1. Home
  2. Companies
  3. Cloudflare
Cloudflare

Cloudflare status: hosting issues and outage reports

No problems detected

If you are having issues, please submit a report below.

Full Outage Map

Cloudflare is a company that provides DDoS mitigation, content delivery network (CDN) services, security and distributed DNS services. Cloudflare's services sit between the visitor and the Cloudflare user's hosting provider, acting as a reverse proxy for websites.

Problems in the last 24 hours

The graph below depicts the number of Cloudflare 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.

At the moment, we haven't detected any problems at Cloudflare. Are you experiencing issues or an outage? Leave a message in the comments section!

Most Reported Problems

The following are the most recent problems reported by Cloudflare users through our website.

  • 35% Domains (35%)
  • 30% Cloud Services (30%)
  • 19% Hosting (19%)
  • 11% Web Tools (11%)
  • 5% E-mail (5%)

Live Outage Map

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

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Angers Cloud Services 8 days ago
London Domains 10 days ago
Noida Hosting 23 days ago
Jewar E-mail 23 days ago
Braga Web Tools 23 days ago
Noida Cloud Services 24 days 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.

Cloudflare Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • zebassembly
    zeb (@zebassembly) reported

    @astuyve @boristane Yeah we aren't happy that the limitation has existed for so long either. We're working hard to try to not paint ourselves into a corner when the o11y platform we've built for Workers expands to being used for other products. There are many shortcuts we could have taken to got this shipped sooner but they may have put us in a state where we later couldn't reconcile it with tracing for another product. We're really going all-out for the o11y platform we're building within Cloudflare and that'll inevitably slow things down by preventing us from taking the easy paths.

  • rohit_jsfreaky
    Rohit Kashyap | AI + Full-Stack (@rohit_jsfreaky) reported

    @EddCoates that nginx 500 is the scrapers basically ddosing you for free training data. robots txt is a polite suggestion they ignore now. what actually helps, put cloudflare in front with bot fight mode on, rate limit per asn not per ip since they rotate addresses, and consider a tarpit for the worst offenders. it is not legal so much as unenforceable at their scale, which is the real problem

  • CommandCodeAI
    Command Code (@CommandCodeAI) reported

    We're aware of an ongoing incident. Partial outages at Cloudflare and Supabase are causing Command Code CLI to experience intermittent connection issues. We're actively investigating and working on a fix. Thanks for bearing with us.

  • heykarenrc
    KarenR (@heykarenrc) reported

    When I built d1-studio, I was still early in my transition from UX to development. At first, I just wanted the simplest stack possible. Something lean. Something affordable. Something I could build with fast. Like many new devs, I started with the familiar stack: Next.js. Supabase. Vercel. AI helping me along the way. Supabase was great to get started. I still like it. But as I built more products, I started noticing the small costs and tradeoffs that you only understand after shipping. Storage. Egress. Deployment limits. The usual “newbie learns the hard way” stuff. That pushed me to look for a stack that fit how I wanted to build. Then I found Cloudflare. Workers. Pages. D1. R2. Queues. Generous free tier. Simple deployment. Close to the edge. I slowly moved more of my projects there and never really looked back. But there was one thing that kept slowing me down: Cloudflare D1 local development. D1 is great, but working with the database locally felt too slow. I didn’t want to keep jumping between CLI commands just to inspect tables, edit rows, run SQL, or check data while building. I also didn’t want a tool that required a long setup. My thinking was simple: The database is already in my Cloudflare project. The wrangler.toml is already there. Why can’t a studio just detect it and work? That became the trigger for D1 Studio. A native database studio for Cloudflare D1. No complicated setup. No extra database connection string. No heavy workflow. Just run it inside your project and start working with your D1 database faster. You can inspect tables, edit data, run SQL, and work with local or remote D1 without fighting the CLI every few minutes. It started as a tool I needed for myself. Now it’s getting used by other Cloudflare developers too. This week it hit 311 weekly downloads. Not a huge number in the grand scheme of things, but for me it means a lot. Because this is the first product I built that truly came from my own pain. Not a random idea. Not a trend. Not something I forced. Just a problem I kept hitting until I finally built the tool I wished existed. That’s been the biggest lesson for me as I move from design into development: The best products are often not born from brainstorming. They come from friction. Something feels slower than it should. Something takes too many steps. Something breaks your flow. And eventually you think: “There has to be a better way.” That’s how D1 Studio started. And seeing people use it for their own Cloudflare projects is still one of the best feelings.

  • tebayoso
    Jorge (@tebayoso) reported

    I had my @cloudflare bill spin up from 0 to 500 per day, and their interface was broken for two days, when I noticed I had to pay 900usd. They don't respond to customer support :(

  • backnotprop
    Michael Ramos (@backnotprop) reported

    Every "ADE" is going to be pushed into one of either of (some might try to do all): - Linear competitor - Notion competitor - diffxyz/Ai-review competitor and away from "a harness for harnesses" - and/or misstep into remote execution (this requires all in customer bets. Like you either all go all in into the linear model or you do not - I can't imagine this scaling). But there's a much stronger durable layer nobody's really hitting at other than the infrastructure providers - context/artifacts has a lot of exciting potential. You can see it with cursor origin, cloudflare artifacts, code[dot]storage are pointing at. A lot of innovation to be had here & on top of - beyond "hey, share your HTML with me" There's still room for middle layer execution innovation, and it might smell like memory, but nobody's doing memory right.

  • g0ksan
    goksan (@g0ksan) reported

    @thomas_ankcorn @SamNewby_ @thomas_ankcorn thanks for the help the issue is still unresolved (despite being closed) and both the assignee and assigner no longer appear to be at Cloudflare

  • Pandaptable_
    nemmy (@Pandaptable_) reported

    @UseCider cloudflare for a page that just connects to a local instance.... truly genius engineering.... holy **** you guys are incompetent fix the cpu usage already it's using more than the official am client with lossless

  • Mike_Preston17
    Nicholas Preston (@Mike_Preston17) reported

    @PLOwingPots @DevLeaderCa You really should learn C and C++ to understand the fundamentals, etc. I say this as a C# dev who went C -> C++ -> Java -> C#. You won't appreciate the 'better' language nearly as much if you don't at least suffer from the shortcomings of its successor language. I suffered pointer and stack overflows from C++ and that taught me to not be an idiot with my memory. Rust babies devs too much, imo - that's what (again, imo) led to the Cloudflare outage: too much trust in the compiler and willfully ignoring the dynamic nature of data in production (which NO language can account for).

  • adrianwjfritz
    Adrian Fritz (@adrianwjfritz) reported

    5/ Governments and major tech companies are already moving. Most blockchains are catching up. The US requires quantum-resistant cryptography on all new national security systems from January 2027 - retiring the same methods Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solana rely on today. Cloudflare, Apple, Signal, Microsoft, and AWS are already deploying upgrades. 24 of the top 26 blockchain protocols still rely entirely on methods being phased out elsewhere.

  • AjayCodeWiz
    Ajay (@AjayCodeWiz) reported

    @VanillaCache I just bought max plan. Using it via vs code extension. Does the web version covers everything. Mobile web version puts things in container. And running the dev server accessing is so difficult. Cloudflare and ngrok not working. Had to push it to vercel which deploys all the branches including the branch the claude is working on. But still slow like building takes time

  • Symedia_
    Symedia (@Symedia_) reported

    @rickyrickyriri @SimonAlmers @AliGrids it's not a work email but a domain email look at tld-list buy a 1$ domain and get a cloudflare email. fixed the problem in few hours.

  • Kolar_Dev
    Kolar😎 (@Kolar_Dev) reported

    As a product builder, avoid putting your entire infrastructure under a single provider. If your database is running on an EC2 instance, keep backups somewhere independent, such as Cloudflare R2. The goal isn't just redundancy, it's leverage. No single provider should be able to take your product offline, lock you out, or put your business at risk with a single outage or account issue.

  • calebsylvest
    Caleb Sylvest (@calebsylvest) reported

    @jasondoesstuff Skip the CMS. Recently did the same. Used Claude to build everything Used Astro. Deployed to Cloudflare. Writing with MDX. Pre-rendered everything and served from Cloudflare edge network. Basically a fast as possible.

  • cshperspectives
    Richard Sever (@cshperspectives) reported

    @manuelrivascruz working on solutions to this. the problem as I'm sure you can imagine is like so many sites we are being hammered by LLM bots in addition to all the DDOS attacks, so (again like many others) use services like Cloudflare to ensure human readers maintain access

  • DWBB1984
    DownWithBigBrother (@DWBB1984) reported

    @ultrasxiv Fair on bandwidth being a real cost, but the 2GB figure is a long way out. Cheapest DO droplet includes 500GB+ outbound, Hetzner 20TB+. At 600-700GB household use you’re a pound or two over on DO, zero on Hetzner. Stays around the base £4-5 for most, not £300. And “un-bannable” was the precise word, not hyperbole. A commercial VPN is bannable because it’s a named brand with known IPs, a company that can be pressured or blocked. That’s the weakness. Self-hosting removes the target entirely. There’s no technical category called “a VPS used as a VPN.” It’s a rented server running standard encryption (WireGuard, IPsec), the same protocols carrying every bank settlement, ATM link and corporate tunnel on earth. To ban it you’d have to block those protocols (killing Visa, every corporate VPN, all remote work) or blacklist the datacentre IP ranges (AWS, Hetzner, OVH) that host the actual internet: payment gateways, banking backends, Stripe, Cloudflare, gov services. You can’t separate “server someone might tunnel through” from “server running the shop you’re buying from.” The second and third-order effects would cripple e-commerce, open banking and logistics, all riding the same cloud backbone. That’s the sovereignty point. You can ban a brand. You can’t ban the capability of renting a server and encrypting your own traffic, not without taking modern commerce down with it.

  • ann1knit
    Ann the cat herder (@ann1knit) reported

    If cloudflare is so buggy and easily broken or hacked, why the frell hasn't someone come up with a better system or solution?

  • glitchtruth
    Glitch Truth (@glitchtruth) reported

    Day 28 of 30. 30 Days of Practical Tech. A reverse proxy is a server that sits in front of your real server. Cloudflare runs one for free in front of millions of sites. Visitors hit Cloudflare's IP never yours so attackers can't find your machine. Tomorrow Day 29: what a CDN actually is.

  • Kolorguide
    Kolorguide (@Kolorguide) reported

    @Hostinger Yesterday I upgraded my hosting plan. My website was operating normally before the upgrade. Immediately after the upgrade, the site became unavailable with Cloudflare 525 errors. DNS, SSL and server checks have been completed, but human support and ticket escalation are currently unavailable due to a reported support platform issue. Can someone from Hostinger please review this case or advise how customers can obtain technical assistance during the support platform outage? #Hostinger #WebHosting #Support

  • perwian
    Nes|🍉 (@perwian) reported

    @nateskeep Not surprising ,most Spanish clubs use ai a lot ,which is really hypocritical cause then they block **** *** cloudflare so people cannot pirate football

  • stjeanp
    Patrick St. Jean (@stjeanp) reported

    @EddCoates I dealt with some of the same stuff, ended up putting them behind Cloudflare proxies, which helped somewhat. The biggest fix was blocking specific ASNs. Specifically AS132203.

  • sulabhpuri
    Sulabh Puri (@sulabhpuri) reported

    A lot of problems with @Cloudflare today.

  • specialkdelslay
    special k | CEO of stressed out era (@specialkdelslay) reported

    @DispairSoftware @DataDeLaurier No no, I am showing the IPs of the ones hitting our site. They belong to openai (afaik). Cloudflare has helped with some of the bot activity but not all of it. I think they make the assumption that openai, claud, et al are good actors who will honor txt directives, when I can see for sure they are not. What he was telling me is to tunnel connections thru cloudflare and host privately but those things wouldn't mitigate this particular issue

  • atresnjo1
    Adnan (@atresnjo1) reported

    if @Cloudflare services had a strict spending limit i'd use them for everything tbh, just too afraid to vibecode some side **** and wake up to a $5k bill

  • nikhildp
    Nikhil Agarwal (@nikhildp) reported

    Everyone please don't fall for false advertising of @Cloudflare @CloudflareDev. They have several billing issues that you can find easily on reddit and their customer support is bad. I moved from GCP to Cloudflare and that was a terrible mistake. Got to move back now!

  • trudydehacker
    Shantanu Dhanuka (@trudydehacker) reported

    @CloudflareHelp Hi, My domain DNS on cloudflare and hosted on CF Pages is returning Warning - Suspected Phishing - This website has been reported for potential phishing. This is happening only with the homepage, inner pages are working fine. We raised multiple ticket Pls help

  • brale_xyz
    brale (@brale_xyz) reported

    This is not just a blockchain story either. @NIST finalized three post-quantum standards in 2024. @Cloudflare says more than two-thirds of TLS traffic through its network now uses post-quantum key exchange. The migration has already started.

  • QuinnyPig
    Corey Quinn (@QuinnyPig) reported

    Man, at this rate I’m gonna have to do a whole new thread with more issues for @Cloudflare to fix.

  • specialkdelslay
    special k | CEO of stressed out era (@specialkdelslay) reported

    @HeadmasterDuck We have cloudflare pro acc which does mitigate some of this. The cloudflare dependency everyone has is a problem tho

  • OttoLorner
    Otto Lorner (@OttoLorner) reported

    Best OpenClaw use case is making it an admin in AWS, Google Cloud, Cloudflare, wherever and never having to use their horrendous UIs again. Cloud consultant on tap.