Amazon

Amazon Outage Map

The map below depicts the most recent cities worldwide where Amazon users have reported problems and outages. If you are having an issue with Amazon, make sure to submit a report below

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The heatmap above shows where the most recent user-submitted and social media reports are geographically clustered. The density of these reports is depicted by the color scale as shown below.

Amazon users affected:

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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.

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Most Affected Locations

Outage reports and issues in the past 15 days originated from:

Location Reports
Ashburn, VA 62
Greenville, OH 40
Columbus, OH 22
Seattle, WA 20
New York City, NY 20
Edison, NJ 17
Chicago, IL 14
San Jose, CA 14
Denver, CO 12
London, England 10
Dallas, TX 10
Charlotte, NC 9
Las Vegas, NV 9
Kansas City, MO 8
Los Angeles, CA 7
Philadelphia, PA 7
Boardman, OR 7
Phoenix, AZ 6
Atlanta, GA 6
Minneapolis, MN 6
Toronto, ON 5
Miami, FL 5
Portland, OR 5
Frankfurt am Main, Hessen 4
Houston, TX 4
Maywood, IL 4
Wichita, KS 4
Berlin, Land Berlin 3
Boston, MA 3
St. Louis, MO 3

Community Discussion

Tips? Frustrations? Share them here. Useful comments include a description of the problem, city and postal code.

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Amazon Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • david_mfon9139 FLAME 🔥 (@david_mfon9139) reported

    Let’s break down how DePIN on Solana is flipping the script on giant monopolies like Verizon, Google Cloud & Amazon. In this thread, you’ll meet 4 Solana-based projects that prove: Decentralization isn’t a dream — it’s already here. 👇 #Solana #DePIN @solana @SuperteamDAO

  • MAGACultBuster MAGA Cult Buster (@MAGACultBuster) reported

    Come on, bro. You’re acting like one bad delivery means the whole system is trash. Every service has hiccups. FedEx, UPS, Amazon, all of them. Most packages get where they’re supposed to go just fine. You just remember the few that went sideways. We need to fix it by electing the right people.

  • GKwithAK Anonymous Civil Services Aspirant. (@GKwithAK) reported

    @airtelindia Recharged with Amazon prime lite benefit but in thanks app showing benfit as claimed but not working in Amazon prime app. WTF is this?? I made mistake jio is much better in handling subscription

  • DoctorWhoforDBD Doctor Who for DBD (@DoctorWhoforDBD) reported

    @DBDHellraiser we have the New Who seasons in Amazon and Disney+, but they only have them up to Capaldi as I said, I think in a couple of months theyre adding the new ones to Disney+ due to some problems they had with the spanish dub, so I guess I'll see them there

  • ayuwaker Ayu Waker (@ayuwaker) reported

    @mdaconta @GuntherEagleman I can agree with most of that but USPS needs to be safe guarded, not defunded. The problem is organizations like Amazon abuse USPS. It can be a source of revenue for the government, and it's basically a utility

  • claydeaux96 Empire2011 (@claydeaux96) reported

    @FedExHelp why can’t FEDEX FIX my delivery issues. Not one of my packages has been delivered “ON TIME”! Always put on the wrong route. My route is 261 and it gets put on route 262. This has been going on for THREE LONG YEARS. USPS, UPS, Amazon all get my packages delivered 100%.

  • CoachMahoney99 Rob (@CoachMahoney99) reported

    @stevetravis681 @DelusionPosting What I would say to them Go make your own movie actually sit down use your brain and right a script. Then go to Disney and tell them you want to make a movie. I’m sure they will let you do it. If not try Amazon.

  • sriniously K Srinivas Rao (@sriniously) reported

    S3 changed everything when Amazon built storage on top of REST APIs and HTTP in the early 2000s. They made a simple bet that eventual consistency was good enough for most use cases, and they were right. The architecture spread data across availability zones using erasure coding, hitting 99.999999999% durability through cross-region replication. What started as eight microservices grew to over 300 by 2022, handling exabytes of data with response times under a millisecond. The pricing model came from old school colocation thinking. Back then, bandwidth actually cost money because you paid for physical circuits and peering agreements. AWS kept that model and charges $0.09 per gigabyte to move data out of their network. The real cost of internet transit today is closer to $0.0005 per gigabyte. That creates an 18,000% markup that generates $68 billion annually across all cloud providers. Cloudflare broke this model because they built their network differently from the start. They run 330 edge locations with 9,500 BGP peering relationships. Between 50% and 60% of their traffic moves through settlement-free peering, which means zero marginal cost. Their network was designed for content delivery and DDoS protection, so they already paid for massive capacity. Adding storage traffic on top of that existing infrastructure costs them almost nothing. R2 runs on their Durable Objects platform, which gives you strong consistency instead of S3's eventual consistency model. It integrates directly with Cloudflare Workers, so you can run compute right next to your data. The zero egress pricing works because Cloudflare pays for network capacity in advance based on committed information rates, not per-byte usage. Once you own the pipes, filling them becomes an optimization problem, not a cost center. Traditional cloud providers built networks to support infrastructure services with usage-based billing. Every byte transferred generates revenue. Cloudflare built for content acceleration where performance creates value. These different economic foundations create completely different marginal cost structures. The competitive response proves the disruption is real. Google, AWS, and Azure now offer zero egress, but only if you migrate your entire platform to their services. This shows they understand egress fees were never about cost recovery. They were about vendor lock-in. Zero egress unlocks architectural patterns that were economically impossible before. Machine learning teams can distribute training across different GPU providers without paying massive data movement penalties. Multi-cloud active-active deployments become viable when you can make network topology decisions based on performance instead of billing optimization. When storage becomes a commodity differentiated by performance and integration rather than lock-in mechanisms, the entire value chain shifts toward actual technical innovation. Cloudflare proved that removing artificial economic barriers creates more total value than maintaining them. We are moving from scarcity-based pricing models inherited from physical infrastructure to abundance-based models enabled by software-defined networking at hyperscale. The companies that recognize this transition first will define the next generation of cloud architecture. The economics of the internet have changed, but most of the industry is still pricing like it is 2006.

  • daviddpc111 Dave (@daviddpc111) reported

    @ThePatriotOasis Been waiting for years. Don't understand why Disney continue down this path. I from Florida uses to go to the parks at least once a year or more. Stop going in 2020 and will never return again. Sold all my shares in Disney and invested in Amazon.

  • RobLWattsJr DrRob (@RobLWattsJr) reported

    please @amazon do you have to use @USPS for deliveries. Always an issue when using them

  • zachware Zach Ware (@zachware) reported

    Deliveries today: Amazon: arrives hours later UPS: delivered on schedule USPS: can’t deliver, mailbox full (it’s a package just put it down) FedEx: Delayed in transit, driver can’t find address, unknown error

  • TheForthboy TheForthBoy (@TheForthboy) reported

    Avoided @AEW #AllIn results all week as we were away on holiday at weekend as @ITV advertised it being shown tonight at 9pm to then pull it last minute. Absolutely poor show, one gutted 9 year old. Such a let down. Could have bought it on Amazon Prime earlier in week.

  • O_Scalaidhe Séamas Ó Scalaidhe (@O_Scalaidhe) reported

    We've had a number of Amazon delays/failures recently due to the USPS not being able to deliver (esp. large packages). I think it's because of summer residents and the storms south of us. They didn't refer to supply chain issues but the Post Office often lies and claims that the package was refused, etc.

  • ReezyResells Reezy (@ReezyResells) reported

    Nice post. You ever think of making this a prep service that others could use? Everyone has this problem, and whole ther are ones I know of that do liquidations on eBay for example, capturing the amazon side of the returns is super important and I think everyone hates dealing w them

  • roll_1up Jacob Wieck (@roll_1up) reported

    In today's hyper-connected world, the average smartphone user juggles dozens of apps to manage daily tasks—from scrolling through social feeds on Instagram and X to snagging deals on Amazon or eBay, and even monitoring investments via Robinhood or Coinbase. This fragmentation isn't just inconvenient; it's a productivity killer, leading to app fatigue, cluttered home screens, and wasted time switching between platforms. According to industry analysts, consumers spend an average of 4.8 hours per day on mobile apps, yet much of that time is lost in navigation rather than engagement. Enter Shop Share Anywhere, a bold new super app that's integrating curated sites across shopping, social networking, and investing to create a unified digital hub, potentially reshaping how we interact with our devices. Launched in June 2025 as an Android-exclusive platform, Shop Share Anywhere positions itself as more than just another e-commerce tool—it's a comprehensive ecosystem designed to eliminate the need for multiple apps. By curating and seamlessly blending services from top retailers, social networks, and financial platforms, the app addresses the core pain points of digital fragmentation. "Tired of juggling 20+ apps just to shop, scroll, and connect? App clutter is REAL!" noted Jacob Wieck, the app's chief technologist, in a recent post on X. His vision? A single app where users can "shop Amazon/eBay/Walmart, vibe on FB/Insta/X, hail Uber, game on Epic, even ChatGPT." The problem Shop Share Anywhere aims to solve is rooted in the explosive growth of specialized apps. With over 8.93 million apps available across major stores, users often download separate ones for niche needs: one for fashion deals on Etsy, another for social sharing on Pinterest, and yet another for stock trading on Robinhood. This leads to "app overload," where devices become bogged down, and users face decision paralysis. A 2024 report from CB Insights highlighted that 70% of consumers feel overwhelmed by the number of apps on their phones, contributing to higher uninstall rates and lower engagement. In emerging markets like Asia, super apps such as WeChat have long dominated by offering everything from messaging to payments in one place, generating billions in revenue. Western attempts, however, have been slower to catch on, with platforms like Facebook and TikTok adding shopping features but still requiring users to hop between apps for full functionality. Shop Share Anywhere steps into this gap, drawing inspiration from these models while tailoring its approach to U.S. and global audiences seeking convenience without complexity. At the heart of Shop Share Anywhere is its shopping integration, which curates a diverse array of top-rated retail sites into a unified storefront. Users can browse categories like fashion, electronics, home decor, and beauty essentials from partners including Amazon, Best Buy, Costco, eBay, Etsy, Kohl's, Nordstrom, Target, Walmart, and Wayfair—all without leaving the app. This curation isn't random; it's powered by AI recommendations, including integrations with Perplexity for unbiased product searches and comparisons. "Discover the ultimate shopping experience with Shop Share Anywhere! This all-in-one super app lets you browse curated products from top brands, share finds with friends in real-time, and get AI-powered recommendations tailored just for you," Wieck enthused in an X post.

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