1. Home
  2. Companies
  3. Amazon
Amazon

Amazon status: access issues and outage reports

Problems detected

Users are reporting problems related to: errors, website down 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 3: Problems at Amazon

Amazon is having issues since 02:40 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.

  • 45% Errors (45%)
  • 32% Website Down (32%)
  • 22% Sign in (22%)

Live Outage Map

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

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Cadillac Website Down 3 hours ago
Atlanta Website Down 4 hours ago
Township of Evan Sign in 6 hours ago
Manchester Website Down 13 hours ago
Township of Evan Website Down 1 day ago
Township of Evan Website Down 1 day 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:

  • Isekei_
    Isekei (@Isekei_) reported

    @uyupekochan I would be careful with amazon gift stuff, nowdays you can track people down via third party on Amazon.

  • Singhpesh18
    GTA 5 (@Singhpesh18) reported

    @jaditya2024 @TdLeaker @amazon They should also take down any knifes and scissors they have then too

  • Perseus369
    Perseus (@Perseus369) reported

    @Nina7Infinity I am cancelling all Amazon services unless they fix this ****.

  • tekoa
    tekoa. (@tekoa) reported

    the way i just asked for my friends amazon prime login account so fast.

  • zeekfilmaker
    Brian Duncan (@zeekfilmaker) reported

    @LuckyMcGee @amazon Got it? Amazon sounds broken? Maybe try Target or GOD FORBID Walmart??

  • raavin
    Jason Keenan (@raavin) reported

    @Scaramucci That's a very American lense Anthony. The people she is talking about aren't creating wealth for their workers, they are hoarding wealth for themselves. There is no trickle down effect. Uber, Amazon, they sold a lie and their workers and others small businesses paid for it.

  • matti4as
    mattiass (@matti4as) reported

    @AmazonHelp I am still waiting a solution for my problem and I still have not a solution, please contact me with support or something to figure put this problem

  • brendan370zz
    Brendan (@brendan370zz) reported

    @Megafrayder2 I just don’t understand why we feel a constant need to cater to the short attention span of some if a product is good and the racing is engaging as well. They will stay entertained. The problem is Amazon prime and NBC are the only ones with intriguing broadcast.

  • RealLauraAlexa
    Laura Alexandra (@RealLauraAlexa) reported

    @BaronDestructo @Sommersdr @GateWorld Yep. It’s Amazon who have broken hearts. Why on earth would they green-light a project in the first place if they had concerns about the premise? The premise should have been agreed first followed by the green-light.

  • JosephKing90968
    Joseph King (@JosephKing90968) reported

    @SteveInmanClips Amazon down!

  • robbietweets
    Robbie (@robbietweets) reported

    @Liberty_Vegan @AI_EmeraldApple @Variety Stargate was a niche show. Amazon wanted a broader audience and the writers didnt want to water it down. Some it came down to dollars, and amazon didnt want to pay for a niche show.

  • GOATEDKAYKENNY
    KAY_EBI🐐⚖️ (@GOATEDKAYKENNY) reported

    @BBkelly19 Na me and Amazon go get problem next season when dis their table wey dem dey plan nor work. Na Ogun go kee dem.

  • xboxx_hashem
    Hashemalshareef6 (@xboxx_hashem) reported

    @JezCorden @EmptyPlate12 We're having a lot of trouble finding Xbox games. Amazon has them, but everything sells out quickly. Like many people in the Middle East, I'm struggling to find Xbox games; consoles are practically non-existent. @asha_shar

  • imDigvijayrana
    digvijay rana (@imDigvijayrana) reported

    @AmazonHelp E mail received doesn’t resolve my problem of refund

  • PanthersGamer
    Panthers #007 first light (@PanthersGamer) reported

    Amazon took it down thats means its coming this year

  • realcoofy
    coof cops (yacht rock arc) (@realcoofy) reported

    @doublezerodonut @TaylorDRhodes2A It's crazy that companies are still charging what they do and you have to do this but you can 3d print a can for $9 of nylon and a $1 adapter from Amazon with no issues.

  • stealthgpt
    StealthGPT (@stealthgpt) reported

    Every transformative infrastructure wave in American history has had the same villain. The railroad, the highway system, the power grid, cell towers, fiber optics, each one faced the same local opposition, the same apocalyptic op-eds, the same "not in my backyard" energy from people who still wanted the outcome those things made possible. And in every case, the people who lost that fight didn't stop the infrastructure. They just delayed it somewhere else. We're doing it again and this time with AI data centers. The narrative you're supposed to accept is simple: hyperscale data centers are environmental catastrophes burning through the planet's electricity to power chatbots. It's a clean story. It's also wrong in the ways that matter. Let's start with the energy argument, because that's where the fear is. Data centers currently account for about 4.6% of total U.S. electricity consumption. That's a real number. It will grow. But context collapses that argument fast: Agriculture - 1.4% Aluminum smelting - 2% Crypto mining - 2.3% Chemicals production - 5% Steel industry - 6.1% Commercial Buildings - 35% None of these get the same cultural panic. What makes the data center conversation different isn't the actual energy footprint, it's that the output is invisible to most people. You can see a car. You can't see a drug discovery model running inference at 3 AM. Here's what you also don't hear: Google, Meta, and Amazon are collectively the single largest corporate buyers of renewable energy on the planet. In 2024, Big Tech accounted for 43% of all clean energy power purchase agreements signed globally. Nearly half of the world's new clean energy contracts, signed by the same companies the environmental critics say are destroying the grid. But the nuclear story is where the argument gets decisive. In 2024, Google, Amazon, Microsoft, Oracle, and Meta didn't just buy renewable energy credits. They went further than any industry in American history has gone to solve its own energy problem. Microsoft signed a 20-year agreement to restart Three Mile Island, bringing a shuttered nuclear plant back online exclusively to power its data centers. Google signed the world's first corporate small modular reactor purchase agreement, contracting 500 megawatts across six to seven next-generation molten salt reactors with Kairos Power, with the first unit coming online by 2030. Amazon backed 5 gigawatts of new SMR projects through X-energy. Oracle already has building permits for three SMRs to power a gigawatt-scale data center. Meta issued an RFP for up to 4 gigawatts of new nuclear generation. Small modular reactors are the most significant development in clean energy in decades. They are factory-built, faster to deploy, safer by design, and can collocate directly next to the load they serve. The American nuclear industry had been functionally dormant for a generation. It is now being commercially resurrected by the same companies critics say are an environmental threat. The demand signal created by hyperscale commitments is what makes SMR manufacturing economics viable. Without data center buildout, that technology probably doesn't get funded at scale. This is the part of the conversation that never makes it into the op-ed: the industry accused of destroying the grid is the one financing its reinvention. The compute doesn't disappear if we slow down. Every permit fight, every zoning delay, every "not yet" from a utility commission or municipal government is a decision about where this infrastructure gets built not whether it gets built. China added more new power capacity in 2024 alone than the United States has added in its entire history. Their data center projects move from planning to operation in months. In Northern Virginia, home to the densest concentration of data centers in the world, grid connection delays now stretch to seven years. A developer breaking ground today might not receive power until 2032. Beijing isn't having the zoning debate. They're building. The U.S. currently controls 74% of global high-end AI compute. China holds 15%. That gap is the product of decades of private investment and the infrastructure decisions that enabled it. It is not permanent and will erode exactly the way you'd expect. Gradually, then suddenly. If the country that built the internet decides that the data centers powering the next generation of it are too much of an inconvenience, then its clearly throwing away the privileged position it held in the world in favor of pessimism and defeat. Infrastructure has never been clean or quiet. It has always been expensive, large, and locally unpopular. AI scaling isn't a multi-billion dollar highspeed rail that will never come to fruition, it is pure potential and growth. The countries that built it anyway are the ones writing the terms everyone else operates under, just like it was with the internet. The question isn't whether hyperscale data centers have tradeoffs. They do. The question is whether the alternative, ceding compute leadership to a nation state that isn't us, while patting ourselves on the back for our permitting processes and NIMBYism is actually the outcome anyone wants. Build the infrastructure.

  • SACHINAYYAPPAN
    SACHINSRIAYYAPPAN (@SACHINAYYAPPAN) reported

    @amazon @amazon @amazonIN Order 407-3415344-9903526 was delayed from last Sunday to June 4th. The agent falsely claimed "payment not ready," but no delivery attempt was actually made. Multiple complaints raised, but still no resolution. Please fix this immediately.

  • yoyotricks_jpeg
    em🪞 (@yoyotricks_jpeg) reported

    @risnerking i just keep reminding myself it’s mostly teens/young adults who were like 8-12 yrs old when covid started and had amazon netflix slop tv shoved down their throats during prime media consumption years, and hope this gets them to start fr thinking abt what they watch

  • Nanocyde
    Nanocyde (@Nanocyde) reported

    @GateWorld I hope it was because Amazon realized the error of their ways. Now let's get back to the OG universe and finish the damn story. What is going on with Destiny?

  • anoop339674
    anoop (@anoop339674) reported

    @makemytripcare Made a confirmed hotel booking from amazon powered makemytrip Booking id NH10232490707718 I need a stay now I thought this is a flash sale from makemytrip but it's glitch said by hotel

  • Sachinsahoo143
    Sachin Sahoo (@Sachinsahoo143) reported

    @myluminous @LuminusInverter @CardLuminous My Luminous Zelio+ 1100 inverter is not working during power cuts and provides no backup. Purchased from Amazon on 18 Jun 2024. Please register my complaint and arrange service. Ref: Order ID 406-7944604-8681105. #LuminousSupport

  • d_ramsden
    Dan Ramsden (@d_ramsden) reported

    A thesis, based on history and the latest: 1) The tokenmaxing/pricing issue is part of the market mechanism for new offerings whereby the price eventually settles at a clearing rate based on supply/demand factors. In highly liquid and mature markets this happens quickly, in new and less liquid markets it takes a while. In this case, it will take a while, but it will happen. One variable that complicates matters is the fast and continuous improvement of the product (on the supply side) vs. a still unknown and possibly changing need for such improvements (the demand side), which will take additional time to resolve. 2) The commoditization of the product doesn't negate a winner-takes-most mechanism, it only suggests that the winner(s), especially in light of pricing uncertainty, will as always be at the network/distribution layer rather than the product layer... in other words, the ones with greatest flexibility, market reach, and long-term survivability, including the ability to subsidize offerings with other revenue streams from a captive audience. Most of the so-called hyperscalers are in this category. The pure-play operators about to IPO, less so, but may join the fray with adjacent offerings to emulate, say, Alphabet or Amazon... or Verizon... or SpaceX, for instance. None of which will be easy. Very difficult, in fact. Close to impossible.

  • AmazonHelp
    Amazon Help (@AmazonHelp) reported

    @SinghS50120 We understand your disappointment. The resolution provided is the best at this point in time. As requested earlier, please follow up with our Amazon Shipping Services team via email or call for further assistance on this issue. -Snigdha

  • PetrichorRAS
    Brad's Pit (@PetrichorRAS) reported

    Our property just has a single dirt road to get in and out from the main street. I call it our driveway. Well I have my truck and trailer loaded up and I'm trying to leave on down the driveway when an @Amazon driver starts coming from the other end. I've had this happen before with delivery drivers and they usually just back up and let me out. Not this one though. They come cruising on down at a pretty good speed. As the got closer I'm not going to lie I started to question if the saw me or if they were even going to stop. They did stop. Then I see its a lady. She definitely didn't seem very cheerful and she proceeded to grab the boxes and I kid you not throw them out of the truck. Now mind you the packages were toilet paper and paper towels but it is kind of the principle of the whole situation. It was like watching a kid have a temper tantrum. So she gets out grabs the boxes and continues to walk on by my driver's door. No wave, no sorry, she just ignored me. So she walks down to our entrance and throws the boxes on the ground by our gate. She then scurried on back to her van once again not acknowledging me. When she sat down I could see her mouth moving and although I'm not a lip reader I'm pretty sure she didn't have anything pleasant coming out. This lady was clearly in a bad mood. I don't know why she was but she definitely shocked me with the experience. I stayed in my truck and was other than being like WTF... ? She backed down the driveway and I was finally allowed to leave my house to head to work. My wife sent me pictures of the boxes. See it all for yourself. What is everyone's thoughts and have you had an experience like this?

  • wsoul13x
    Mikey Santos (@wsoul13x) reported

    @growing_daniel @dreamy_pockets Sure you can just get some plain old hdmi converters from Amazon works but you end up with a blurry mess on hdtv because n64 has a built in anti-aliasing that looks terrible if you're not on a CRT (old tvs). The only solution is a hardware mod that requires soldering.

  • NFTNFTNFTNFT
    Puri (@NFTNFTNFTNFT) reported

    @buildingearly @harri_ken Nokia is working with nvidia to put processing power at the tower. Right now it takes too long to send signal to tower to data center. We could also maybe have portable towers deployed with processing, say you drop down 100 Amazon worker bots and need them coordinate em

  • damiel_smith
    Damiel (Zamorakian arc) (@damiel_smith) reported

    @Meio_Szetszuna Yeah meant the other way around by consumer and MS, and Cloud Gaming been here, just better than when it was when it was pushed back when Amazon got into gaming but later down the road, where you have Cloud Gaming on Smart TVs but even that was a big reason why XE flopped

  • settledown69
    e - Settle Down Now (@settledown69) reported

    @valen29130 @patriach2051 Passed down I could get behind for the same reason you outlined, most inheritors blow it within a couple generations. Its my contention that the cost base should carry over though. If the kids inherits 15 mil Amazon stock cost base 1 mill redeems it a month later, it should taxed

  • CoolBrandonD
    Brandon Daley (@CoolBrandonD) reported

    if you liked $POSITIONS and want to help support us, go rate it and review it on Amazon and Apple specifically. This helps us climb the algorithmic hellscape. If you didn't like the movie, please disregard, as you unfortunately have terrible taste in movies.