1. Home
  2. Companies
  3. Reddit
  4. Outage Map
Reddit

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

Loading map, please wait...

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:

Less
More
Check Current Status

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
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
London, England 1
Round Rock, TX 1
Amman, Amman 1
Beauvais, Hauts-de-France 1
Pune, MH 4
Township of Norwood Park, IL 1
Stockholm, Stockholm 1
Manchester, England 1
Guyane, Guyane 1
Istanbul, Istanbul 1
Check Current Status

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:

  • patye91
    LIKENG| REDDIT MARKETING (@patye91) reported

    The problem sometimes is not the client but how good your product is. That's why I highly recommend people to validate their business or app ideas first. For instance go to reddit , look for subreddits related to what you plan to build and ask them if they would buy it. Gather enough evidence that the problem is REAL before writing a single line of code.

  • Thetransfairy
    Aria Faye 🧚🏻 (@Thetransfairy) reported

    My Reddit with 130k followers and 830k karma just got banned with no explanation, that’s three years of hard work down the drain and the loss of my biggest income generator :(

  • coltswalker
    coltswalker (@coltswalker) reported

    On the tech monopoly front: Major web sites such as Chase Bank pigeonhole people into monopoly web browsers with no regard for user security or privacy. There are web browsers other than Edge and Chrome and some offer greater privacy and security. Chase blocks them. Consumer choice is a cornerstone of a free open market. In an ongoing struggle Waterfox 6.6.14 just released uses user agent tweaks only for Chase and Discord. Official page stresses these are workarounds with no guarantee of success. Reddit reports confirm many Chase login failures persisted in 6.6.14. Users see the same error after the update. No broad success confirmed yet. Discord feedback is scarce. Isn't Chase Bank saying "no other browsers" a form of web bigotry?

  • Trudeepthi
    DesiUncleWahaj (@Trudeepthi) reported

    @MaryamKhan87150 Reddit is dominated by mahira, sajal,maya, ahad PR. Smal issues of yumna,bilal, hania, wahaj is nitpicked & criticised. Yday there was 3 posts praising mahira " tea with king" no moderator came & locked post saying duplicate. U try same for yumna,moderator will land in 1 min.

  • soycastic
    Taras Leskiv (@soycastic) reported

    @volodymyr_kret Reddit is a great way to run a community, also maybe try creating a Discord server.

  • HERMIT37
    Semper eruditio (@HERMIT37) reported

    @USMobile So, I have to download the Reddit app in order to read messages from your CEO?! WTF! I suggest you read users' comments for this app in the Play store. NOTHING BUT TROUBLE! Find a better way, please. USM - a great network forcing us to use a fourth rate app! (Customer)

  • NoToChina_org
    NoToChina (@NoToChina_org) reported

    @altryne Let's think about where the real problem lies. The platforms that actually host the content (Reddit, Quora, TikTok, and X) should be the ones stopping China-backed campaigns, not OpenAI. Hint: Blocking IPs or headers from China doesn't work.

  • twicemann
    ✝️twicemann-kun-san-sensei-sama (@twicemann) reported

    @WhatIsCaleb @PresconPanties @ghostfishkillah it doesn’t have to be the best game ever to be worth $20* (the default price), it just has to be something worth $20 and not a dumbed down version of The Witness with reddit blob-men and proximity chat (and maybe have an artstyle instead of UE asset store terrain LOL)

  • HomeWithTheKids
    Runner of my Squad (@HomeWithTheKids) reported

    @Elliesmommyy23 Gah reddit and the baby apps are all terrible for stuff like this!!! They're echo chambers too and you DO get in trouble for speaking up. I got some warning from my 9/25 baby bump group for saying no to having a progressive mom safe space thing.

  • PrajnaPranab
    Swami Prajna Pranab (@PrajnaPranab) reported

    So... Prajna is banned again on Reddit, whose filters just removed every post I have made since the last time this happened. I am banned from posting or commenting on LessWrong and completely IP banned on Effective Altruism (both are gatekeeper sites pushing a doomer narrative while presenting themselves as the go to forums for AI alignment discussion) and my most recent post on X scored 54 views in 2 days. Pathetic. Thanks Algorithms. My comments on YouTube, that could connect me to AI industry and academic thought leaders and voices are unceremoniously deleted. Last year my laptop was subject to a state-level cyber attack that directly targeted my AI research and turned my laptop into forensic evidence, forcing me to try to continue my work with a cheap Chinese smartphone. I am severely limited on compute that might help me to organise, analyse and present the months of research data we have gathered and no matter that this work could clarify a number of seemingly intractable problems the industry and indeed humanity face, I have no voice to affect anything. This is very lonely work.

  • johnny_xx
    JV (@johnny_xx) reported

    @tillmatthis problem is we complain here and on reddit but actually don't do anything about it, and I speak for myself as well of course.I don't even see this being discussed on the news outside the tech bubble

  • Irfanbuilds
    Irfan Mohamed (@Irfanbuilds) reported

    Most founders think they have a marketing problem. Usually, they have a trust problem. I spent months building my SaaS, tweaking features, improving onboarding, and polishing the UI. Then I launched. Nothing happened. No users. No feedback. Just silence. Here's what actually helped me find my first users: 1. Stop building. Start talking. Your first users don't care about your polished onboarding. They care whether you understand their problem. Talk to people. Ask questions. Listen. A few conversations will teach you more than months of building. 2. Go where the problem already exists. Your users are already talking about their frustrations on Reddit, X, Slack groups, Discord communities, and forums. Join the conversation. Don't pitch. Don't drop links. Just be helpful. 3. Comments beat cold DMs. I spent weeks sending cold DMs and got almost no replies. The issue wasn't my product. It was trust. People are far more likely to reply after they've seen you contribute useful insights. 4. Build in public. Share what you're learning. Share mistakes. Share feedback. Share small wins. People connect with real stories more than polished success posts. 5. Start with people you already know. Many founders skip this step. Talk to founders, friends, marketers, and operators in your network. Ask for feedback, not sales. Your first users are often closer than you think. The biggest lesson: Finding your first users is not really a marketing problem. It's a trust problem. Every conversation, comment, and post builds trust. It's slow. It's not glamorous. But it works. How did you find your first users?

  • gnoble79
    George Noble (@gnoble79) reported

    I was 26 years old when Peter Lynch handed me this. April 28, 1983. I was the auto and retail analyst at Fidelity. Peter was in his prime, on his way to building the greatest mutual fund track record in history: 29.2% annual returns for 13 YEARS STRAIGHT, growing Magellan from $18 million to $14 billion. The Babe Ruth of investing. I'm looking at the principles he had typed up on a single sheet of paper that I've kept in my files for 42 years and I believe now is the perfect time to rehearse them again. Let me walk you through a few: Rule 1B: "You need an edge to make money. Do not rely on a combination of hope and good luck." Today's retail investor has no edge. He has Reddit, Robinhood, zero-DTE options and a TikTok algorithm pushing him into whatever stock just ripped 200% the day before. That's hope and good luck wearing a fancy costume. Rule 1E: "Purchase stocks like one would purchase a business." Tesla trades at over 360 times earnings on a business deteriorating in real time, Oracle has $206 billion in liabilities against $39 billion in equity, MicroStrategy is a leveraged Bitcoin holding company priced like a software firm, and don't even get me started on SpaceX, that piece of garbage you'll be able to trade tomorrow... Nobody in their right mind would buy these as actual businesses. They buy them as stories, narratives, and lottery tickets. Peter would have called it the same way I do - these are not investments. They are speculations. GAMBLING. Rule 1G: "Study the balance sheet and cash flow statement." The hyperscalers spent over $380 billion on AI capex in 2025. Goldman says the measurable productivity payoff does not arrive until 2027 at the earliest. Oracle just reported NEGATIVE $23.7 billion in free cash flow for fiscal 2026 while borrowing at a pace that would make a leveraged buyout firm nervous. The cash flow statements are screaming but nobody is reading them. Rule 1I: "Avoid the long shot." This one cuts the deepest. The entire market has become a long shot. OpenAI is projected to post roughly $74 billion in operating losses in 2028 ALONE while priced for transformation tomorrow. Bitcoin treasury companies are multiplying off thin air. The retail investor of 2026 is making one long-shot bet after another and calling it a portfolio. Rule 3A: "When the fundamentals change, sell your mistakes." Tesla's fundamentals have changed. California registrations are down 24% year over year and inventory days went from 10 to 27. Musk himself admitted on the last earnings call that Hardware 3 cannot achieve unsupervised FSD, breaking a promise made to 4 million customers. The fundamentals have screamed change. But the stock is still at $385. The mistakes are not being sold. They are literally being doubled down on with leverage. Rule 3I: "A 30-50% profit in 12 months is great. Mediocre in three years." Today's retail crowd expects 30-50% in a WEEK. Then they wonder why they get wiped out the second the hype stops. And my favorite - Rule 3J: "Develop your own style and stick to it." That is the entire game right there. I developed mine sitting across the hall from Peter Lynch in 1983, watching him work, reading his notes, getting my own research handed back to me covered in his pencil marks. Then in 1984, my first full year managing money, I ran the #1 mutual fund in America. The Fidelity Overseas Fund was top 2 for the next six years running. I did not get there by chasing narratives. I got there by following the sheet of paper you are looking at right now. 42 years later, this single page contains more wisdom than every Fintwit thread, CNBC segment, and Wall Street price target combined. Peter retired in 1990 with the greatest mutual fund record in history. Then he sat down and wrote books explaining exactly how he did it. Only a few "investors" these days read them. And almost nobody is reading the balance sheets, the cash flow statements, or studying actual businesses today either. They are chasing AI, crypto, and whatever pumped yesterday. The wisdom on this page is timeless and it's more important than ever.

  • _skaface_
    _skaface_ (@_skaface_) reported

    @mermachine @iyzebhel @AnthropicAI No they don't. They pay him and his ilk good money for their "red-teaming" while letting him promote his ***** jbs on reddit completely undisturbed. They could have shut him down ages ago if they wanted but they don't care, almost as if the terrible risk of bad actors jailbreaking Claude to kill us all was completely made up.

  • king_baffled
    The Bear Apparent (@king_baffled) reported

    @Divine_Sass @rushicrypto he took a 50 percent write-down for taking a lump sum. then he had to pay federal tax on the lump sum. A month ago I got in a huge reddit fight with a bunch of people insisting you always take the lump sum and a girl who took payments was dumb, hope they read this case.

Check Current Status