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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.

July 1: Problems at Amazon

Amazon is having issues since 02:20 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%)
  • 26% Sign in (26%)

Live Outage Map

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

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Kalgoorlie Website Down 10 hours ago
Newark Errors 1 day ago
Greenfield Errors 1 day ago
Marseille Sign in 1 day ago
Saint-Rémy-de-Provence Sign in 1 day ago
Gaillac Sign in 2 days 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:

  • GivingLifeMyAll
    OkieLand (@GivingLifeMyAll) reported

    @AmazonHelp Apparently @amazon @JeffBezos does not understand my frustration of your employee verbally and in writing stating I will receive a $100 inconvenience refund for Amazon’s error, yet telling me oh the employee shouldn’t have told you that so you are NOT getting what was guaranteed

  • dangambardello
    Dan Gambardello (@dangambardello) reported

    @Galindo_Inc I understand what you’re getting at but that’s not at all how you assess inflation. Especially based on an Amazon product. I’m saying that as an Amazon seller. Inflation measures the average change across a broad range of thousands of goods and services. Egg prices came down substantially over last year. What’s better data? Amazon boots or national egg prices?

  • Scot_Gaijin
    Greig. (@Scot_Gaijin) reported

    @ROS5IHD @PlayStation The fact that PSN store charges double for titles that are physical on Amazon is a problem.

  • llHvncho
    Honcho (@llHvncho) reported

    @iQueue211 @FatKidDeals Holy **** your grammar is terrible. Also me comparing ps and Xbox stores to Amazon proves majority of gamers don’t purchase their games there. What are we talking about. It’s called statistics buddy. Me saying “no one” is also called exaggeration. Learn simple reading skills.

  • rehmanrindd
    Abdul Rehman (@rehmanrindd) reported

    @claudeai The vulnerability that triggered the ban wasn't actually a unique Mythos-level capability. Anthropic says Opus 4.8, GPT-5.5, and even Kimi K2.7 could find the same issues Fable 5 did in the Amazon report, it was a borderline safeguard case, not a real capability gap. The fix was a narrower classifier, not less capability. Does the 99% block rate hold up once people start probing the new classifier for edge cases?

  • RussellShaw_MLS
    Russ Shaw MLS - Lab Scientist (@RussellShaw_MLS) reported

    @bowtiedmeathead Appreciate you sharing this, and I have been following you here for a while and love your content. I will give you my honest take through my own path onto TRT, because I think you mostly answered your own question, and I am probably a textbook version of the patient you are losing. A few years back, thinking about therapy, I went to a local men's health clinic that sounds a lot like what you support. They wanted around $3500 for a year. I got my T tested. It came back lower than I wanted but not rock bottom, and the doc offered to write me a script at the follow up. I passed. I had done my homework, so I took those numbers to my own primary care doctor and tried the boring stuff first. Better food, more sleep, dialing in training. Early thirties, and my numbers actually responded. But my T kept drifting down anyway. I saw a urologist, did his bloodwork, and still chose to wait until my forties. When I was finally ready, I could not get back in with him for 8 months. Not him, not any urologist in town. So I went to a telehealth company, redid the labs, they matched, and started therapy with their online doc. Eventually that urologist appointment came up, he took me on, and wrote the exact same script. Only now I could fill it anywhere. Today it shows up from Amazon in a next day Prime box, a fraction of what telehealth charged and a sliver of the clinic's price. So yes, retention was a pure financial decision for me. And I do not even love my urologist. Ten minutes once a year, an eight month wait to see him again, thin lab panels because he bills insurance. I only stay because I run my own comprehensive labs and barely need him. I am not some edge case. Plenty of guys walk this exact path, find it cheaper elsewhere, and bounce. Which is why I think you nailed it. Retention is not a sales problem, it is a value problem, and you do not fix a value problem by paying a salesperson to keep someone on the hook. The fix is to sell the value honestly, from day one. Say it out loud. Yes, we cost more, and here is exactly why. More access, more testing, real follow up care, a face to face relationship with someone who actually knows your case, whatever your true differentiator is. Do not let a patient discover your value proposition six months in, holding your bill next to a telehealth invoice. He should know on day one precisely what he gets that the ten minute urologist and the faceless online clinic cannot give him. And if he just wants cheap T and does not care about any of that, he was always going to leave. Just make sure he leaves knowing exactly what he walked away from, not wondering what he was even paying for. Same goes for expectations. TRT was not the magic switch I expected either. It took months of my levels actually being restored before I felt the real shift. Half the guys walking in think it is a same week miracle, and when it is not, they are gone before it ever had a chance to work. A year and a half in, I will shout from the rooftops what it did for me personally, professionally, and physically. But somebody has to tell them at the start that it is a slow build, not a switch. Now to your actual question. You are right that the value has to be delivered by the clinical team, not manufactured by a consultant paid to retain. But I would not swing all the way to retention being nobody's tracked responsibility either. What happens when a doc is cold, rushed, and quietly running patients off? You need to see that. In a cash pay model, the whole thing lives on the customer believing he is getting better care than the insurance treadmill, and that belief gets built at enrollment and earned at every clinical touch after. So it is not the consultant or the clinician. It is the entire model delivering something real and saying so out loud, tracked closely enough that you know the moment it stops.

  • emjayy1027
    em jayy (@emjayy1027) reported

    @theblaiirwitch If you would like to watch it before then I can give you my Amazon login 🫶🏻

  • Robert_Sharonii
    Robert Sharon (@Robert_Sharonii) reported

    @netflix glad to see you give customers 2 mins to respond to a chat but your reps can take over 5 without a response. Your trouble shooting steps didn't work. So I was told to go to @amazon because it must be my firestick and not updating my payment method that caused issues.

  • BHolshouserUS
    Brian Holshouser (@BHolshouserUS) reported

    Quick update: I received an email today from Amazon regarding my infringement case. It stated that the listing for the infringing eBook had appeared to have been removed. Amazon didn't specify if they removed it, so I'm not sure if it was the reports that everyone made or my copyright infringement case that brought it down. Either way, it's a step in the right direction! That said, the paperback still remains. Apparently I have to open a separate infringement case for each variant of the book. I've accomplished this just now so hopefully the rest of the book will get removed shortly. Thank you again to everyone who has taken time to report and those who were able to leave reviews on the book's page—and to everyone who reposted and support me through this! The indie author community has been a true blessing to have on my side! Thank you! It really means the world to me!

  • pr4m0d
    Pramod (@pr4m0d) reported

    Yea, I think this is the key discussion that naturally follows. Basically, we are going to see the same thing happen with games as with movies, where you can buy it, but if licensing and terms change for a provider, you may have to buy it again. So more akin to renting. I bought that super mario movie from Amazon, for example, about a year ago. When I went to go buy Mario Galaxy, it said I didn't own the first one, so I had to buy it again!! In addition, I can't imagine people downloading or pirating this stuff because it simply takes too long to download and then you have to have space to store it. So this whole transition to digital is a double edged sword. Ease and convenience go up, but then ownership goes down or out.

  • kabrutusdeid
    Kabrutus (@kabrutusdeid) reported

    "But Kabrutus, you're a PC guy. Why do you care about consoles going fully digital?" There are a few reasons. On PC, yes, we've been fully digital for years. But you also have plenty of storefronts to buy your games from. Don't like Steam? Fine. There's GOG, Epic, and even Battle. net depending on the game. Amazon has its own platform, and Ubisoft, Bethesda, and EA all have, or at least had, their own launchers. If PlayStation goes fully digital, what are your options?The PlayStation Store. That's it. Don't like the PS Store prices? They're not running a sale? Too bad. Either spend hundreds of dollars on another piece of gaming hardware or pay whatever price they ask. Otherwise, you don't get to play. Here in Brazil, the end of physical media is especially harmful because PS Store prices are terrible. If a game costs $70 in the US, it can end up costing the equivalent of nearly $80 on the Brazilian PS Store. On Steam, that same game is often priced closer to the equivalent of $50 to $55 thanks to regional pricing. That's a huge difference. A few days ago I said that physical media was still one of the few things that justified choosing a console over a PC. I completely understand and respect people who enjoy owning their games physically and having something they can truly call their own. But soon that won't be an option anymore. Xbox has already all but abandoned physical releases, and Nintendo is already pushing Game Key Cards. To my friends on console: there has never been a better time to start moving over to PC. Keep the physical games you already own. I'm not saying you should get rid of your collection, but start buying your games on different storefronts. Right now, that's the only real way to push back against Sony. And remember: Nintendo is watching. If this works for Sony, you can be absolutely sure Nintendo will follow the same path. These corporations want as much control as possible over the games we buy from them. Pic: Some of the physical games I still own for modern systems.

  • KyleParkhurst
    Kyle Parkhurst (@KyleParkhurst) reported

    @Zyrex584661 @RevolverJerm Sony pretty much never reduces the standard price of the game. They will do sales, but when it’s not on sale it’s still $70. Amazon physical copies are not like that. The standard price goes down over time.

  • Awselot
    Awselot  (@Awselot) reported

    Right now, I have the choice to buy $60+ digital games or physical discs at walmart, resold on ebay, or discounted on amazon for $25 or less. Not to mention I’ll actually own the game and have the ability to share it with my gf or resell. This is vanishing.. ******* terrible

  • VGNewsNow
    Video Gaming News Now (@VGNewsNow) reported

    Over the past 20 years, major electronics retailers have closed down, including Circuit City, RadioShack, and Game Crazy. Best Buy is currently hanging on, but in recent years several stores have closed. They discontinued Blu-ray and DVD movies and now only sell TVs, computers, video games, and appliances. If they also drop physical media and video games, it will hurt their business, as people are buying those items on Amazon.

  • afrokami
    𝚔𝚊𝚖𝚒 (@afrokami) reported

    Amongst other issues like Amazon uprising to cause IRL stores to reflect that model once they got big enough to rival in store retailers, everything has been conglomerated to online/digital for immediate delivery and gratification

  • NickDWhitehead
    Sir Nick (@NickDWhitehead) reported

    @GrumpyNCynical @SirSimonClarke Amazon will deliver by drone long before you fix the bridge. Wake up. Emergency services figured out a plan to avoid the bridge a long time ago.

  • BUNNYSPAMZZ
    BUNNY (@BUNNYSPAMZZ) reported

    @RewardsSupport Why the heck are you restocking unwanted gcs like PVR,league of legends or sea of thieves when most demanded were Amazon pay or Flipkart or Croma gcs Please address the issue as many users were waiting for those gcs because those were more practically used when compared to others

  • andya09
    Andy 🇺🇸Defensor Fortis 🇺🇸 (@andya09) reported

    @amazon has gone to the dogs. Can’t do anything but confer with an AI idiot that still can’t resolve the issues. Sick of these FOREIGN COMPANIES especially ones that were good.

  • MedLifeNetwork
    MedLife Network (@MedLifeNetwork) reported

    Trauma Thursday: What do YOU think caused this broken ankle? 1. Fell off a roof while trying to repair shingles 2. Rolled ankle while trying to dismount a horse (foot was stuck in the stirrup) 3. Fell off a scaffold onto a truck 4. Football injury 5. Basketball injury 6. Lego injury 7. Slipped while running after his dog that was chasing an Amazon driver Amazon driver

  • sephtiger
    sephtiger | Unshadowbanned! (@sephtiger) reported

    @AbdallahNATION preordered a physical copy from Amazon for $49.99, skill issue

  • Beachdudeca
    Joseph Angelo (@Beachdudeca) reported

    Warsh Says Price Risks Fading, While Most Stocks Rise – #US #MarketWrap Most stocks in the US rose on signs of economic strength and easing pricing pressures, with Fed Chair Warsh stating inflation concerns had decreased. Economically vulnerable areas of Wall Street rallied as statistics indicated that industrial activity increased for the sixth consecutive month as a war-driven jump in input costs subsided. While the majority of companies in the S&P 500 climbed, a drop in chipmakers caused the index to fluctuate. Two-year yields edged down. Oil prices fell after the US announced that indirect negotiations with Iran were promising. Apple is in talks to buy chips from two Chinese semiconductor firms on a Pentagon blacklist to help mitigate the impact of a global memory scarcity that has caused the company to boost prices across its product line. Meta is developing plans for a cloud infrastructure firm that will provide access to AI computing power and models, creating a new source of competition for industry players such as Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud. In June, the ISM Manufacturing index approached a four-year high. Prices for raw commodities increased at a slower rate. The group's pricing index fell the most in a single month since July 2022, as an interim agreement between the United States and Iran sent oil prices plunging.

  • JasmyneSam68534
    Skillful💙 (@JasmyneSam68534) reported

    @kolan_xyz U people are funny ooo doing give away on top football predictions when you are yet to resolve Amazon kdp publisher royalties error big Error you people are not even ready to Sky rocket at all I pray raenest, grey, cleva do something for us that will be the end this rubbish.

  • pondwhale
    beef jerry (@pondwhale) reported

    @Zhane_Star i agree that this is a problem but i dont think the best way to solve it is to burden the legal system with large payouts to amazon

  • TFTC21
    TFTC (@TFTC21) reported

    Fable 5 is back but nerfed and metered. Anthropic added a new government-negotiated safety filter that blocks the specific jailbreak Amazon researchers found. If a request gets flagged, you get bumped down to the weaker Opus 4.8 instead. They admit the filter will catch harmless requests too and they're "working to refine" it. Biology and chemistry classifiers are also still overly broad, triggering fallbacks on basic questions. Paid users get Fable 5 for up to 50% of weekly usage through July 7, then it moves to usage credits. The most capable model available to the public now comes with government-approved safety filters, an admission those filters will overcorrect, and usage caps. This is what frontier AI looks like going forward.

  • Vision33X
    Vision33X ♘ (@Vision33X) reported

    @WOLF_Bitcoin_ amazon beat walmart by 4 billion. thats a rounding error, basically a photo finish

  • bicks236
    Adam (@bicks236) reported

    @NintendoAmerica When does the physical go on pre-order on Amazon? I’m getting nothing but error messages trying to pre-order it.

  • a1trading_
    A1 Trading | EdgeFinder (@a1trading_) reported

    🚨 Meta popped 8% today after announcing it will build a cloud infrastructure business — renting out its AI compute and AI models to outside companies. Overnight, Meta went from being AWS's biggest customer to being AWS's biggest competitor. The math is why this matters. Meta has committed over $600 billion in AI capex. Utilization sits between 40-60%. The unused capacity has zero marginal cost to rent — it's the closest thing to free money in tech. This is the exact playbook Amazon ran in 2006. AWS launched to monetize retail's excess server capacity. Twenty years later, AWS is 20% of Amazon's revenue and 60%+ of its profit. Meta is copying the template with better economics — GPUs are more scarce and more expensive than servers. The second-order effects are bigger than the Meta headline. When another hyperscaler enters the cloud market with excess GPU supply, AWS/Azure/GCP margins compress. Which means AI compute gets cheaper. Which changes every SaaS ROI calculation in the market. This is why Guggenheim upgraded Salesforce and ServiceNow today on the same news — cheaper AI compute = software companies survive.

  • WesEklund
    Wes Eklund (@WesEklund) reported

    > The problem: you can't be in every decision. At Amazon, Bezos can't review every product launch. Every architecture choice. Every hire. As a solo builder, YOU can't deeply think through every feature. Every bug. Every customer request. Every marketing channel.

  • ajwade
    Antoine Wade (@ajwade) reported

    I built an agent named Denzel. He runs on my Amazon EC2 server. He runs my channel analytics. Tells me what videos to make. I stopped being the clicker and became the director. Last 28 days my views are up 178 percent. Revenue up over $4000. Same move Arthur made. Same move you can make this week. #LadderClimbers

  • OInnocxnt
    Emeka (@OInnocxnt) reported

    They are not the same. Amazon built AWS because a real internal need existed first. The infrastructure solved a problem Amazon already had, and it turned out thousands of other companies had the same problem. Demand brought AWS into existence. Meta is building compute on a bet that demand for its own LLMs will show up later. Nobody is building or asking for Llama the way early customers were asking to rent Amazon’s infrastructure. That is supply looking for a demand story, not the other way around.