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 3: Problems at Amazon
Amazon is having issues since 01:00 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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Website Down | 2 hours ago |
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Errors | 4 hours ago |
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Sign in | 14 hours ago |
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Sign in | 19 hours ago |
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Sign in | 1 day ago |
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Sign in | 1 day 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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Timmy_Turnes (@Timmy_Turnes) reportedPrediction markets don't have an intelligence agency. Until now. 2026:@Polysights launches to solve the biggest problem in prediction markets > billions flow through prediction markets > whales move odds before headlines > anonymous wallets shape global narratives > build Polysights > an institutional AI layer for prediction markets > designed to see what everyone else misses > cluster anonymous wallets > detect insider trading patterns > track whale movements in real time > generate AI trading signals > analyze liquidity across every major market > surface hidden onchain behavior > promise institutional-grade intelligence > transform raw betting data into actionable insights > become the "Arkham" of prediction markets > raise a $1.5M pre-seed > backed by YZi Labs + Maven 11 > receive grants from Amazon + Polymarket > early access opens > funds and high-volume traders get in first > retail watches from the sidelines > goal shifts beyond tracking markets > predict the traders before they move markets > identify smart money wallets > detect manipulation before news breaks > automate trades from onchain anomalies > data becomes the new edge > AI becomes the new analyst > prediction markets enter the intelligence era > if prediction markets keep growing > whoever owns the best data wins > Polysights wants to hold the map
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Alaskan Groucho (@AlaskanGroucho) reported@AmazonHelp I was supposed to get a delivery today. I got an email saying they attempted a delivery and "ran into an issue" and will attempt it on July 5. What does "ran into an issue" mean?
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Michael Pepper (@M1CHAEL_PEPPER) reported@UGEplex @amazon @AmazonHelp Just about every non major brand of tablet on Amazon seems to be pulling this stunt. They will advertise anywhere from 12GB (4GB memory+8GB of smart memory or whatever other “clever” name they can come up with) to 40GB (16GB of RAM+24GB of fake memory). The problem is the storage they use is slow, so then everything slows down if you go over the actual amount of RAM that they have. The worse part is that legitimate companies are starting to do this now too. Samsung with 8gb of memory and then another 8 or so with RAM+. We all know to should know that ROM can’t truly act like RAM. This is almost as bad as the bait and switch where they have a product that gets legitimate good reviews and then they just swap out the product for something else. Amazon could stop this fraudulent behavior if they cared enough to. They make money either way.
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Amazon Help (@AmazonHelp) reported@Ram_Jani_ @Ram_Jani_ We understand your concern. Please copy the link and paste it on the desktop web browser, it redirects to Amazon application, please sign in and you will be connected with a member of our team via chat. Please don’t provide your order/account details as we consider them to be personal information. Our X page is visible to public. -Snigdha
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Paul (@harrythemukste1) reported@AmazonHelp they only happen when I get something delivered by Amazon own drivers, delivered to home with RM no issues. Your drivers are the problem.
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The Scrub (@thePatriotScrub) reported@realrobluna Covid shut down alot of local businesses and small ownership that would be a benefit and show how working is done and how to build small local networks. Now the choice is amazon warehouse or a Walmart full of coworkers that dont speak English or Spanish
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Agatha (@Brande16615686) reported@Cointelegraph Meta is the only company that simultaneously discloses water consumption for both server room cooling and indirect power generation. Microsoft, Google, and Amazon only disclose on-site water consumption and do not account for hidden water consumption in power plants.
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Joe Thomas (@TrueMMABabay) reported@anthonyzenkus I hate Amazon, but if you're a professor, you should at least acknowledge that amazon contracts with franchised DSPs, who famously had that issue. I bet you're a really ******* ****** professor.
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Tank Devang R. (@tank_devang) reported@AmazonHelp @amazonIN My address is correct. The problem is the courier refusing doorstep delivery. I'm facing a delayed order, refusal of delivery, and now the risk of a false return reason. #AmazonPrime #AmazonIndia @AmazonIN [5/6]
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Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡ (@shanaka86) reportedA quarter to a third of all the Bitcoin that will ever exist, as many as 6.5 million coins including the 1.1 million believed to be Satoshi's, sits in addresses whose keys are already exposed on the open ledger. This year Google showed how to shrink the quantum machine that could crack them by about 20 times, and Bitcoin's own developers are now at war over a plan to freeze those coins before anyone builds it. Start with the mechanism, because the popular version is wrong. Quantum does not threaten Bitcoin mining. Attacking that would take something near the power output of a star. What it threatens is the signatures, the locks that prove who owns a coin. The moment you spend, or if your coins sit in one of the early address formats, your public key is written onto the chain forever. A quantum computer running Shor's algorithm could take that public key and run it backward to the private key that was never meant to be found. A Coinbase analyst put the exposed pile at 6.51 million coins, almost a third of all supply. Glassnode says 6.04 million. Hundreds of billions of dollars, held safe today only because the machine does not yet exist. And it does not, not close. In April 2026 the best result on real quantum hardware cracked a 15-bit key. Bitcoin's keys are 256 bits, a gap that is astronomical, not one more rung up a ladder. The quite credible timelines from NIST, IBM, Google and PsiQuantum still land between 2030 and 2035. This is not a next-week story ladies and gents! What changed is the direction of travel. Google's 2026 work cut the qubits needed to under 500,000. In the past month Microsoft, Google and Amazon each announced error-correction gains that turn a real machine from fantasy into a schedule. Governments moved too, ordering US agencies to file post-quantum migration plans by April. The clock, everyone now agrees, has started. Which is where Bitcoin turns strange. A bank swaps its encryption from the top, overnight. Bitcoin $BTC can only change by consensus, and consensus is the one thing it does not have. A quantum-safe address type, BIP-360, is already running on a test network, yet Bitcoin Core has not begun to build it in, and serious developers disagree on the path. A second proposal, BIP-361, goes further and colder: force every vulnerable coin to move, and freeze the ones that do not. That would seal Satoshi's 1.1 million and millions more in lost wallets forever, coins whose owners are gone and can never sign the transaction to save them. Protect the network by freezing the founder's fortune, or leave it in the open for the first quantum computer to take. Bitcoin now has to choose. For more than 15 years that fortune has rested untouched in plain sight, safe because the math was unbreakable. The math just got an expiry date, and the people who inherited Satoshi's network must now decide whether to bury his coins or let a machine come for them. Critical situation here!
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Hello hurrah! 🇮🇹 🥁 ⚽️ 🎶 (@petedel67) reported@matt_saunders_ @AmazonHelp Had a similar problem…emailed help, spoke to someone and got a credit in less than 24 hours. Then I found the delivery…win win
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L'Carpetron (@Dookmarriot) reported@AmazonKindle @Amazon Did you do something to the Android version of the Kindle app? In the last month or so, it keeps logging me out of my account and deleted everything I'd downloaded. I'm using the app on a Chromebook Plus; in settings, storage permissions are locked as "denied" and "Pause app activity if unused" keeps turning back on if I restart my Chromebook. I've tried a Kindle Fire and it's so slow.
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Dharma 🌺🕉 (@DharmaCalling) reported@vicharabhio Problem with the YRF genre is the fact that it would have worked a decade ago but with Netflix Amazon and global access people need a benchmark movie
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Ejaj AHmed 🦅 (@aeejazkhan) reportedIndia wants to crack down on fake websites. GoDaddy says the cure could end up hurting the internet. After years of rising online fraud, the Delhi High Court ordered sweeping measures against more than 1,100 fake websites accused of impersonating brands like Amazon, Microsoft, and McDonald's. Sounds reasonable—until you look at what comes next. The order doesn't just target scammers. According to Reuters, it would require domain registrars like GoDaddy to reveal domain-owner information within 72 hours to anyone with a "legitimate interest," stop offering free privacy protection in many cases, and restrict registrations for domain names that resemble existing trademarks. GoDaddy isn't saying fake websites should be protected. It's saying these rules could expose legitimate website owners, clash with privacy laws like India's data protection framework and the GDPR, and make it harder for journalists, activists, small businesses, and ordinary users to protect their identities online. The company has warned that, if broadly enforced, some domain providers could even reconsider operating in India. Here's the trade-off. Everyone wants phishing sites taken down. Nobody wants the internet to become a place where registering a domain means giving up your privacy at the first request. That's why GoDaddy, along with other domain companies, has challenged the order in the Delhi High Court. The irony is hard to miss. India is trying to make the internet safer. Some of the companies that help build the internet are warning the rules could make it less private—and potentially less open—for everyone else. The case now heads back to the Delhi High Court later this month, where the outcome could shape not just India's fight against cyber fraud, but how much privacy internet users can expect when they register a website.
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Saltydog2128 🇬🇧 🇮🇱 🇺🇦 (@Saltydog2128) reported@Google ordered #fitbitair on the 1st June and it never arrived, google put in a replacement on the 15th June, it too never arrived. Apparently they have shipping issue and they won't give me a refund, as I could buy it on Amazon & get it next day. Anyone else have this issue?
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🇺🇦🌻Game On 🇺🇦🌻 (@_Game_On_) reported@jillian_lemur @AndyRileyish @amazon My first assumption was that the driver would be penalized if the tote did NOT make it back to the depot. Contacting Amazon could be an effort to save the driver from repercussions, not get them in trouble. Also to not be accused of a crime for using/disposing of it.
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Donald (@DonOftheDead80) reportedShs going as Demi Moore as she didn't get her delivery of The Substance. She was on the toilet with explosive diarrhea when the Amazon man came and she didn't mark down a safe space to leave it in.
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yota (@y0tafomo) reportedMicrosoft just dropped a $2.5 billion AI infrastructure play. Same "build it and they will come" strategy. Unprecedented scale. Let’s break down the blueprint: Microsoft is designating this as a "Frontier" deployment. We aren't talking about running basic Copilots—this is raw compute for training the next generation of foundational models. The $2.5B isn't just buying Nvidia chips. It's going toward the physical layer: custom data centers, advanced cooling systems, and specialized power grids. The deployment timeline is aggressive. They are pushing to have this massive cluster operational in months, not years, to force the hand of Google and Amazon. But the real world pushes back. A deployment of this size requires gigawatts of power. Microsoft’s biggest bottleneck isn't the AI architecture anymore—it's convincing local energy grids to actually support the hardware. One detail buried in the report that nobody is talking about: Microsoft is essentially becoming a utility company. They are directly funding power plant expansions and nuclear revival talks just to keep their AI servers turned on. Consumer-facing features from this specific "Frontier" cluster are still vague. Better Bing? Faster Office? The PR doesn't say. This $2.5B ships without a clear consumer product — just raw, massive intelligence infrastructure. Microsoft’s spending pattern suggests AI CapEx has entered an arms race phase where cash flow is the only weapon that matters. The AI frontier isn't about software anymore. It's about who can keep the lights on.
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Ethan Stone (@Aakashchowdhar6) reported$AMZN's ad business has nearly tripled in under five years, growing into a $72B operation with zero down quarters — and it's still climbing 23% YoY off an already massive base. Amazon has emerged as the third major scaled digital ad platform, holding 9% of global share, with ads now driving 35% of total income.
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The_only_juzzo (@TheRealJuzzo1) reported@GovernorHobbs From the mom and pop restaurant down the streets quickbook servers, to all the pictures you upload to social media or the cloud, to your WiFi cameras you can check on your phone, to google, Amazon, Netflix, etc etc etc, they all need “datacenters” the current batch of cavemen trying to oppose them are lying to you, just a bunch of ignorant panicking tribesmen shaking their fists at some tech they don’t understand.
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XRPfanatik (@GeldmanNathan) reported@AmazonHelp my mother in law spent over $2000 on a pool from your company only to have it not delivered and then to put her through the run around about a refund? Please fix this it’s been over a week now!
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Vineeth K (@DealsDhamaka) reportedSeller Discounts On both Amazon and Flipkart, a handful of large sellers dominate the marketplace. During sale events, these sellers slash prices on selected products to attract buyers. For example, if a 55-inch TV normally sells for ₹30,000, the seller might reduce the price by ₹3,000-5,000 during the sale. Add the bank offer on top of that, and you could end up buying it for around ₹23,000–₹24,000. Products sold by sellers like RetailNet, Cloudtail, and OmniTechRetail are generally reliable and rarely have issues. Some niche sellers, like Corseca, specialize only in products such as Bluetooth headsets, TWS earbuds, or home theatres.
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Amit kumar (@amitjha321) reported@amazonIN @AmazonFresh @AmazonHelp My order was not delivered despite raising a complaint. It's been days with no resolution or update. Please look into this urgently and resolve the issue. #AmazonIndia
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Small Cap Value Opportunities (@SmallCapVal) reported@BillBrewsterTBB @MebFaber Alright. Narrowing it down. Bill didn’t sell it on Amazon. I need to make a list and start crossing them off.
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Lucy Connolly (@LucyTCWife) reported@SBarrettBar Blackwells have stock online. Waterstones haven’t listed it! Can’t say I’m surprised. Amazon is being ridiculous. I’m hoping it’s just teething issues, but not convinced.
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patrick kielty (@paddy2808) reported@LucyTCWife @SBarrettBar I bought from Amazon with a substantial wait list middle of July no problem I can wait try not to stress probably teething trouble
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ManMohan Vyas (@man_elc) reported@AmazonHelp You are currpting the image and reputation of customer records, just some of delivery manipulators, my old such reported issues still waiting for the refund and resolution.! I left hope of reporting this eyewash here, just heads-up to other innocent customers
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The PERSEC puffin (@PERSECthePuffin) reported@LucyTCWife @AmazonUK This is an issue with Google and Apple. Not Amazon. Basically Google and Apple have banned apps from allowing people to make purchases of copyright files (music, books and other such things). This is because Google wants to direct people to YouTube Music etc.
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ShadowBat 🇱🇧 (@mediafanatic25) reportedAll of you keep trying to put me down and make me feel bad and insignificant for my collection size, and keep trying to press me to say I have more digital than physical. You mfs will not gaslight me into thinking I’m not a physical fan when I have way more of discs than digital titles and I will keep buying discs as much as I can overtime, I’m always on the lookout for sales from brick and mortar retail or Amazon or eBay or marketplace, I’m never gonna stop owning more discs even after 2028 so **** all of you abusive mfs once again 🖕
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NLR (@NestorLRamos) reported@TesCalendar1 I replaced the control arms on my 2020 model Y with parts from Amazon and had no issues for >3 years.