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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

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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:

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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
Stockholm, Stockholm 1
Manchester, England 1
Guyane, Guyane 1
Istanbul, Istanbul 1
City of Rapid City, SD 1
Edmonton, AB 1
San Francisco, CA 1
Pune, MH 4
Saint-Pierre, Réunion 1
Melbourne, VIC 4
Kensington, England 1
Vancouver, BC 1
Marseille, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur 2
San Jose, CA 1
Thiruvananthapuram, KL 1
Ottawa, ON 1
Enguera, Valencia 1
Benalmádena, Andalusia 1
Sydney, NSW 1
Township of Evan, KS 1
Ballinasloe, Connaught 1
Copenhagen, Capital Region 1
Stoke-on-Trent, England 1
Sebring, FL 1
Chicago, IL 1
New Orleans, LA 2
Toronto, ON 1
Barcelona, Catalonia 1
Algiers, Algiers 1
Cape Breton County, NS 1
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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:

  • fraudfreezers
    InLimbo (@fraudfreezers) reported

    @Reddit @fuelfive You can just tell this thing is a lefty ****. It drips down every pixel on your forums. Imagine supporting that stance. You bunch of ******* spastics at Reddit.

  • tomaldertweets
    Tom Alder (@tomaldertweets) reported

    I vibe-coded a tool that got me 250k impressions the next day. Here's exactly how it works - and the prompt I used to build it. I used to lose 45 minutes every morning scrolling Reddit for content ideas. I asked Perplexity Computer to build me a tool that would do it for me. 2 evenings. 5 conversations. 0 code I wrote myself. Perplexity called it Reddit Radar: → Scans 20 tech subreddits at 6am → Ranks trending visuals by potential → Writes 5 hook angles per saved visual → Syncs directly into my Notion pipeline Now my morning routine is 3 minutes with a coffee. Tap through the ranked posts, save what I like, choose from the best hooks. The next morning I posted one. It did 250,000 impressions and 500+ engagements. What's wild: I never picked the stack. Perplexity Computer chose Claude Sonnet for the hook gen, React + Tailwind for the frontend, Express + SQLite for the backend, Notion API, Gmail API, a cron job, and Python to parse Reddit RSS. All by itself. When the save function broke, I screenshotted the error and sent it back. It diagnosed the issue, refactored the flow, and deployed the fix - all in one message. You don't need a content team any more. You need content systems. Full prompt + live tool + deep dive article in the comments 👇

  • Dannfox_22
    DannFox (@Dannfox_22) reported

    Nike acquired RTFKT in 2021 for an undisclosed sum widely reported in the hundreds of millions. By January 2025 they shut it down. By December 2025 they quietly sold it. Adidas. Reddit. Starbucks. All tried. All retreated. And Nike is now facing a class-action lawsuit from its own NFT holders who called the shutdown a rug pull. Here's the uncomfortable truth: none of them failed because NFTs don't work. They failed because they bolted a crypto product onto a brand without asking one question first: what existing behavior does this improve? Technology doesn't create habits. It improves them. Every brand still planning an NFT strategy in 2026 needs to answer that question before spending a single dollar. The ones that do will look very different from the ones that didn't.

  • realarmaansidhu
    Armaan Sidhu (@realarmaansidhu) reported

    @immasiddx YouTube Premium subscribers are seeing ads, and Google's official response has been "we're aware, it's a bug, we don't have a timeline." The screenshot is real. AndroidPolice and Reddit threads have documented dozens of cases since late 2025. The yellow progress bar is the integrated ad format used in standard YouTube, not Premium Lite. This is a different problem than the contributor notes suggest. YouTube Premium is sold as ad-free. It costs $14 a month individual, $23 family. The product promise is the absence of ads. When ads appear anyway, even sporadically, the implied contract breaks. Google's lawyers know this. The bug has been allowed to persist for months because admitting it formally opens up class-action exposure. The math is uncomfortable for everyone. YouTube has roughly 130 million Premium subscribers globally. Premium revenue runs north of $15 billion annually. A bug that intermittently serves ads to 1-2% of Premium users is several million people having their paid product mildly degraded. What this also reveals about Google's product priorities. Premium revenue used to be the moat protecting YouTube's ad business. Now Premium is the underinvested part of the stack. Engineering hours route toward Shorts monetization, AI summarization, and creator commerce tools. The bug surface that would have been fixed in 48 hours in 2018 sits open in 2026 because nobody on a quarterly review cares enough to push the fix. The ad you saw isn't a glitch. The glitch is that nobody at YouTube is incentivized to ship the patch.

  • stpaquet
    Stéphane Paquet (@stpaquet) reported

    @strzibnyj Then you will fall back to the same moderation issues as Reddit. Because at the end of the day we are only humans

  • luscasgibis
    Lucas (@luscasgibis) reported

    @ProfofEvil I do feel that the people that like the book don’t appear on Twitter very often to talk about it. At least on the english language posting they’re mostly shy of sharing because of the constant reminder of how “terrible” it is. Reddit though… is the opposite problem.

  • Ruinosekai
    Thomas Jefferson (@Ruinosekai) reported

    @TheWr13r @amaifuwaa Instagram needs to go with Twitter and Reddit it’s genuinely terrible

  • TopQuokka
    TopQuokka (@TopQuokka) reported

    @GarbageHuman24 @GerryKeogh_ Now he is off to post on Reddit about having 8” of depth or some such and will add some ‘down below’ photos off a female anatomy medical site while boasting about his multiple girl ‘O’ body-shakes. In reality he’s crying about the infection, pain and roadkill aesthetics.

  • MrMunchWeb
    Chris Munch (@MrMunchWeb) reported

    @aporiabuilds the exact words your customer uses to describe their problem in amazon reviews and reddit threads are your highest converting headline and most brands never look.

  • konrad_matej
    matej (@konrad_matej) reported

    X boosts the original poster. Reddit lets the crowd vote. We had to pick. When a comment has 50 replies, which one shows up in the feed? Looks small. It's actually a big call. Please show the wrong reply; the thread reads as dead. Show a good one, and people click in. Went down this rabbit hole researching comment replies at @framer a few weeks ago. X is explicit: OP replies get algorithmically boosted to the top. YouTube seems to do something similar more subtly, surfacing the author's replies above those that came first chronologically. Reddit goes the other way entirely, ranking by a confidence-weighted upvote ratio (Wilson score). Three platforms, two leaning toward "OP matters" and one rejecting that entirely. All tuned to years of behavioral data. I had none. Picking any of those would've been me optimizing for what I imagined, not what I'd seen. So we settled on the boring version: chronological, with the earliest reply visible, the rest behind "Show more." Watch how it gets used. See if the OP's reply matters, or the longest one, or replies with images, etc. Then make the smart call. Almost added cleverness for problems that might not exist yet. Easier to add later than to remove.

  • ItzKaosSzn
    Kaos (@ItzKaosSzn) reported

    @crashd_out @maxaadiidayaa @BigGulpAmerikan I hate that I can jump on this app and accidentally talk to a ******* ****** for no ******* reason. Reddit is down the hall to the right, ***.

  • bbaddapp
    sleed (@bbaddapp) reported

    @Apple_Pitou @Demonhonho oh my god appleshitou has broken reddit containment

  • noah_sterlingg
    Noah Sterling (@noah_sterlingg) reported

    chatgpt doesn't recommend your tool because you have strong domain authority or 200 backlinks it recommends tools that appear naturally in conversations, reddit threads, and community discussions where real users describe actual problems and solutions the old seo playbook of building links and publishing keyword articles is now completely disconnected from how ai search actually works

  • realarmaansidhu
    Armaan Sidhu (@realarmaansidhu) reported

    A Reddit confession went viral. A 22-year-old with terminal cancer took out a credit card with $6,500 limit, 0% APR for 20 months, and bought what he wanted because the debt would die with him. The replies called him a hero. The structural read is harder than either framing. The mechanism. US credit cards charge an effective average APR of 24.5% in 2026 to compensate for default risk. Lenders price expected losses across millions of accounts. Terminally ill borrowers who max accounts they don't intend to repay become statistical noise in a system designed to absorb them.The numbers. ~41% of Americans die with credit card debt averaging $6,400. Lenders write off ~$130B/year in unsecured consumer debt collectively. A single $6,500 default by a terminal patient costs the issuer ~$6,500. The same amount in compound interest gets recovered from ~50 healthy borrowers paying minimum payments over 5 years. The structural read. The system isn't broken. It's exactly what it looks like. Lenders extract value from the healthy and absorb losses from the dying. Both flows are priced into the average. The "hero" framing flatters the borrower without acknowledging the cost still gets paid by other consumers. The honest read. A dying person enjoying months they couldn't otherwise afford is not the moral failure here. The moral failure is a healthcare system that left a 22-year-old with $2,000 in savings after two years of cancer treatment. The credit card is the symptom. The treatment economics are the disease.

  • Smatterchuboy
    CommonSense (@Smatterchuboy) reported

    @Timcast Put. Down. The. Pipe. You're never going to prevent Reddit users from arguing about things over which they have no control.

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