported@ConsoomerLs OMG employed people on Reddit complain about such luxury problems. I WISH I was in a position to complain about stuff like this. Finding a job now is 100X worse than doing a job
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Clyde (@parklief) reportedthese past months i just said ok im never gonna make this ill let it go but funny enough like.. a sweet oomf of mine offered to help me recently and also someone on reddit but the issue is the same as always...: no writers..!...cant have a story without it being written!!
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Josh Kubicki (@jkubicki) reported@MEKowalski Frustratingly firms are hiring without asking/testing for AI competency. Worse, many are striking down interviewees if they mention AI skills. Firms have to get in front of this. Lawyers not properly trained will do what the Reddit thread hits on. Those who have been properly trained and reps with legal thinking and AI are less likely. I tech two consecutive 3 credit hours classes at IU Maurer on this. My students are fluent and competent. But many firms will overlook this.