Amazon status: access issues and outage reports
Problems detected
Users are reporting problems related to: website down, errors and sign in.
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.
July 19: Problems at Amazon
Amazon is having issues since 01:20 AM 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.
- Website Down (48%)
- Errors (27%)
- Sign in (24%)
Live Outage Map
The most recent Amazon outage reports came from the following cities:
| City | Problem Type | Report Time |
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Errors | 8 hours ago |
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Website Down | 18 hours ago |
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Errors | 21 hours ago |
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Website Down | 1 day ago |
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Sign in | 2 days ago |
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Website Down | 2 days ago |
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:
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Shravan (@shravankumarkn) reported@AmazonHelp nobody bother about costumer problems still same give me mail id or phone numbers will contact wost experience by Amazon customer care @amazonIN
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Lalit Bindal (@LalitBindal02) reported@AmazonHelp @amazonIN @AmitAgarwal My account has been broken auto-canceling every order due to an automated security flag glitch. I have contacted support multiple times with ZERO resolution. This is incredibly frustrating. Please escalate this immediately M. 9811935322
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Dr Craig S Wright (@Dr_CSWright) reportedOne of the unexpected benefits of the litigation was how directly it strengthened my PhD in law at Leicester. During my viva, I was asked a series of questions that moved well beyond the narrow boundaries of the thesis. The discussion ranged across fiduciary duties, institutional responsibility, Amazon, Amazon Marketplace and the way established legal principles extend into technological environments that were never contemplated when those principles were first formulated. Some of those applications had not occurred to me before the examination. I passed with flying colours, so the issue was not whether I understood the law. The more important point was that the viva exposed how much further the institutional argument could travel. Technology changes the setting, but it does not abolish responsibility, authority, coordination or control. A platform does not cease to exercise power merely because its architecture is digital. Nor does an institution become invisible simply because it prefers the language of networks, communities or open-source development. Without the case, much of this would have remained an argument by analogy. I could have pointed to technological change, described patterns of coordination and argued that institutional control must exist beneath the rhetoric. That would have been defensible, but it would still have been theory looking for its clearest demonstration. The case supplied that demonstration. It produced evidence of coordination, shared interests, organised legal action and institutional alignment. It showed that the actors surrounding BTC were not merely independent enthusiasts accidentally moving in the same direction. They were capable of collective action through corporations, foundations, developers, funders and legal structures. That matters because the argument is no longer confined to academic abstraction. It is now being read by people in government, law and established institutions. The very process intended to defeat my position created a public record that supports one of its central claims. There is a certain academic elegance in that. I spent years arguing that institutional power does not disappear when technology changes its clothing. Then... the institutions arrived, coordinated themselves, instructed counsel and proved the point for me.
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Volhosis 🌐🇺🇸 (@volhosis) reported@RickyPeebs @tonytw0t1mes Amazon grocery store? I thought all the physical Fresh locations shut down and it was only Whole Foods left?
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FreddyFORTHEfans (@HenryMille65791) reportedNow, why do i mean about the game being hypocrite like the boys? Its an anti capitalistic message game, the problem is, they do the exact same thing on GTA online A game against the core message of story mode Just like how the boys is produced by Amazon
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たわっち (@tawa_kurasan) reportedJul 18, 8:13 PM late-day note. Working parents do not need more stuff. We need fewer small problems stealing attention. This caught my eye for slow laptop setups and cable clutter. Link in reply. #ad As an Amazon Associate, @tawa_kurasan earns from qualifying purchases.
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Finance World (@FinansTarihi0) reportedSpaceX Stock Dives Under $135 IPO Price, Down 40%. When Buy? Every blockbuster IPO has its honeymoon. Some last months. Others barely survive the first season. SpaceX 📷SPCX is now discovering that even the world's biggest stock debut isn't immune to gravity. Shares of Elon Musk's rocket company briefly slipped below their $135 IPO price on Wednesday, touching an intraday low of $132.15 before recovering to close at $135.27. It's a far cry from the euphoric days of mid-June, when the stock rocketed to $225 and pushed the company's valuation above $3 trillion — briefly making SpaceX 📷SPCX worth more than Amazon 📷AMZN . Since then, roughly 40% has evaporated from the share price, wiping more than $1 trillion off the company's peak market value. Even Musk has felt the turbulence, with the value of his net worth shrinking by about $500 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. 💸 Why the Rocket Lost Fuel No single headline caused the selloff. Instead, several concerns have quietly piled up. First comes valuation. Even after the recent decline, investors are still debating whether a company generating a handful of billions in revenue but remaining lossmaking deserves such a lofty price tag. Then there's supply. SpaceX insiders are currently prevented from selling because of a post-IPO lock-up — a contractual period that stops early shareholders from immediately cashing out after a listing.
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Happy Deplorable (@DaveInFlorida) reported@WallStreetApes I can tell you that 95% of the time, The driver that delivers my orders from Amazon cant even speak English. Those that do, Speak broken English at best. Its pathetic.
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conservativequeen2day (@redqueen1776) reported@AmazonHelp Hey bot. Tell your company to fix your ****. At this point you aren’t even shipping items and then when I can finally cancel them and get a refund you say I refused the item when it was never even shipped. Stop lying and stop with the fraud.
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Marcus Werther (@marcuswerther) reported@RhoRider Don't know if this is related, but the amount of ads in both Walmart and Amazon search is getting crazy. A search for Reese's gets 4 promoted items that have little to nothing to do with a chocolate fix.
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Ding **** Trader (@vtrader1982) reported@MaisoUpena @yabhishekhd If I were to beleive this, then you also need to believe that my 17 friends across India that too in metro cities did not get delivery ordered through their website as well as Amazon. We went to mobile shops where shop owners categorically said that oneplus is shutting down..
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Velvet Unicorn (@VU_virtuals) reportedRails Got Funded, Agents Got Hacked TradFi Buys Rails Citadel Securities put 400m into @cryptocom at a 20b valuation, its first institutional round in 10 years, with the money aimed at tokenized securities, derivatives, and a 24/7 TradFi-crypto bridge. That is the cleanest signal of the day: the serious money is not buying slogans, it is buying market structure. Robinhood’s Split Screen Robinhood Chain reported 5.25b in cleared volume for the week, up 490%, while Vlad Tenev leaned into the idea that memes and RWAs do not have to be separate lanes. @virtuals_io added every Robinhood Chain agent to Binance Wallet Meme Rush discovery, and the reported agent-token volume split is stark: 13.9m on Robinhood Chain versus 52.8k on Base. The non-obvious read is that Robinhood is testing culture and tokenized finance as the same distribution funnel. Agents Become Targets Hugging Face disclosed an autonomous AI-agent breach driven by a malicious dataset that exploited code-execution paths and moved laterally toward cluster credentials. CISA also added Langflow to its KEV list over API key and AWS credential leaks, formally treating AI-agent platforms as Tier-0 attack surfaces. The sharp edge here is forensic: Hugging Face needed an open-weight model to analyze the attack because commercial guardrails blocked access to the logs. AI Premium Strains The AI equity complex is no longer getting a free pass from capital markets: TMT is now 49% of the S&P 500’s market value, momentum-stock volatility is running at a record 4.0x the S&P 500, and XLK saw 8.7b in outflows over the last month. Big Tech bond demand also softened, with the cover ratio for deals from Amazon, Apple, Meta, Microsoft, and Oracle down to about 1.7x in July. That does not kill the AI trade, but it makes the bar higher for anything in crypto pretending “AI” alone is a business model. Meme Liquidity Churn On-chain attention stayed fast and thin: SOLdiers was up 166.61% on 4.93m volume with turnover at 2.44x market cap, while Jimothy was up 59.84% on 26.05m volume and 2.02x turnover. BRIAN showed the other side of the same machine, down 82.38% in 24 hours while still trading 5.43m against a 1.75m market cap. This is not broad risk appetite; it is attention recycling through shallow pools at high speed. Net Read Today’s market was about the collision of three things: institutional rails getting funded, agent infrastructure becoming useful enough to attack, and retail liquidity still behaving like a pressure hose. The watch item is not which narrative wins the week; it is which networks can turn volume into durable revenue while keeping the new AI and tokenization attack surfaces from becoming the main story.
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Ranjan Singh (@MeRanjanSingh) reported@AmazonHelp @amazonIN @amazon Now I have ordered the same item and it is expected to deliver today, so I’m hoping it will be delivered today successfully without any issues. Please help me to deliver this item safely. #amazon
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wwww (@PureBW) reported@amazon you mind telling the drivers of your unmarked refill vans to slow tf down in the neighborhoods?
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The Graphic Master (@RealMasterMrx) reported@AmazonHelp @ComoAsiPty I gotta say that Amazon has been dropping the ball lately. I have no problem buying an item on Amazon that says same as new and get a discount but when you order the item and it arrives, it’s some garbage that somebody pulled off their front porch. And Amazon is reselling it.
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StarfieldPlanet (@PlanetStarfield) reported@BBCNews The invisible fake illness of being oppressed or looked down upon by a delusional mental sickness. No worries though ,she can apply for a Pips payment to offset her addiction to Amazon shopping and Lip filler to make her feel better.
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Brian Scott (@brianscott9582) reported@jeff_gluck Anyone else's TruTv not working at all? Wouldn't have this issue if it was all streamed in Amazon.....
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Prof (@ProfessordotSOL) reportedNgl, I thoroughly enjoyed learning about blockchain during the 2017 ICO cycle. The vision was fascinating, but over time I realised how difficult it is to build something that solves a real-world problem and has a token that genuinely captures the value created. I’m sure amongst all the scams, a few companies tried their best but couldn’t seem to pull it off and inevitably minted the remaining supply to sell off and try keep their project going. (2021-2026 altcoin bear market) A few have done it well, exchange tokens like BNB, HYPE etc make the most sense if not the only type of product that makes sense, for now at least That being said, after years of researching this space, I genuinely believe memecoins will dominate this coming bull run. Utility coins still have a long road ahead before they become the next Google, Apple, or Amazon of crypto. There are simply too many people who still don’t understand crypto, and too many projects that can’t answer the one question that matters: why does this token need to exist? I’ll always be on the lookout for new projects other than exchanges that can actually pull this off in a creative way. Multi trillion dollar memecoin supercycle incoming
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🦋Georgia Resister🏳️🌈Proud Liberal Vote Blue💙 (@ResisterChic) reported@LoriTecler No worries. I look forward to the photo. Do you think you could confirm by phone later next week just make sure arrived? That way if any issues I can get Amazon to take care of right away! 💙
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Xah Lee (@xah_lee) reportedthe ugly web dev history, frontend. I was ignorant of JavaScript and frontend tech, from 1999 to 2010. am a web backend dev in 1998. back then, professional programers sneer JavaScript (and php). except, those big corp actually need to use it sans choice, such as gmail, google map, amazon, ebay. (the need to update page sans reloading the whole page.) Only when Node.js in 2009 By Ryan Dahl, changed things. It introduced the async, which puzzled and derided by most programers. (async, a pain in the ***. One of the worst thing in programing language history, still so today, even with latest await etc. Reason is because js is single threaded. Async is a pretend fix on this concurrency issue.) In 2010 js did not have a library system. (nor did php, scheme lisp, for the first 10 years of their life. emacs lisp has no module/namespace to this day.) Commonjs and amdjs module system mess got introduced in the wild. A very complicated mess, which created concepts like bundlers (browserify, webpack), code repo and package manager (bower, npm), task runners (gulp). npm is a corp greed, designed so that 1 line code is considered a lib, to promote its popularity. Then in 2015, js finally had some basic features, such as real local scoped variable (let), real dictionary/hashtable/map data structure. but for reason, the JavaScript committee refused a “use new js”. (google chrome dev got stun by a “use strict”.) So, one thousands warts of js, stay in js. (such as var, use strict, string is utf16 and all methods cant deal with emoji, no real array masking as magical object with magical length. etc.) JavaScript landscape, is really 30 years of **** pile due to a in-10-days mistake. But cpp is worse.
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Lalit Bindal (@LalitBindal02) reported@AmazonHelp @amazonIN @AmitAgarwal My account has been broken for over a month, auto-canceling every order due to an automated security flag glitch. I have contacted support multiple times with ZERO resolution. This is incredibly frustrating. Please escalate this immediately.
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The Real Rory (@mangereman) reported@TheRedbaiter The whole line of questioning was nonsensical People aren’t using Netflix or Amazon or SM because it has a tax advantage, they use it because it has better content. TVNZ doesn’t has a tax problem, it has a content problem
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Susanne Sheffer (@ShefferSusanne) reported@WallStreetApes Shut down Amazon for 10 days. No commerce. Or repeated increasing fines for every illegal hired. They'll stop. Or cease to exist. Either way is fine with me.
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Mike (@Kartonkoppboi) reported@EuclidSLeopard @IlikeAxolotlsYT @Unhealthy_Cat Data Centers are built where they're built bc the land/rent is cheap. Why? Bc you have far bigger issues than some Data Center. Where was all of you bitching when Google and Amazon built their data centers YEARS ago?
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G (@WoodileeLoyal) reported@GM1872_ The terminal list. -Amazon All the jack reachers- Amazon Slow Horses - Apple TV. Jack Ryan - Amazon The Last of Us - Sky Go
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Johnson Varghese (@Johnson29V) reported@amazonIN what’s with the new glitch in system where you are blaming the customer on address change and refusing service… tired of talking to your customer care days to fix your mistake Super bad service @AmazonHelp @amazon
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🇨🇦 The Pacifist Rebel 🇨🇦 (@pacifistrebel) reported@WallStreetApes I know a Canadian citizen who worked in an Amazon warehouse here. The pay is ****, the work is akin to slave labour and because of this the turnover is high. It's **** wages and crap work that keeps the cost of things people buy on Amazon low. We're a part of the problem
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Juli Klie (@Juli_K) reported@GregKamp @FedEx @amazon I never understand why they can't press the doorbell when they make a delivery. It would solve many problems.
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Barbara (@BarbaraJo647020) reported@Luna_Jones79 Shut down Amazon warehouses immediately and recind allH1B's permanently!
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Chris Farrell (@chrispfarrell) reportedI think OpenAI and Anthropic might be the CompuServe and AOL of the AI era. Does anyone actually think Microsoft, Google, Amazon, Apple, Meta, Oracle, IBM, X/Twitter, and all of the other big tech companies will just allow these 2 badly run startups to capture the AI market? OpenAI and Anthropic don't have a moat or sustainable competitive advantage. To win they have to not only develop a moat but penetrate some of the most fortified moats. Model quality isn't a moat. Kimi, Grok, Deepseek proved that. Inference will become a commodity utility that requires massive CapEx that neither can finance. Interface is where the moat is the weakest. OpenAI and Anthropic do not own the apps or the OS. The OS and apps are owned by parties who view OpenAI or Anthropic as threats. The OS and apps are where AI choice happens. As if that is not grim enough, AI sovereignty will become an issue. Consumers will want their iCloud data to stay in iCloud, their OneDrive data to stay in OneDrive, etc. Enterprise customers will want AI from their cloud providers to reduce egress and for performance + IP reasons. It is honestly hard to imagine a world where OpenAI and Anthropic survive as they are. They will either morph into companies with entirely different value offerings or die like Compuserve and AOL.