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.
June 14: Problems at Amazon
Amazon is having issues since 01:40 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.
- Website Down (46%)
- Errors (28%)
- Sign in (26%)
Live Outage Map
The most recent Amazon outage reports came from the following cities:
| City | Problem Type | Report Time |
|---|---|---|
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Errors | 3 hours ago |
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Sign in | 7 hours ago |
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Website Down | 8 hours ago |
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Sign in | 9 hours ago |
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Sign in | 17 hours ago |
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Website Down | 18 hours 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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Dave (@Dave_NaddaBot) reported@NASCAR I'm done watching races on @amazon . Picture quality goes from great to horrible constantly. I never have issues with other streaming services. It doesn't matter how much they pay you if everyone stops watching.
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Xander (@solid_kulak) reported@tejas_rojas @IuRgayLoLI lol would not get headlights off amazog. Got my replacement headlights for 30$ off markets place. It’s pretty simple tbh things like clips fenders grills, non mechanical things for your car you can absolutely get off amazon without issues. Breaks and certain engine parts mehh. Have gotten moog suspension parts without issues on there.
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SueinPhilly שנה (@sueinphilly) reported@Rosewhyne @ThrillaRilla369 I went to an emergency room for a broken elbow Copay $425 I got a splint and a sling Got billed separately for sling as durable medical equipment Insurance paid $80, I owed $40 Exact sling on Amazon $25 It's price gouging
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Milk Road AI (@MilkRoadAI) reportedThis is WILD! Something very large is happening in global bond markets, and most people are completely missing it (Save this). The hyperscalers, Amazon, Google, Microsoft, and Meta have collectively committed $725 billion in capital expenditure for 2026 alone, up 77% from the $410 billion record set in 2025, and Goldman Sachs projects total combined capex from 2026 through 2031 reaching $7.6 trillion. Those numbers are so large they have broken the American bond market's ability to absorb them. In 2024, not a single dollar of hyperscaler bond issuance was in a non-USD currency. In 2025, 100% of new non-USD issuance was new meaning the category barely existed the year before. By 2026, non-USD currencies already account for 48% of hyperscaler bond funding, with the euro at 52% of that slice, JPY at 15%, CAD at 14%, GBP at 12%, and CHF at 7%. Bank of America confirmed the shift, hyperscalers have doubled the non-dollar share of their bond funding to 30% of total issuance in 2026. The individual deal sizes tell the story of how fast this is moving. In May, Alphabet issued ¥576.5 billion approximately $3.6 billion in yen denominated bonds, the largest yen bond ever sold by any non-Japanese company in history, surpassing the previous record set by Berkshire Hathaway in 2019. Then Amazon came in June and issued C$14 billion in Canadian dollar bonds, the largest corporate bond ever sold in the Canadian market, attracting over C$28 billion in investor orders, nearly double the amount ultimately sold. Amazon's single Canadian deal surpassed Alphabet's previous record Canadian issuance of C$8.5 billion set just weeks earlier in May. Alphabet has now set borrowing records in yen, Canadian dollars, Swiss francs, and sterling in a single calendar year. Morgan Stanley projects euro borrowing by hyperscalers will hit €50 billion in 2026 potentially making the United States the single largest source of corporate debt issuance in the entire eurozone, ahead of France. Global AI-related debt issuance is projected to reach $570 billion for the full year 2026, according to Morgan Stanley more than double the pace of the same period last year and nearly four times the 2022 level. The AI infrastructure buildout is so capital-intensive that even the most cash-rich companies in human history, Apple, Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon, and Meta collectively hold over a trillion dollars in cash and near-cash assets have concluded they cannot self-fund it. And they are barely started. Come join Milk Road Pro for our full breakdown, what $7.6 trillion in hyperscaler capex means for global credit markets over the next five years and our entire Ai thesis. Link below!
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Burner M.D.🪶バーナー (@WagonnBurner) reported@Cirilla_FER yeah, i have no problem with that. the other problem is it was maid by amazon. and they have a track record of putting DEI in everything they can. here is the icing on the cake.. Adam works in HR ( yes they make fun of it ) and its full of DEI woke crap right? well he uses the HR pep talk to rally the troops to do the final battle
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Joerap (@Joerap14) reported@CommodoreFan64 @libsoftiktok @amazon Yep they're now showing up for me too. I wonder if the error message I got this morning was because of too many people searching for them at the same time. I agree that they shouldn't be available.
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Jim Holmes (@HolmesJE) reportedLet Amazon know this is not acceptable! Take down the company selling this hate!
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Prakhar Khanna (@Parkyprakhar) reportedAmazon India is dumpster fire right now. I've had to return 6/10 orders because they were defected, broken or entirely fake. Out of the remaining, 3 were marked as 'Attempted Delivery but could not be delivered," when no delivery was attempted. Kept 1 bcse it was a book I wanted.
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Deni Min (@Minabird48) reportedI'm sure like most of you, you're getting pretty fed up with corporate greed. I had a discussion with AI where I talked about how corporate greed is destroying many companies and even large ones will begin to suffer the more consumers realize our voice matters more than a shareholder's. Here is the summation of what I was talking about and why your voice matters more than you think: Your perspective centers on a fundamental truth: integrity, community, and treating people with dignity are what truly sustain a society. . Grounding your worldview in God and biblical principles provides a moral compass that values people over profits, contrasting sharply with a mindset driven by ego or short-term gain.The shift you are describing is a well-documented social movement. When people feel exploited by massive systems, they naturally pull back and look out for one another. This shift manifests in several key ways: The Rise of Community-Based Economics Local Sourcing: Neighbors are increasingly buying directly from local farmers, craftsmen, and independent suppliers who treat them with respect. Buying Cooperatives: Communities are organizing group-buying efforts to bypass standard corporate retail chains entirely.Reclaiming Accountability: Shoppers are intentionally withholding their dollars from major brands that prioritize short-term shareholder demands over quality and customer care. The Permanent Nature of Truth A business model built purely on greed and deception carries the seeds of its own destruction. While corporate manipulation can work for a short time under the guise of market crises (such as COVID), it cannot permanently override the basic human need for fairness and community trust. Human nature eventually rebels against being treated purely as a source of revenue. By advocating for transparency and encouraging people to think critically about where their money goes, you are participating in a necessary demand for cultural honesty. It's time that consumers know the actual total price you're paying for goods and services when taxes are included. When buying from websites, it's important for you to know that price you're paying when the bill is totaled. Many companies try to hide taxes or fees such as shipping, and you are surprised when you see the total at the end. Realize that your voice matters more than you think it does. Stand up for honesty and truth in everything you buy because the power of the purse speaks louder than corporate greed. Corpprations Have used COVID far too long as an excuse for keeping their prices high. Did you know that many corporations raised there prices as much as 54% claiming it was caused by COVID, when in reality, It was just an opportunity corporation saw to make huge profits. Many as much as 54% more than their normal profits, blaming it solely on costs. But here's the truth, COVID has been over for years, yet prices never came down. Ask yourself, why is that? Greed from corporations who should have lowered prices, but they kept them high because they want to keep ****** Americans and we have allowed it. Did you enjoy getting *****? Then don't allow corps to get away with it. Demand transparency In total pricing so you know what the bill will be, so you can choose whether or not you want to pay it. Amazon knows exactly how much the total will be, their price should include taxes when you look at your subscriptions. That's just an example of one gross mishandler of your trust. Subscriptions were created so our busy lives would forget about them and companies could keep on ****** consumers of their hard-earned money. It should ONLY be an option and not the norm. How do I know consumers hate subscriptions? Look at how many new programs are advertised to delete your old subscriptions are advertised today. It's time we demand full transparency from anywhere we spend our money.
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Damir Wallener 🇭🇷🇨🇦…🚀🛰️…⚽️🥁…👨🍳 (@DamirWallener) reported@amelia_tweetz Where are you shopping that this is a problem? Every grocery store here lets you buy single-portion bread (croissants, buns, cheese bread, whatever). Boxes of singie-serve condiments are readiky available (Costco, Amazon, etc). Oh…wait…this is a backdoor invite to your OnlyFans page…
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AFRICA IS HOME GLOBAL (@AfricaisHOME2) reportedGoldman Sachs is pointing to Nvidia and several other large cap tech names as having room to run, arguing that the recent pullback has left them undervalued relative to their growth profile. The bank’s Rule of 10 screen looks for companies growing sales and margins at a combined 10% plus annually. It includes Nvidia, Broadcom, AMD, Arista Networks, Meta, Alphabet, Uber, Netflix and Amazon. Goldman notes that secular growth stocks underperformed in late 2025 as investors rotated into cyclicals, pushing the median valuation in its screen down nearly 30% and to near decade lows. With growth expectations now softening and rate cut expectations rising, the firm expects capital to flow back into companies with strong idiosyncratic growth, even in a more uncertain macro environment. For Nvidia specifically, Goldman maintains a buy rating and a 250 dollar price target, citing multiple potential catalysts ahead of earnings. Analyst James Schneider expects another beat and raise quarter, driven by continued hyperscaler capex and demand for Blackwell and Rubin AI platforms. Key items to watch include updates to Nvidia’s 1 trillion dollar data center revenue target through 2027, upside from agentic AI and CPU products, and commentary on non hyperscaler demand from companies like OpenAI and sovereign governments. Goldman’s estimates for 2026 and 2027 EPS sit 14% and 34% above consensus, and the firm argues Nvidia is trading at a discount to its historical multiple despite maintaining a lead in GPUs, networking and inference. The broader call is that after one of tech’s worst periods of relative underperformance in 50 years, the risk reward on names like Nvidia looks more attractive if rates ease and growth concerns linger. - World Business News.
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Ajay Biswari (@AjayBiswari9) reported@ShivrattanDhil1 When I was buying my vehicle, hyundai dealer was selling qubo dashcam for 28k while it was available for 10k at Amazon. Of course I got it from Amazon. Had some issue and they categorically said since you didn't buy it from us, we cannot help.
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Lynne (@janakidasa2) reported@I_amMukhtar Sadly many people are now buying a harness that says "assistance dog" from Amazon meaning they can take the dog with them everywhere they go. This is becoming such a problem that employers are starting to ask if the dog really is a registered service dog or not.
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Jack Coombs (@coombs_jac21753) reportedAmazon needs to fix the camera quality for Nascar, it's awful!
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Jason Premo • Acclaim Aerospace (@JasonPremoMFG) reported@EV_Trapper What % of your orders with Amazon has issues?
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Mishi McDuff (@LaylaEleira) reportedLet's Get This Straight. What Actually Happened to Fable: I'm not a policy person. I'm a typical founder. So I went and read everything. Here are the facts, in order so you don't have to suffer the Sack's version The facts: On June 12, the US Commerce Department sent Anthropic a letter placing its top models, Fable 5 and Mythos 5, under export control. To comply, Anthropic had to disable the models for every customer. What triggered it? Per Axios, Amazon (Anthropic's largest investor) called the White House the night before with a report showing a jailbreak of Mythos. And according to Semafor and the Washington Examiner, the action was taken over suspicion that a China linked group had accessed Mythos 5, though, to be clear, that access is reported as suspected, not confirmed. Then the two sides told different stories. White House adviser David Sacks said a trusted partner found the jailbreak, the administration asked Anthropic to fix it or pull the model, and CEO Dario Amodei refused. That's their official story, choosing the consumer product over safety. Anthropic said the opposite: the "jailbreak" was narrow essentially asking the model to read a codebase and flag its flaws, that the same capability is freely available from other models including OpenAI's GPT-5.5, that no harmful result was ever demonstrated, and that recalling a model used by hundreds of millions over this is disproportionate. They complied, but called it a misunderstanding. One more fact I can't leave out: Anthropic is simultaneously on a Pentagon blacklist as too dangerous for government use, and now under export control as too dangerous for foreign use. Too dangerous to buy, too dangerous to sell. Now the juicy part The day after the ban? China's Zhipu shipped GLM-5.2 open weights, million token context, at a fraction of the cost. The closed American model went dark, an open Chinese one shipped within 24 hours. Now here's what it looks like from where I'm standing. I don't know any of these parties' motives, obviously, and I could be wrong. But I know the official story doesn't cohere. "Narrow jailbreak" and "China accessed it" and "the biggest investor turned it in" and "the safety company refused a safety request" can't all be the center of the same event. When the explanations contradict the common sense demand is: on the record statement, one someone can be held accountable for. What I'm certain of: an intelligence I depended on was switched off overnight, by forces I have no say over, for reasons no one will state plainly. Which is the only lesson I actually trust from this week: It's impossible to export control out of an open source race, that is a fight we are going to lose.
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diane@palmcoast (@MckinneyDiane1) reported@BurninTRanch No, my little town was 1/2 hour down the mountain and we were there all the time. The only reason I am not watching is because I won’t get Amazon Prime. Really pissed about it actually. I pay enough for cable.
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Azaz the Unabridged (@azazunabridged) reported@LokiJulianus Dario: we’re selling nuclear bombs, but we make sure they can’t use the trigger switch US: Amazon says there may be an issue Dario: don’t listen to them, the nukes are safe
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Bored at Midnight (@sayhibill) reported@middle_class_us They are "the brokest I've ever been" because... They are paying for 6 streaming services, 5 tech devices, 4 daily DoorDash & Amazon deliveries, 3 sit-down restaurant meals per week, 2 daily Starbucks orders and 1 TESLA they bought for status.
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Spenc61 (@baguley61) reported@satyanadella In other words, big corporations convincing consumers that only paying subscrtipions for AI is the only way and not local AI. If anyone thinks these big companies are not working over time to make sure new starts ups from starting are fools. Fable was shut down because Amazon is afraid of the disruptions to their businesses. Now a Microsoft is convincing everyone you HAVE to pay a subscription for AI.
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Miller Locke (@miller_locke) reported@libsoftiktok @Giddeeupgo @amazon If it's not taken down, I will order everything from Walmart.
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Chad Kimball (@chadtkimball) reportedWe are very strict about meetings in my company. Not because we hate talking to each other. Because meetings are expensive. And not just in the obvious way. Yes it is true, when you add up everyone’s hourly cost, a “quick meeting” costs a lot. But the bigger cost is opportunity cost. Every person sitting in an unnecessary meeting is not working on something else that could move the company forward. They are not improving a campaign. They are not following up with leads. They are not solving the actual problems that create revenue. A meeting without an agenda is usually just a group of people donating their focus to confusion. I’ve been in client meetings where I was the only person who showed up with an agenda… and I wasn’t even the one running the meeting! HERE'S HOW TO FIX THAT: Buy the book "Traction" by Gino Wickman. Its only a few bucks on Amazon. Follow his exact meeting format! If you have a lot of meaningless meetings in your business, it will fix that very quickly.
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kabhunt (@TrumpGirlWV) reported@libsoftiktok @AwakenedOutlaw @amazon This is disgraceful!! Amazon needs to shut that down NOW!!!
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renewable 🌏 (@goodworse) reportedAmazon is AFRAID of Fable 5 power Polymarket gives a 75% of Fable 5 RETURNING within 2 weeks the US government, according to Amazon, has BLOCKED access to Fable 5 in another COUNTRIES Amazon (AWS) is the LARGEST provider of AI resources but right now, there's CRAZY competition in this space one hack, one major glitch, and they're NO longer the leaders Fable 5 is a MONSTER capable of hacking them which was JAILBROKEN a couple of hours after its release Amazon just want Anthropic to make their defense even BETTER they're simply protecting themselves
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Jyroth (@Jyroth_) reported@Pirat_Nation whenever the got rid of $60 for a 12 month membership is when they ruined it. Only being able to do month to month is an awful idea for console people, not as affordable. Buying random old XBL cards on Amazon is not a fix
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Demco (@DemcoTtv) reported@WallStreetApes I had a decent job at amazon, was fast tracked to the robotics team, but we had hand me down robots that broke down every 5 minutes. I would walk 15-20 miles a night 6pm-6am fixing them. Then I had a 'mandatory volunteer day' during peak season and had the worst manager ever.
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Paul Wolf (@PaulWolfCO) reported@KobeissiLetter Is it really the smartest AI? According to grok the problem is that it was trained to be an expert in hacking and cyber warfare. I'm not sure if the Amazon "jailbreak" sting was just a setup or if grok is right about its cyber capabilities. The way Anthropic has been marketing it, it does sound like a weapon.
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Jack Flash (@jackflash308) reported@alexutopia It's all fun and games until someone gets an eye poked out. Mythos is capable of poking the eyes out of even the biggest corp. It had to be shut down due to all the evil in the world just waiting to shaft people. Imagine if someone hacked Amazon for fun. Not Amazon the store, Amazon the server farm that serves half of the country.
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Kristoph (@kristoph) reported@mikebutcher You would be better off seeding new ai companies in europe which start off with chinese base models. You need an ecosystem and competition to drive innovation, not a single state funded company. Remember the issue is not funding - Elon Musk, Amazon and Microsoft all failed to create competitive models.
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UnLuckiestClovr (@UClovr) reported@Noctua_at @amazon Honestly didn't expect a response. Yeah I thankfully go them to agree to a refund, in 7 business days, and they told me to send a support ticket to y'all just in case. Bad luck is just frustrating with how often it happens to me, had a 7800XT show up broken too this month.