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 |
|---|---|
| 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 |
Community Discussion
Tips? Frustrations? Share them here. Useful comments include a description of the problem, city and postal code.
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Reddit Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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Sandro (@IAmSandroSaric) reportedUltra phrase of the week from Reddit: HAHAHAH I can build your app by myself in few hours if I want to, hihihihihihi ok, anyone can cook pasta at home, yet millions of people pay restaurants to do it for them every night. anyone can set up their own email server yet everyone pays Google or Microsoft. anyone can build their own apps, yet almost everyone uses existing tools and pays for them. the 1% of developers who will reverse engineer your app, swap out the license check, configure their own prompts, and maintain it themselves forever, let them, who cares they would never be customers, anyways. they would rather spend 20 hours rebuilding your tool than spend $29. that's their choice and it's a bad trade, because serious dev per hour is usually more than $29 but you can't stop them and you shouldn't try. the other 99% will think "this is cool it works, it saves me time, $29 is nothing"
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Custom Wetware (@CustomWetware) reported@tenobrus @DaveScolte On reddit each vote has the same value to the algorithm so bots are free to manipulate what gets recommended to you. And also the moderator issue. Good subreddits require good moderators but no sane, mature expert wants to be a moderator.
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Armaan Sidhu (@realarmaansidhu) reportedA 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.
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SilverBoarMedia (@AbcAbc347433) reported@GULAGSGOTTAGO @sixsevenabuser @MizoChris I'm going to post something you might find controversial, I didn't think BF4 was bad, it was one of my favourites. It did have it's problems for sure but what really killed the multiplayer was it's own community of power mad admins that make reddit look tolerant.
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Rashi Umapathi (@rashiumapathi) reportedHot take: Reddit is the best market research tool for SaaS and nobody uses it that way. Before you write a word of copy: Search your problem on Reddit. Read the top 20 threads. Copy the exact phrases people use to describe their frustration. That's your homepage headline. That's your email subject line. That's your ad copy. Your customers already wrote your marketing. You just have to find it.
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Elizabeth Hudson (@ClarkPolner) reportedText data exploded (and made LLMs possible) not only bc things like HTML5 or Wordpress or Reddit made it near-zero marginal cost to create/share - but **ALSO** bc writing publicly delivered instant prestige/citation payback, and text is easy to aggregate; each document or paragraph is mostly self-contained and is interpretable in isolation. PDB followed the same pattern: Possible bc crystallography; “cheap” bc publicly funded; incentives to deposit (more citations, more follow-on work), and straightforward to pool. But most biology data generation doesn’t look like this: 1. Sky-high cost to generate (wet-lab time, reagents, sequencing; even the “$100 genome” isn’t really $100 fully landed, and unlike text, biology has layers - so genomes aren’t all you need). If it cost $1 to reply to a subreddit or in a comments section, LLMs would look a lot different. 2. Enormous disincentives to share (you surrender IP, first-mover advantage, or grant priority). Academics are generating data with public funds, and are compelled to post their data publicly, and it’s still near impossible to get people to share their FULL data set in an easy to download form. (Because it’s better for your career to retain what you can so that you can publish on it.) And it’s even worse in private industry for obvious reasons; “I’ll spend your money and someone else will reap the reward” is, I assume, a hard pitch to make. 3 Poor aggregability: unlike text, every biological measurement is entangled with rich, often non-standardized metadata—sample provenance, exact protocols, instrument settings, controls, post-processing. Without the full context bundled, you can’t compare two datasets. (And what is shared now is almost never all of the raw data and all of the meta-data; it’s a distilled set of results or interpretations, the conditions for which you’ll never know.) Bottom line – platforms that make data generation cheap and easy are necessary, but they are not sufficient. They make it possible to generate @mkoeris’s “common crawl for the living world.” You have to find a way to make it easy to aggregate and rewarding to contribute. That’s what makes it probable. Not a technical problem. It’s an economics problem.
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Anglo-Saxon (@AngloSaxon97256) reported@C0nspiracyLemur @Mike_from_PA This was always the problem with ethan klein lawsuits. What is everyone gonna sue eachother for reactions now if they dont like the criticism? Is everyone going to sue asmongold or his reddit for posting or talking about them?
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JackWison (@jackaiwison) reportedProgramming is becoming a "commodity," while "product taste" is the scarce asset. There's a sobering point in that Reddit $10M discussion thread: the bottleneck is no longer writing code, but "knowing what to build." The most lucrative people in the next 10 years will be "AI Directors": ✅ Not needing mastery of Python syntax, but understanding system architecture. ✅ Using AI to automate messy databases and UI. ✅ The core competency is identifying processes in an industry that are "completely broken" and reconstructing them with AI. Don't be the one typing at the keyboard; be the one defining the problems. Direct the AI to help you "pick up the pieces."
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𝘴𝘰𝘧𝘪 𓂃౨ৎ ┆ 𝙚𝙢𝙧𝙚 𝙡𝙤𝙫𝙚𝙗𝙤𝙩 ♡ (@emreslover) reportednightmare fuel high cortisol team reinhardt one trick larper hitscan with bad mic and anger issues tiktok genji main reddit lucio but they’re 2-16 flank jetpack cat
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seroja sinar 🪷🔆 (@SerojaSinar) reported@clionemi It's the wording because you mentioned that Glitch was ******* up Aussie fans as if they were ******* up all of them like what they did with Korean fans. Seen tweets and posts on Reddit seeing people state that Glitch is pulling out of Aussie bcs a tweet by a Turkish fan
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IndiJo (@odd_joel) reportedion before acquisition point hit hard. I made the same mistake with my own iOS app (Moshi, a mobile terminal for devs). Spent two months pumping users in through Reddit and X while the first-week drop-off was 40 percent. Stopped all acquisition for three weeks, fixed onboarding, added one tiny push notification that brought people back, and the same acquisition effort suddenly produced way more keepers. The "use your own product religiously" one is also underrated. The only reason I noticed how broken my onboarding was is because I started using it to monitor my own Claude Code agents from the couch. Bugs jumped out within a day. You really cannot find them by intentionally testing, only by being a real user with a real need.
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Sayujya Gupta (@GuptaSayujya) reported@alexejbkkr Man, there are so many good ideas in comments as well as reddit But yk the problem isn't finding them, it's the validation part I struggle with Like how do I know if it's even gonna work
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The Growth Engine (@allenxmarketing) reportedI pulled 12 ad headlines from one Reddit thread in 9 minutes. The thread was an r/SaaS post: "anyone else burned out on AI tooling?" 47 comments. Real founders. Real frustration. I dropped the URL into a Claude Skill I built last weekend. It pulled 3 things from every comment: The pain. What was actually broken for them. Their objection. Why they hadn't switched yet. Exact phrases. Verbatim quotes of 6+ words. 9 minutes later I had a sortable table. 28 rows, sorted by emotional intensity. Top 3 phrases went straight into a landing page test that night. No paraphrasing. The awkward real wording is what makes copy land. One row read: "paying for 4 AI tools and using 1." That became a headline test against a generic control. CTR up 18% in 4 days. The lesson isn't really about Claude Skills. It's about where the language lives. Buyers write your best copy when they're frustrated at midnight on Reddit. You just have to go listen. One rule I follow: mine the language, not the people. Never paste usernames in ads. I wrote up the full Skill prompt and the 3-tier headline framework. Free guide. 1. Connect with me. 2. Comment REDDIT and I'll DM it over.
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Horizon (@horizon_trade_x) reported@aleabitoreddit 56% revenue growth, four beats in a row, stock down 30% YTD Says more about the tape than about Reddit
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CryptoD₿S (@DbsCrypto) reported"All systems operational" while your workflow is on fire is a trust failure, not a comms bug. If users need Reddit to verify whether Claude, Cursor, or Codex is broken, the status page has already failed. The minute the platform controls both the outage and the story about the outage, you need an independent signal.