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Amazon status: access issues and outage reports

Problems detected

Users are reporting problems related to: website down, errors and sign in.

Full Outage Map

Amazon (Amazon.com) is the world’s largest online retailer and a prominent cloud services provider. Originally a book seller but has expanded to sell a wide variety of consumer goods and digital media as well as its own electronic devices.

Problems in the last 24 hours

The graph below depicts the number of Amazon 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.

June 11: Problems at Amazon

Amazon is having issues since 07:20 PM EST. Are you also affected? Leave a message in the comments section!

Most Reported Problems

The following are the most recent problems reported by Amazon users through our website.

  • 45% Website Down (45%)
  • 29% Errors (29%)
  • 25% Sign in (25%)

Live Outage Map

The most recent Amazon outage reports came from the following cities:

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Metz Errors 8 hours ago
Pittsburg Website Down 11 hours ago
Fort Myers Website Down 13 hours ago
Lexington Website Down 15 hours ago
Cape Coral Errors 16 hours ago
Rennes Website Down 16 hours ago
Full Outage Map

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.

Amazon Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • james_Eagl3
    james_eagle (@james_Eagl3) reported

    @amazon hi! As usual another complete fumble. You casually cancel 90% of an order a month after it was placed without notification. The last 10%? You shipped to Pontiac Michigan??…… I’m at an APO address in Japan. Fix it.

  • ThatDamnedGamer
    P.C.Albert (@ThatDamnedGamer) reported

    @MadamSavvy @Pirat_Nation @NobodyHasSpoken Companies keep trying to do the whole cloud gaming thing, they have all failed, wasn't the last one that shut down Amazon?

  • Nestarichierich
    Robert Nesta (@Nestarichierich) reported

    @davidShayne1210 @EDoguses2013 Most people who believe MJ is guilty are unaware of key facts. A civil settlement doesn’t prevent a criminal trial, & u can’t pay people not to testify in criminal court. There’s a great doc called Square One on Amazon Prime breaking it down. There’s a free version on YT as well.

  • shakti0402
    Kumar (@shakti0402) reported

    @AmazonHelp I ordered a 2 kg bournvita packet 2 times for 847421 area pincode In this location the issue is they are not delivering the person they told me come to Wearhouse and take product Many times Called to Customer Support and Delivery partner they are not delivering not refunded

  • GrahamB_89
    Graham (@GrahamB_89) reported

    @MichaelShanks Only issue here is, Amazon don't sell most of their originals as physical media. They want people to sign up to Prime in perpetuity to retain access to the most loved content. I assume they would "gatekeep" the stargate franchise harder than a Jaffa on Saqqara

  • CryptoMikli
    Mikli (@CryptoMikli) reported

    Good Alexander explains why the entire market is depending on the SpaceX IPO doing well “If SpaceX actually tanks, that would be horrendously bearish. And that’s probably why people are doing big deals with SpaceX. Elon probably called Google and said, ‘If my IPO goes down, your stock is dead’” “Elon figured this out. He’s thinking, ‘What is the reason you wouldn’t build a data center in space?’” “Anthropic’s revenue is all enterprise. OpenAI is the scary one because they’re burning so much money that they basically have to do this IPO. OpenAI is the company I’m most optimistic on. They have three times the number of users as Amazon, and the market consensus is that Sam Altman is an idiot because he has 900 million users and is losing money on them. But that’s the exact same thing that caused investors to underestimate Amazon for nearly a decade”

  • michaelpatron0
    Michael Patrón (@michaelpatron0) reported

    I had an inventory issue with Amazon and they put a couple guys on the issue - we emailed back and forth towards solving it and then both of them got laid off in the middle of it, lol. Not funny they got laid off, just funny how bad that luck is. Both of them? lol.

  • Malay4Product
    Malay Krishna (@Malay4Product) reported

    Zoho keeps doing things the rest of Indian tech has decided are impossible. They just built its own computer server, but the way they did it is so fascinating. First, let's understand what a server is. It is the big computer sitting in a data centre that runs your apps. Every time you use Gmail or WhatsApp, a server somewhere does the work. Almost every server running in India is designed by foreign companies. Indian firms just buy them. Zoho decided to design its own. And I cannot stop thinking about how they went about it. They set up the project in Nagpur. Now, Nagpur had no experienced hardware engineers at all. So Zoho did not hire experts from Dell or HPE. They started a training programme called SETU, hired freshers straight out of engineering colleges, and gave them one hard problem to work on for five years. Think about that. Every big IT company in India complains that freshers are unemployable. Zoho took those same freshers, in a smaller city, and got a working server out of them. They have filed more than five patents on the designs, and the key parts were designed fully in-house and put together by Indian manufacturing partners. So the talent has always been there. A company patient enough to train people was the missing piece. But why build your own server at all? Zoho runs all its apps on its own machines. Until now, every server they bought from a foreign company included that company's profit and licence fees. By designing their own, they get the same performance while using 12 to 18% less electricity, and the total cost of owning each machine drops by 20 to 30%. With a few hundred servers, that saving is small. But Zoho plans to move all its apps worldwide onto these machines. Also there is an AI angle. Running AI is expensive because AI needs huge computing power. Zoho's plan is to run smaller, focused AI models on its own servers in its own data centres, to manage costs. Most companies rent computing power from Amazon or Google but Zoho is attacking the bill at the machine level. The timing is important too. In 2023, the Indian government put restrictions on importing hardware like servers. Zoho had already started its server team in Nagpur back in 2020. Three years before the government rule arrived, Zoho was preparing for a world where India cannot simply import its computers. So, they moved on their own belief. The best part is that the design is fully owned in India, Zoho does not depend on any foreign company for security checks, software updates, or licences. If some country imposes sanctions or a licensing fight breaks out tomorrow, nobody abroad can switch off Zoho's machines. Zoho has been honest about the fact that the chip inside the server is still an Intel processor, and Intel helped in the development. That is fine. Every country that builds hardware starts this way. China's server companies started by assembling other people's parts and slowly went deeper. The chip is the next decade's problem. What I love most is how Zoho-like this whole thing is. > This company took no investor money in 25 years. > It opened offices in villages and small towns. > It hires school students and trains them. > It built its own browser and its own AI model. > Now its own server. Now compare this with the big Indian IT companies. TCS, Infosys, Wipro, HCL. Together they earn over $250 billion. They have managed the world's computers for decades. But not one of them designed a server of their own. Even the name is a nice touch. Nathu La is the mountain pass in Sikkim through which India traded with the world on the old Silk Route. Naming your first server after a trade gateway, while building it so India depends less on imported tech, shows someone thought about this for years. They have a few hundred servers running today and want 2,000 by the end of the year. Small numbers. But the team is trained, the design works, and the path is proven. Indian software companies spent 30 years building on other people's machines. One of them finally built the machine. :)

  • JasonIn16370144
    Jason Ingram (@JasonIn16370144) reported

    @RockChartrand Property rights don't exist in China. When Jack Ma, China's Jeff Bezos, decided to go against the Party he was under house arrest for months until he "self reflected" and decided to walk away and Alibaba, China's Amazon is no longer under his control but he got to keep some of his wealth because he retracted. USSR has very impressive growth rates on the 1920s when it was running Lenin's NEP, the precursor to China's "social market economy" and it had equally impressive results on the 30s late 40s and 50s under the command model under Stalin. They slowed down when they had to spend 11% of GDP on defense to match NATO spending despite having less than half of their GDP. CCP avoided that by exploiting the weakness of capitalism, the knowledge that those with capitalists will sell their middle class for even a 0.25% increase in share price, even if they industrialize China and move their factories and let their tech slip away from them, while making Chinese workers wealthier. It's how they grew by double digits for 40+ years without needed to spend on defense (they disowned the Soviets and the US ruling class did the protecting for them before their own govt) that's not a Big of capitalism that's its feature. Now they are choosing to challenge the US because they can afford to match defense spending. At PPP their GDP is bigger than the US. Two weaknesses of their system is agricultural output is crap under collectivist systems and central planning is inefficient. However, AI makes it much more efficient, at least enough to make something like the miscalculation of the Great Leap Forward impossible to miss but likely much more efficient than that. Also, modern agricultural work is done almost entirely by drones so the individual incentive to create output for profit is obsolete. In the 1970s Cold War 1.0 was very far from being over but if you saw the trends it didn't take a rocket scientist to conclude the US was going to win it. In 2026 we are very far from Cold War 2.0 being over but if you know which trends to look for, it's not hard to figure out how it turns out. For those who don't see it, it's more of a matter of psychology and ideology than anything else.

  • theriac33
    theriac (@theriac33) reported

    in 2021 the FDA decided you couldn't sell NAC as a supplement anymore. warning letters went out, amazon delisted it overnight, bottles vanished off shelves. the reason they gave: NAC was first approved as a drug back in 1963, before anyone ever sold it as a supplement. so by their logic it's theirs, it's a drug, and you don't get to buy it off the shelf for 15 bucks. look at what they were trying to pull. NAC is the precursor to glutathione, the main antioxidant your body builds to clean up oxidative damage. you can't swallow glutathione and absorb it, but you can hand your body the raw material and let it make its own. that's what NAC does. it's also the exact antidote the ER runs into your veins when someone overdoses on tylenol and their liver starts dying. same molecule. they keep it in the crash cart and tried to strip it off the supplement shelf in the same breath. it's mucolytic on top of that. it breaks the disulfide bonds that make mucus thick, so it thins the gunk and clears it. that's the chest cold, the sinus pressure, the dandruff, the post nasal drip. and it pulls down glutamate in the brain, which is why most of the actual research on it is for obsessive loops, compulsions, and pulling people off addictions. 600mg, once or twice a day, take it at night. cheap, well tolerated, decades of human data behind it. the molecule works. that's the whole reason it almost disappeared. t33

  • politacs7
    Edward (@politacs7) reported

    Amazon leaving packages oit in the rain lately. Had to call several times. Drivers are lazy and don';t read delivery instructions. Thinking of cancelling Prime. Anyone else having problems? @amazon #Amazon #Delivery

  • CosmicInglewood
    (Light Bringer) + (Black in German) (@CosmicInglewood) reported

    **** Samsung, Greedy, they have them on Amazon, on Samsung's Store, they want to sell them for $900+ on Amazon, there is no shortage, I can buy as many as I can pay for on Amazon, 10 or more, but they will not warranty a broken unit, its anti consumer, evil Samsung

  • tonyg79ap
    TonyG (@tonyg79ap) reported

    @Iberian_America what malls? your country is full of fat ***** who order everythign from amazon. All the good malls closed down if not during the first 2 years after covid? so again I ask what malls?

  • Matissegelblum
    Matisse (@Matissegelblum) reported

    The Microsoft/Claude Fable story is getting framed as a data-privacy dispute, but I think that misses what's actually happening here from a capital allocation standpoint. MSFT has spent somewhere north of $13 billion on OpenAI - that's not a vendor relationship, that's a strategic bet on exclusive AI infrastructure embedded into every Microsoft product that matters: Azure, Copilot, Office, Teams, GitHub. When Anthropic shows up with a Mythos-class model and starts asking for data retention terms that give Anthropic access to corporate communications running through Microsoft's pipes, of course Redmond is going to pump the brakes. This isn't about privacy compliance. This is about moat protection. The thing that makes $MSFT interesting as a long-term holding isn't the surface-level AI hype - it's the compounding nature of enterprise lock-in. Every Fortune 500 that runs Teams, Azure DevOps, and Microsoft 365 is generating data that trains Microsoft's models, improves Microsoft's products, and raises switching costs year over year. The FCF generation that flows from that flywheel - $73+ billion in trailing twelve-month free cash flow as of the last reported quarter - is the real story. The OpenAI partnership is the mechanism for keeping that flywheel competitive against Google and Amazon. Allowing Anthropic to embed data retention hooks into employee workflows would mean leaking proprietary signal to a competitor. It doesn't matter how good Claude Fable is. The terms are the problem. I've held Microsoft since the early Nadella era - my cost basis is embarrassingly low at this point - and situations like this are exactly why I've never felt the need to reduce the position in any meaningful way. Every time there's a new AI entrant that makes the headlines, Microsoft's response is structural: they negotiate from a position of distribution, not desperation. They have 300 million Office commercial seats. That's not something Anthropic can replicate by building a better model. The capital allocation angle matters here too. Microsoft's buyback program has been consistently executed - they're not a company that sits on cash waiting for perfect conditions. The ROIC on the OpenAI investment is still TBD over the long arc, but the defensive logic is sound: you don't hand a rival the data generated by your own enterprise customers. NGL, the thing I'm actually watching is whether Anthropic's new data retention policy becomes a structural barrier to enterprise adoption. If Fortune 500 IT departments start drawing lines around Claude products the same way they've historically restricted certain consumer apps on corporate devices, that's a meaningful competitive moat for Microsoft's AI stack - not just the OpenAI models, but the whole Copilot product suite. Microsoft's intrinsic value case doesn't rest on winning every AI skirmish. It rests on being the enterprise OS layer that all those skirmishes run on top of. This news, counterintuitively, reinforces that thesis. Still long. Still not selling.

  • jonahhodges_
    Jonah 📦 (@jonahhodges_) reported

    The easiest way to find wholesale accounts costs NOTHING and takes 15 minutes: 1. Open Google 2. Search "[niche] distributor [your city]" ⇀ example: "sporting goods distributor San Jose" or "grocery distributor San Diego" 3. Do the same search on Google Maps AND the Yellow Pages 4. Pull every result. Name, phone number, email. 5. Call first. Email as the follow-up. 6. One filter: do they carry brands selling on Amazon? That's the whole criteria. Most sellers pay for sourcing tools before exhausting what's free. Your local distributor nobody has called is down the street.

  • norvid_studies
    norvid_studies (@norvid_studies) reported

    @__vining "comingling" (a fraught word for amazon) book words quality and book object quality definitely still a problem... well, there's always goodreads ratings

  • cola23335
    yui233 (@cola23335) reported

    How far from their peak? 📉 Coca-Cola: Even 🎯 S&P 500: Down 5% Apple: Down 8% Google: Down 13% Amazon: Down 15% Nvidia: Down 15% Tesla: Down 24% Gold: Down 28% Meta: Down 28% Microsoft: Down 28% Palantir: Down 38% Silver: Down 48% Bitcoin: Down 52% Ethereum: Down

  • Rudd3Marc
    Marc Rudd (@Rudd3Marc) reported

    @TeamYouTube right ok one problem at a time I've got you tube built into my TV. My back button is not working i clear cache and uninstall updates every 2 days. My back button works on kodi works on Netflix works on amazon prime but not on you tube please can you sort this out.

  • jonahhodges_
    Jonah 📦 (@jonahhodges_) reported

    Small brands need help that you can actually provide. I'm talking brands doing $1,000 to $30,000 a month on Amazon right now. Maybe they have one blurry product image from 2012. Almost no A+ content. No PPC running. Selling 150-250 units a month with a terrible listing. That's your target.

  • LaughingRoguePA
    Laughing Rogue (@LaughingRoguePA) reported

    @markemusgames Not to me. Amazon will give you one to use there, and you don't have to worry about the issues of ownership, transfer, and display. If you're only selling on Amazon, let them get it for you. If you're selling at cons or privately, you don't need one anyway.

  • vijayMa22514973
    Vijay (@vijayMa22514973) reported

    @AmazonHelp You aren't ashamed to tell lies.@AmazonHelp You said it would take three days, but it has been a week now, and you still haven't resolved the issue. Dont lie.

  • drjoshcsimmons
    Dr. Josh C. Simmons (@drjoshcsimmons) reported

    A city can have Amazon, Microsoft, AI labs, luxury apartments, and elite credentials everywhere. Then somehow it still feels poorer than the places it looks down on. That should tell you something.

  • CovfefeAnon
    Covfefe Anon (@CovfefeAnon) reported

    @ResortIsla1832 No, "although less now" was referring specifically to amazon after 2020 when the left went into hysterics about the flag No one was going down to the mall to buy a "**** hood" - no one was selling them The idea that you had to have a special article of clothing to fight blacks is absurd anyway - blacks constantly start fights

  • android_poet
    Ranbir Singh (@android_poet) reported

    They're also saying AI will end software engineering careers, and here we are 3–4 years later. Now companies like Amazon, Uber, and Microsoft are saying it creates more problems than it solves.

  • LizardWizardBTC
    Radu ⳩ XiXi ☦️ ☸️ ☯️ ⚡️ ⭐️⭐️ (@LizardWizardBTC) reported

    @BrenBuilds @awscloud The main problem Big Tech companies face is how to not break millions of customers. They already have distribution pipelines and getting an MVP out fast has never been a problem for them. That’s a startup problem, not an Amazon problem.

  • Highland_Gal
    Kirsteen Meikle (@Highland_Gal) reported

    @AmazonHelp I am trying to watch season 5 southern charm via Hayu on prime video. It says unavailable due to expired licensing rights. Hayu advised it is available and is an Amazon issue. Reported 2 weeks and still not resolved. Can you advise?

  • Ethan__Dobbins
    Ethan Dobbins (@Ethan__Dobbins) reported

    $0-$1m dropshipping - day 17​ Hey pookies, product test #3 is officially ready to go…​ … the product page is genuinely strides better than my competitor who's pushing numbersssss not because of fancier design tho, but because the unique mechanism is explained with the level of specificity stage 4 audiences actually require​ i honestly think that's the main reason 99% of dropshippers can't make a product work they refuse to get into the weeds enough​ As an example, if i was marketing my ecom program right now to dropshippers​ The ai written slop would say, "you've watched youtube videos, taken a course, set up your facebook ads, made some AI image ads, and it's not working, that's why you need my AI branded dropshipping system"​ But there’s no way in Davy Jones's locker that ad will ever work on a real dropshipper​ because if you've actually put your ***** in the dropshipping mouse trap for years​ you read that copy and immediately know the marketer has never actually done the real thing​ But the ad that DOES land on me is one that calls me out by name without naming me​ "you've tried Shrine, you've tried Elixir, you've changed your ad account or pixel because your cpm was too high, you've blamed Meta for underperforming this month, you've blamed the product, you've second guessed your criteria and your prompts"​ THAT level of specificity reads my mind​ now you can introduce the mechanism: "you've heard of AI branded dropshipping before, but the other systems are running outdated prompts on the wrong tools…​ …mine uses agents that do the deep research and surface the exact details your audience uses so your ads speak directly to your customer"​ then back it with real proof, real results, real testimonials​ now i've handled the objections and related to the specific pain​ while showing why my version of a familiar mechanism is structurally different​ that's how trust gets built​ specificity = trust. emotion = trust​ calling out the exact thoughts they have in their head at 1am while staring at ads manager = trust​ because generic copy that you don’t even realize is generic is why your ads flop​ that was my entire focus on this product ​ Not to just write "here's why other supplements don't work"​ i wrote how dog owners actually feel when they're watching their dog suffer​ the depression of "i guess this is just part of pet ownership," the resignation, the guilt of having spent money on 4 different products that didn't move the needle​ then i called out those limiting beliefs and challenged them​ ended up with about 3x more copy on the page than my main competitor​ Now ik i’m a 10/10 on understanding the dropshipping audience because i've lived it for 8 years​ but i'd estimate i'm about a 6/10 on understanding the dog supplement audience right now​ still more reddit threads to read, more amazon reviews to dig through, more forums to surface​ but if this product shows early signs of life, i'll go deeper, no question​ The product is in the best possible position i can give it on a first test​ ads launched​ native style format for both angles, 2 formats per mass desire, 2 mass desires total​ natives because that's what wins in this specific niche based on the swipe study​ PST ad account so they kicked off at 7am pst​ $25 per ad set, $100/day total, all traffic to the same heavy PDP which is basically functioning as both an advertorial and a listicle given how much copy is on it lol​ offer is solid, social proof is believable, mechanism is layered, copy is hyper specific if i do say so myself​ At the gym today, your boy hit some shoulders and tris​ for anyone wondering how i actually lift, i'm fully Dorian Yates pilled​ 2 working sets to true failure per exercise​ if you need more sets on the same machine then you're just leaving reps on the table, full stop​ This methodology easily turns a 90 minute workout into a 45 minute one with better results​ Now once i hit 7 reps clean on any weight, i bump it up the next session​ i genuinely despise going past 7 reps unless i've maxed out the machine waiting for the Gym 2.0 of that machine to drop​ Hit 193 on the scale today, the tortamaxxing is finally working ​ trying to get back to a 9:30 bedtime, which is why this post is shorter than usual​ tomorrow is intentionally a slower day​ a few obligations in my other business to clean up​ then planning to study Hollow Socks since everyone's been pointing them out​ curious to see if there's a layer of their funnel or creative that translates to what i'm doing​ this product needs 2-3 days of breathing room before i make any decisions anyway​ see you in the next one pookies

  • itsonlymspie
    Deadly Disaster🤯😱💀 (@itsonlymspie) reported

    @emopunkgrrrl tbh the only way to make Bond movies that feel believable now is to make them into campy 60s period pieces. Then let Amazon spin off a gritty thriller about the latest 007 tracking down Bond's killer, facing difficulties Bond never had to because they are of a marginalized id

  • 10ichthyschrist
    lord of lords king of kings, jesus the christ (@10ichthyschrist) reported

    amazon core ready to eliminate the problem definitively special forces deployed ............................

  • JonWagner15
    Jon Wagner (@JonWagner15) reported

    @AmazonHelp I received an email saying that my delivery was attempted but an issue prevented delivery. There is no fence, dog, etc to prevent a driver from walking up to my front porch and setting a package down. You have delivered here many times without issue. What happened?