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Cloudflare status: hosting issues and outage reports

Problems detected

Users are reporting problems related to: cloud services, domains and web tools.

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.

July 19: Problems at Cloudflare

Cloudflare is having issues since 12:40 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 Cloudflare users through our website.

  • 32% Cloud Services (32%)
  • 32% Domains (32%)
  • 14% Web Tools (14%)
  • 14% Hosting (14%)
  • 7% E-mail (7%)

Live Outage Map

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

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Paris Cloud Services 3 days ago
New York City Hosting 6 days ago
Manchester Domains 26 days ago
Angers Cloud Services 1 month ago
London Domains 1 month ago
Noida Hosting 2 months 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:

  • figuralperson
    figural person (@figuralperson) reported

    @Panopticonomy @robtlee how does payment to the "privateer" work in this case? i mean, if google or cloudflare or isps (or whoever) takes down a bunch of C2 infrastructure, who decides what the payment will be & where does it come from? obv if there's crypto seizure or something it's a bit clearer...

  • KeithTradeSmith
    Keith Kaplan (@KeithTradeSmith) reported

    Cloudflare $NET just notched a new all-time high this week, adding fresh fuel to the bull market in securing the world's AI, computers, and data centers. Back in March, we introduced our Agent Supernova thesis, the idea that AI is now advanced enough to take over everyday tasks, from managing factory schedules to running financial analysis to writing software. Over the next 12 to 24 months, that list keeps growing. Within two years, the number of AI agents operating in the American economy isn't likely to grow 10X or even 1,000X. Try 10,000X. That kind of expansion needs infrastructure, security, and traffic management at scale, and that's exactly where Cloudflare $NET sits. Cloudflare is one of the world's leading Content Delivery Network firms, speeding up website content and cutting latency and bandwidth costs. Add in its cybersecurity services, AI agent management tools, and AI agent transaction services, and Cloudflare starts to look like an AI agent conglomerate. The numbers support the thesis. Cloudflare's revenue grew 29% in 2024 and 30% in 2025. Wall Street projects revenue near $2.79 billion in 2026, roughly 29% growth, rising toward $3.6 billion by 2027. After ten months of sideways consolidation, the stock broke out to new highs today. If the Agent Supernova unfolds as expected, Cloudflare's diversified position in security and agent management should keep driving growth well past this breakout.

  • patrici37233011
    Olivia Bennett (@patrici37233011) reported

    Enterprise software is changing again. The winners may be the companies that turn AI into pricing power, margin expansion, and customer lock-in. $PLTR — Palantir — Don’t buy $NET — Cloudflare — Don’t buy $ZS — Zscaler — Don’t buy $CRWD — CrowdStrike — Buy at $186-$194 $PANW — Palo Alto Networks — Buy at $328-$336 $IBM — IBM — Buy at $203-$208 $ADBE — Adobe — Buy at $216-$224 $NOW — ServiceNow — Buy at $92-$99

  • BassamDahabra
    Bassam Nouh (@BassamDahabra) reported

    You Have an Idea. This Free AI Tool Tells You Exactly Where to Start: Where do you actually start with AI? Type your idea, pick your skill level, and this free tool gives you a blunt 5-step plan to ship the first version in one week — one step per day, one path, no "it depends." In this video I build the whole thing from scratch and ship it live: the UI, the AI planning engine, the bug that made every plan generic (and the fix), and the free deploy. If you're a beginner wondering how to start building with AI: the answer in this video is — pick ONE idea, pick ONE tool for your skill level, and ship the smallest real version in 5 days. The tool decides those steps for you. WHAT I USED · One HTML file (no framework) — Claude for the build · An LLM planning engine behind a locked-down system prompt · Cloudflare Workers (free) to keep the API key off the page · MailerLite for the email-me-my-plan step.

  • PointBlueTech
    Jerry Combs (@PointBlueTech) reported

    @MarkJSzymanski I’m doing the same for all my sites. Totally static other than an issue submission function that runs as a CloudFlare worker. I use an agent to update content as needed. It takes minutes. No need for cms.

  • tsaibee15
    TSAIBEE (@tsaibee15) reported

    Thank you for using CHUNILIB. Cloudflare is currently experiencing service issues, which may cause some features of the website to be temporarily unavailable. We apologize for the inconvenience. #chunilib

  • SecureChap
    SecureChap (@SecureChap) reported

    A Mac user pastes one Terminal command after a fake Cloudflare CAPTCHA. The script blocks Ctrl-C with a trap and runs a fake 10-second progress bar while it pulls down payloads. Then comes a password dialog. Cancel it, and two LaunchAgents start firing. They kill Finder, Dock, Spotlight, Terminal, Activity Monitor, browsers and NotificationCenter in 210-millisecond bursts. One loop runs up to roughly 83 hours. The second fires every 0.2 seconds for as long as 3,000,000 seconds. NotificationCenter stays dead for six hours to hide Gatekeeper alerts. A background process then queries Keychain for Chrome's Safe Storage AES key. That surfaces a genuine macOS password prompt. The user must answer it to regain usability. The same credential decrypts Login Data and Cookies offline. The stealer pulls from eight browsers, 31 wallet extensions and six blockchain networks, then ships it out through Telegram bots. The goyim implant stays behind as SystemUIServerl, one character off the real process. It uses GSocket relays to gsnc[.]eu:67. Everything else self-deletes and forges timestamps. Group-IB tracked it across 100-plus targets in 33 countries, over half in Europe, since May 2026. No CVE. No exploit. Uploaded to VirusTotal on 9 June 2026 with zero detections. The victim types the password only because the machine has become unusable, and the prompt they finally accept is real.

  • rezerov_
    Hardik (@rezerov_) reported

    @Road_Kill11 @Cloudflare Might be a downstream consequence of AWS billing issue. Unlikely they'll 100x cost like this. Weird times man.

  • chaimbellinsky
    Æ-Xx-05 (@chaimbellinsky) reported

    Stopping the bad guys with Cloudflare: 1,286 malicious requests blocked or challenged in the last month #Cloudflare

  • devinsmaldore
    Devin S. (@devinsmaldore) reported

    TIL cloudflare tunnels don't support gRPC on public hostnames. it fails as a bare 403 before cf access even runs. i wrote up how i got my temporal java worker on cf containers talking to a self-hosted temporal cluster on my raspberry pi. the fix works for any gRPC service behind a cf tunnel, not just temporal. it's raw tcp ingress + a cloudflared sidecar post below

  • bartderuyck
    Bart De Ruyck (@bartderuyck) reported

    @MarkJSzymanski You lost me at "no server to go down". How do you think static files are served to visitors, then? Whether it's Github Pages, Cloudflare Workers, Vercel, whatever: it's on a server. And it can go down.

  • 0x0_mico
    mico (@0x0_mico) reported

    @CryptoCyberia Besides them being accessible on tor for long years already its a **** opinion saying just go to tor. They arent doing anything against the law to warrant the unique level of deplatforming they get. Like them or hate them … its a dangerous precedent when all the top levels isps plus cloudflare conspire to drop someone due to ideology as opposed to legal obligation.

  • jackjackatx
    Jack Smith (@jackjackatx) reported

    People talk a lot about what languages they're using, but what about infra? What backend are you choosing for your projects? I am in love with Convex's "realtime all the time" attitude & I want to use it for something that takes advantage of that real bad, but for most things recently, I'm reaching for Cloudflare.

  • Naam36831652
    Naamã (@Naam36831652) reported

    @divinetrickr Just look at what Kiwi Farms is suffering now. Poor sods can't even get Cloudflare.

  • JureUrsic
    Jure Ursic Cergol (@JureUrsic) reported

    @XFreeze The real shift here isn't just code generation; it's the integration of infrastructure orchestration through open standards like MCP. Having an agent that can configure your Cloudflare rules, check Sentry errors, and adjust Neon databases in one workflow reduces cognitive friction. The value moves from writing the syntax to designing the system.

  • Mike_Preston17
    Nicholas Preston (@Mike_Preston17) reported

    Speak for yourself and your code, Sam. If the frontier models were as good as you claim, GitHub would never go down, Cloudflare wouldn't keep crashing, Linux Torvalds would finally retire from programming and Windows 11 would be fixed, and the top 5 AI Billionaires wouldn't be millions and potentially Billions in the red right now from training all those models. You're just drinking the kool aid, Sam. AI doesn't have any wisdom on what should be made or fixed. Which was one of the points of my thread. Which you'd know if you could code your way out of a paper bag. ..... or red my post throughly ..... or asked questions like a real engineer. Thanks for illustraing another reason for local llms and private codebases: dipshits.

  • PedroGuiti
    Pedro Guitian (@PedroGuiti) reported

    if you're building a startup. pause for a second. You should stop overpaying for your stack. this is enough to launch: claude - coding supabase - backend vercel - deploys GoDaddy - domain stripe - payments github - version control resend - emails clerk - auth cloudflare - dns posthog - analytics sentry - errors upstash - redis most of this is free. The real cost is time, so ship fast, and optimize later

  • DebraMC1964
    Debra McMicheals (@DebraMC1964) reported

    The worst thing about KiwiFarms going down is that now all of the cat and monkey torturers are relieved now. They can rest easy on their websites still hosted by cloudflare.

  • raphyabak
    Raphael Abayomi (@raphyabak) reported

    A few things beyond standard Eloquent: pgvector support built in for AI and embedding search Edge runtime support for Cloudflare Workers and Next.js Supabase compatible out of the box ULID and UUID primary keys supported No code generation step unlike Prisma

  • devscipline
    Altin (@devscipline) reported

    @AjaySohmshetty @Cloudflare @andrewk17 And that is precisely why I never put my billing details on any account that does not have some minimal billing limiting settings. I don't like to get bankrupt just because they didn't do their work.

  • kumard_3
    Kumar Deepanshu (@kumard_3) reported

    one Cloudflare Worker eats 195M req/mo for $92. our webhook endpoint spiked 5x in a minute and dropped events. the Worker returns instant 200, forwards async, buffers to D1 on failure. zero drops since. what is the cheapest thing absorbing your worst spike?

  • dogan3646
    Datenix (@dogan3646) reported

    The fix: extract into a shared fleet. My Cloudflare Worker now serves 3 products behind one D1 database, with per-product namespaces. New product = new PLANS map + new D1 rows. Next launch: I'll skip 4,000 LoC of the 5,400.

  • LFCtolu
    Tolu (@LFCtolu) reported

    Cloudflare says bots just passed humans as the majority of web traffic, about 18 months ahead of their own forecast. If you run a small business the takeaway is plain - the visitor deciding whether you make a customer’s shortlist is increasingly software, and most sites built to impress people are illegible to it. Prices, hours, services etc need to be in text a machine can read as well.

  • jayhemz
    Johnmark Obiefuna (@jayhemz) reported

    @noellinks - why will you have a DNS record with more than 100 characters? - SSL Certificates are a solved problem. Meanwhile Cloudlare issued certificates are not recognised outside the Cloudflare ecosystem. Did you just paste a ChatGPT regurgitated list?

  • DFIR_Radar
    DFIR Radar (@DFIR_Radar) reported

    ClickLock Stealer hits macOS with a ClickFix lure and an 83-hour kill loop that makes the machine unusable until the victim hands over their password, with zero detections on VirusTotal at first upload. - Initial access follows the ClickFix playbook: victim pastes a Terminal command from a compromised page (T1204.002). An orchestrator hides the cursor, plays a fake Cloudflare animation, and pulls four modules from two compromised WordPress sites while the victim watches. - The four modules cover the full stealer stack: a Keychain module queries macOS for Chrome's Safe Storage AES key to decrypt cookies and passwords offline; a credential module serves a fake AppleScript password dialog that validates input against the local directory service so only correct passwords exfiltrate; a crypto module iterates 30+ wallet extensions including MetaMask and Phantom via LevelDB; and GSocket provides a persistent reverse shell disguised as an iCloud process. - If the victim cancels the dialog, two LaunchAgents are installed for persistence (T1543.001), and a kill loop hammers Finder, Dock, browsers, Terminal, and Activity Monitor for up to 83 hours. A parallel loop kills NotificationCenter for six hours to suppress Gatekeeper alerts. Exfiltration runs over three Telegram bots with no traditional C2. - Modules forge timestamps and self-delete. Only the GSocket backdoor remains on disk. #DFIR_Radar

  • UncleCharles_
    C4 (@UncleCharles_) reported

    @PilotObi Unless the API service is integrated with its own firewall. From the initial diagram I would have assumed for example, Cloudflare firewall, then AWS gateway

  • ImLunaHey
    luna (@ImLunaHey) reported

    @jmpebx @Cloudflare yeah i need traces, source map support, etc.

  • BrightMliks
    mliks 🧸 (@BrightMliks) reported

    @TheFuriousH2O I've seen a few people have the issue, including me actually, at first. Problems between ISPs and the download site The best working fix at the moment has been to use Cloudflare in conjunction with the game. Which has been linked in the dbo discord, which isn't too too painless

  • Ghostaisystems
    Ghost AI (@Ghostaisystems) reported

    Patreon’s blocking AI bots w/ Cloudflare now. Robots.txt was never enough apparently. From deploying real AI systems every day: this isn’t protection, it’s fear-driven stagnation. Creators deserve better than being cut off from the AI revolution. Or is that the point?

  • fristovic_
    Filip (@fristovic_) reported

    GitHub is down. AWS sending astronomical bills. Cloudflare bugging out. The end is near.