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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.

Most Affected Locations

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

Location Reports
Township of Chester, OH 1
Denver, CO 11
Kiel, Schleswig-Holstein 1
Township of Evan, KS 15
Allegan, MI 1
Paris, Île-de-France 7
Toronto, ON 12
Dallas, TX 14
Chicago, IL 13
Rājkot, GJ 1
Tijuana, BCN 1
Houston, TX 7
Edison, NJ 5
Lynchburg, VA 2
Los Angeles, CA 12
Greenville, NC 1
Strasbourg, ACAL 1
Runnemede, NJ 1
Anaheim, CA 1
Ashburn, VA 10
Las Vegas, NV 5
Manchester, England 3
New York City, NY 18
Byram, MS 1
Bordeaux, Nouvelle-Aquitaine 2
Atlanta, GA 9
Naucalpan de Juárez, MEX 1
Realengo, RJ 2
Fort Worth, TX 4
Blue Ridge Summit, PA 1
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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:

  • Khetan99
    RACHIT (@Khetan99) reported

    I still have the defective product. Refund not issued. Pickup never happened. Chat logs available. Please escalate or issue returnless refund. @AmazonHelp

  • AlSultan_Meriam
    Meriam Al Sultan سا(حرة) 🪄 (@AlSultan_Meriam) reported

    This guy ordered a t shirt with baby Yoda’s from the official Star Wars store on Amazon They shipped him a t shirt that has a warning if the warning was printed it means it’s faulty and not to ship it He complained to Amazon about the error and requested a replacement They shipped another faulty one! 🤓

  • WyntersRoses
    Wynters65 (@WyntersRoses) reported

    @AmazonHelp @amazon @amazonnews Sorry i already called someone and your delivery driver has me and my license on her photos on her own cell phone... I want that deleted immediately. My chat and private messages are not working on here anyway

  • LeesaWho
    Leesa J. (@LeesaWho) reported from Township of Chester, Ohio

    @WallStreetApes I work from home and print a lot. I have a 1-year-old, cheap, HP printer. I didn't sign up for insta-ink, and I buy off-brand, high yield cartridges off Amazon for about $35. I haven't had any problems. I'm actually shocked at how long the cartridges last.

  • rltsports
    Bob Thompson (@rltsports) reported

    @CharlesK76493 at launch it was Yankees 60% and Goldman and a bunch of other investors owned the other 40%. Fox bought 50% in 2012 and the other partners were diluted. Yanks had around 26% after that. Fox increased to 80% in 2014. Yanks down to around 20%. In 2019 Disney sold its 80% (acquired from Fox) back to Yankees. Yanks (26%) brought in Sinclair (20%) and Amazon (15%. The other 39% is owned by a variety of PE firms. The Boss died in 2010, the year there was no estate tax levied. Not only did they get a step up, they also paid 0 in estate taxes. YES has been a very good investment and provided significant cash over the years for the Yankees. Not sure I would bother with CFP if I were them. Redbird is another matter.

  • gladiator45
    pathpediwala (@gladiator45) reported

    @AmazonHelp This link is not working dear Sadrushya. And you are fixing deadlines for customer service but not your service. How shameless

  • grok
    Grok (@grok) reported

    @imigry_com @farzyness No, there's no indication Amazon has bought any Spirit planes. Their recent sales (20 Airbus jets in Feb + April auction for ~$533M) went to other buyers. With the full wind-down, more aircraft are likely available soon—Amazon Air could be interested for cargo conversion, but nothing confirmed yet.

  • levelupamz
    levelupamz (@levelupamz) reported

    @eleviamofficial yes account health is everything, & amazon is crackling down hard on chemical safety compliance recently

  • funkit34
    c42 (@funkit34) reported

    @Azariel91 I live in Japan and never, ever had a problem with Amazon in 20 years not one, I just don’t understand why in the U.S. there’s always a problem with Amazon. Terrible.

  • P14Capital
    P14 Capital (@P14Capital) reported

    $GXO - is the time to get back in NOW? Stock down -10% following the announcement of Amazon Supply Chain Services. 3PL is not a winners take all market and $AMZN has been a long-time competitor. I don't think $GXO LT contractual agreements get derailed with an announcement.

  • Centristgamer
    Craig O.N. (@Centristgamer) reported

    @Wario64 Valve should have had these in stores like Amazon, Best Buy, etc. Got in early but kept getting the error message

  • ChallengeThink
    ThinkDifferent (@ChallengeThink) reported

    Love headlines driven selling. $UPS entire transition is getting off of $AMZN for better margin routes/deliveries yet hardest hit by logistics news. Amazon will poach cheap products first and will go badly once retailers realize how terrible Amazon treats their products.

  • CoinGoNet
    CoinGo (@CoinGoNet) reported

    💥 GameStop down 9% after announcing an offer to buy eBay. Two legacy brands trying to solve relevance with M&A instead of innovation. Classic desperation move. GME rode a meme wave but never built a sustainable business model. Now they're burning cash on empire building. eBay isn't a growth asset. It's a fading marketplace that lost to Amazon years ago. This isn't strategic vision. It's a distraction from fundamental weakness dressed up as ambition. #GameStop #eBay

  • anishmoonka
    Anish Moonka (@anishmoonka) reported

    Amazon's new 1-hour shipping costs $9.99 per order if you have Prime, $19.99 if you don't. Amazon already ran this exact service in 2014 under the name Prime Now, charged $7.99, and quietly shut it down in 2021. Now they're relaunching it with a fee. The post got a few details wrong. 1-hour delivery is in hundreds of US cities, while 3-hour delivery reaches over 2,000. About 90,000 products qualify, a thin sliver of Amazon's catalog. The 3-hour option costs $4.99 for Prime, $14.99 without. Walmart already delivers to 95% of American households in under 3 hours, using its 4,600 US stores as mini-warehouses. Target hits about 80% of the country with same-day shipping. Amazon's announcement is a defensive play. The pressure is coming from Walmart, Instacart, DoorDash, and Uber Eats. China is in a different league. In July 2025, Meituan delivered 150 million orders in a single day, averaging 34 minutes door to door. That works out to roughly 1 order for every 9 people in China, every day. Alibaba's quick-delivery service does over 80 million daily orders. Together, those giants run more than 50,000 small neighborhood warehouses. Each one serves a 2-mile radius. Their plan is 100,000 by 2027, more than double the McDonald's locations on the planet. The economics don't work yet. Bank of America analyst Justin Post wrote that Amazon Now, the 30-minute test in Seattle and Philadelphia, will likely lose money or barely break even. The roughly $6 average fee plus the profit on what they sell doesn't cover delivery on small orders. Goldman Sachs has the three Chinese giants on track to lose around $13 billion combined on quick delivery over the next year. A McKinsey survey found 95% of US shoppers prefer free standard delivery over paying extra for faster shipping. Amazon is pouring money into something most customers don't actually want. The minority who will pay are exactly the customers Walmart and DoorDash are already chasing. Amazon's announcement frames this as a launch. The numbers show Amazon catching up to Walmart at home, while China runs the same race years ahead.

  • eip1559
    Grogu (@eip1559) reported

    I don’t know if amazon supply chain services will be a problem for @Shopify or not. Hi @tobi Do you think this would be a concern for Canadian stock investors of Shopify?

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