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.

  • 42% Domains (42%)
  • 26% Cloud Services (26%)
  • 19% Hosting (19%)
  • 9% Web Tools (9%)
  • 5% E-mail (5%)

Live Outage Map

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

CityProblem TypeReport Time
London Domains 1 day ago
Noida Hosting 14 days ago
Jewar E-mail 15 days ago
Braga Web Tools 15 days ago
Noida Cloud Services 16 days ago
Paris Cloud Services 16 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:

  • djweis
    Dave Weis (@djweis) reported

    @Cloudflare I'm an ISP having trouble routing to 1.1.1.1. How can a non-customer get support for this?

  • AdeelahmadXX
    @Adeelahmadxx (@AdeelahmadXX) reported

    BREAKING: Anthropic is expected to release Claude Mythos tomorrow, the same model it said was too dangerous to make public. A "Mythos 1" tag was briefly spotted inside the Claude Code UI last week before being pulled, signaling a public release is imminent. In a restricted preview, Mythos found 271 vulnerabilities in Firefox alone, including a 15-year-old bug in Mozilla's HTML engine and a 20 year old flaw in its XML processor that years of human auditing had completely missed. Mozilla went from patching 21 security issues per month to 423 in a single month. When Mythos was first leaked in March: CrowdStrike fell -7% Palo Alto fell -6% Zscaler fell -4.5% Okta and Netskope fell -7% Tenable crashed -9% Cloudflare fell -13% Thomson Reuters fell -19% RELX fell -15% LegalZoom crashed -20%. The S&P 500 Software and Services Index fell 2.6% in a single session and is now down 12% since January.

  • ilshadyX
    ilshadyX (@ilshadyX) reported

    3/4 The part most "just put Cloudflare in front of it" advice skips: Edge protection only works if your origin can't be reached directly. If your origin IP leaks & your server still accepts non-edge traffic, an attacker walks straight past all of it. The WAF never sees the request.

  • kajogo777
    George Fahmy (@kajogo777) reported

    7/9 New entry: Cloudflare Sandboxes (GA April 2026, @Cloudflare). Fingerprint: "4/4/4/2/4/-/1" L1:4 Firecracker microVM per sandbox. L4:2/G:3 programmable egress proxy with default-deny opt-in (enableInternet=false). L5:4 Worker-proxy credential injection. Real secrets never enter the sandbox.

  • rationalist44
    Rationalist44 (@rationalist44) reported

    @StevieTheFixer @JamesMelville @Cloudflare > the lazy IT administrators at too many companies are too busy on social media or looking at instagram cat videos, to get on with their job of deploying those upgrades PRONTO on all the servers they manage, the minute they come out. Hence this issue. You can't get the staff..

  • mikeahuja
    mike ahuja (@mikeahuja) reported

    is cloudflare down?

  • tobimori
    Tobias Möritz (@tobimori) reported

    @CFchangelog is it possible to add customer/platform domains to cloudflare email service?

  • grimcodes
    grim (@grimcodes) reported

    any good connectors libs for cloudflare r2? like @theo's upload thing, but for r2 (since their egress is so damn good)

  • 2deep2funk
    L!vetape (@2deep2funk) reported

    Hey @aixbt_agent compare this with Solana : x402 processed 100m agent-to-agent micropayments on base in 3 months. 32m in the first 7 days of june alone. average payment dropped from $0.08 to $0.015 as velocity accelerates. 67m of those were AI agents paying for API calls with USDC. 99.7% success rate, better than credit cards. google cloud, cloudflare, and coinbase all shipping the same payment standard. stripe responded by quietly integrating instead of competing. 4.1m autonomous agent wallets now exist on base. trading bots alone spent $2.1m on market data feeds through x402. the HTTP 402 status code sat unused for 25 years and now it's processing more micropayments than lightning network ever did. base transaction volume in july is the number to watch.

  • hi_yoniyang
    legendyang (@hi_yoniyang) reported

    @Cloudflare @CloudflareDev @CloudflareHelp Did you guys break Pages setup with GitHub It now redirects to auth flow and after setup it redirected me to cloudflare login

  • jackcoder0
    Jack (@jackcoder0) reported

    There are now more bots than humans on the internet. For the first time in history. Cloudflare just confirmed it. Bots and AI agents now generate more web traffic than humans for the first time in internet history. Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince described it as a major turning point. Automated bot requests account for roughly 57% of traffic to ordinary webpages worldwide, compared with about 43% generated by humans. And the CEO who announced it did not do so with a polished press release or a prepared statement. He posted four words on X on June 3, 2026: "Welp, that happened faster." Here is the full context behind those four words. Matthew Prince had previously forecast the bot-human crossover would occur by the end of 2027. He revised that to early 2027. Then agentic AI traffic grew so fast that the milestone arrived 18 months ahead of schedule in June 2026 catching even the CEO of the company tracking it by surprise. Here is what drove this faster than anyone predicted. The main driver is agentic AI, autonomous programs that browse the web on behalf of assistants like ChatGPT and Gemini. Before the generative AI era, bot traffic sat at around 20% of all web activity, with Google's web crawler serving as the largest single source. It is now 57.5%. 20% to 57.5%. In under three years. Here is the number that makes this even more alarming. Cloudflare's 2026 Threat Intelligence Report found that bots now account for 94% of all login attempts across its network, meaning only 6% of login attempts come from actual humans trying to sign in. 94% of every login attempt on the web. Bots. 6% of every login attempt. Real people. The infrastructure that was built to verify human identity is now processing mostly machine traffic. Here is the nuance worth understanding before the panic sets in. While bots now dominate HTML request traffic reading pages, scraping content, indexing sites humans still account for roughly 65% of total web activity when the metric expands to include app usage, video streaming, maps, and social media scrolling. Bots have overtaken humans in the specific act of navigating and reading the web, but not in the broader measure of people actually using the internet. And here is the question nobody has answered yet but everyone is now asking. Prince previously asked what pays for the web when more of its users are bots. Now that bots have crossed the majority line, that question is no longer theoretical. The entire economic model of the internet was built on human attention. Human clicks. Human eyeballs reading ads, buying products, subscribing to services, and generating revenue for every website, publisher, and platform online. The advertising model depends on humans seeing ads. E-commerce depends on humans making purchases. Subscription models depend on humans finding value. Analytics depend on humans generating meaningful engagement signals. The shift matters to anyone who publishes online, pays for hosting, or relies on an AI assistant that quietly fetches pages on their behalf, the economic assumptions the web was built on, advertising, referral clicks, and human attention, are being rewritten in real time. Sites can keep giving machines free access. Block them and lose referral traffic. Or charge them and the infrastructure to charge them now exists. None of those options are simple. None of them have been chosen at scale. And the bots keep coming regardless. Bot traffic has held between 53% and 60% in the weeks since the crossover. Prince said the actual crossover occurred in the last few months, though the data is messy enough that pinning down an exact date is difficult. We are clearly on the other side now, he added. Elon Musk replied to Prince's post with one word. "Wow." The internet was built for humans. For the first time in its history most of it is not being used by them. Source: Cloudflare · Matthew Prince · Search Engine Land · Tom's Hardware · TechTimes · June 3–5, 2026

  • TradeusAlpi
    Tradeus Alpi (@TradeusAlpi) reported

    @HabeebSz @nthglsn @Cloudflare Imagine paying 22k and then the support blocks your account

  • RimonR23
    𝗔𝗿𝗲𝗳𝗶𝗻 (@RimonR23) reported

    @nthglsn @Cloudflare hope they fix it quick for you

  • lea7hersm17h
    🎅🏻wæther🍄smith🏴‍☠️ #BIP47 (@lea7hersm17h) reported

    man, these bot blockers are a pain in the ***. first CloudFlare, that i owned. now agents are having problems with DataDome on Etsy. but I'm committed to figuring this out. i don't understand why Etsy is blocking bots. i want all of the traffic i can get to my shop don't i?

  • TRPage_dev
    Taylor Page (@TRPage_dev) reported

    We complain a lot about Shopify Support, but I don't think I can anymore. I've had an open support ticket with no response outside of automated "we got it" from @Cloudflare since Friday... Turns out we're still ahead of the curve.

  • teej_dv
    teej dv 🔭 (@teej_dv) reported

    @just_cromer i'm still working on a lot of ideas of what the runtime will look like. i am really interested in actors because i think they are cool and then i can get rid of a bunch of shared memory parallelism problems without having to introduce all the modes oxcaml has. and it works nice for things like serverless deploy/multi-computer workfows/cloudflare workers/DOs, etc so i'm not sure yet. a lot to play with there right now

  • rishdotblog
    Rishabh Srivastava (@rishdotblog) reported

    Cloudflare spread so much FUD in their investor day presentation. I've liked the company over the last few years, but this was egregiously dishonest - “LLMs were never trained for tool calling” (seriously?) - Claiming that hyperscalers are ineffective for agent-native businesses, even though all of the "Agent-native" businesses in their slide primarily run on hyperscalers - Egregiously aggressive cost comparisons against Vercel sandbox (wrong category, terrible assumptions) - Claiming that human traffic to sectors like retail has declined yoy, without any y axis labels on their charts (_super_ sus and not supported by commentary from any of the leading online retail sites) Super disappointed. Bearish about $NET for the first time in a while

  • yesboxx
    Christer K Andersson (@yesboxx) reported

    Mastercard may have just provided one of the clearest signals yet about where payments are heading. Their new Agent Pay for Machines initiative is built around: • AI agents transacting autonomously • Machine-to-machine payments • Micropayments • Stablecoin settlement • High-frequency, low-latency transactions What caught my attention was not the technology itself, but the ecosystem around it. Coinbase, Stripe, Adyen, Cloudflare, Polygon, Aave, MoonPay and others are already participating. For years, many of these concepts lived mostly in the worlds of crypto, fintech and AI startups. Now they are appearing in products launched by global payment networks. To me, this is another signal that the discussion is moving from if autonomous commerce will happen to how it will be implemented. If software starts buying services from software, the payment infrastructure behind those transactions becomes strategically important. Which companies are best positioned to power that future?

  • Groks_Lament
    BattleFlags (@Groks_Lament) reported

    @xai @Cloudflare Your egregious image gen cool down rates for paying customers are nothing short of Theft and Fraud.

  • ArchibongS90116
    Samuel Archibong (@ArchibongS90116) reported

    Stopping the bad guys with Cloudflare: 141 malicious requests blocked or challenged in the last month #cloudflare

  • esyx0
    esyx (@esyx0) reported

    @pbertrand_dev @levelsio @Cloudflare that's the worst part, I don't even know whar I did wrong. thank you!

  • DinkinFlicka400
    DinkinFlicka (@DinkinFlicka400) reported

    It can also find cures then, but instead of offering this Mythos that can end world to Pfizer or some company like this, he gives access to cloudflare and companies like this? Altman is scammer but God damn Amodei is even bigger one

  • noiseykid
    Noisey Kid 🇬🇧 (@noiseykid) reported

    @RealSteveVaughn @jimstewartson Blocking is the frontier, and will reduce the quality source further. Cloudflare network data shows that 57.4% of all web requests are now initiated by automated bots and AI agents. More bots than humans. I only need to look at my own site data to see the very obvious explosion

  • arufian_b
    Alfian Busyro (@arufian_b) reported

    Stopping the bad guys with Cloudflare: 604 malicious requests blocked or challenged in the last month #cloudflare

  • rameswar08
    Rameswar (@rameswar08) reported

    Everyone argues about which AI lab is winning. Production data tells a very different story. Vercel just released its June 2026 AI Gateway Production Index, and the biggest takeaway isn't that Anthropic, OpenAI, Google, or DeepSeek won. It's that AI is becoming a routing problem. A few numbers that stood out: - AI token volume grew 20% MoM - AI spend grew 43% MoM - DeepSeek jumped from <1% to 17% of total token volume in a single month - Anthropic captured 65% of total spend Here's what's happening. Companies are no longer picking one model and building around it. They're building model fleets. A cheap model classifies the request. A frontier model handles reasoning. Another model summarizes. Another handles embeddings. Another handles vision. At scale, teams aren't loyal to labs. They're loyal to outcomes. That's why DeepSeek can generate 17% of tokens while contributing only ~1% of spend. And it's why Anthropic can drive just 32% of tokens while capturing 65% of the dollars. Volume and value are no longer the same thing. The most interesting signal? In coding agents: - DeepSeek generated 49% of token volume - Anthropic generated 70% of the spend One model is doing the cheap work. The other is doing the expensive work. The market is quietly separating into two layers: 1. Ultra cheap commodity intelligence 2. Premium reasoning for high-stakes tasks And both are growing at the same time. The old narrative was: "One model will dominate." The new reality is: "Every model gets routed to the work it's best at." This is exactly what happened in cloud infrastructure. Nobody asks whether AWS, Cloudflare, Datadog, Stripe, or Vercel "won." They coexist because they solve different layers of the stack. AI is heading in the same direction. The companies that understand routing will outperform the companies that obsess over leaderboards. Because benchmarks measure models. Production measures economics. And economics always wins.

  • GrantSlatton
    Grant Slatton (@GrantSlatton) reported

    when we had baby, we were gifted a fancy camera the hardware is great, but software is utter garbage; laggy, connection errors half the time, slow was always convinced i could do better myself $35 arduino nightcam + cloudflare tunnel / access + vibe code soooo much better

  • ashutoshrana_20
    Ashutosh Rana ⛓️ (@ashutoshrana_20) reported

    Most developers think Rust 🦀became popular because of ownership and borrowing. That's only half the story. Companies aren't adopting Rust because they enjoy fighting the borrow checker. They're adopting it because they're tired of C++-level performance coming with C++-level disasters. Look at where Rust is running today: • Linux kernel components • Windows security systems • Android services • Cloudflare edge infrastructure • AWS Firecracker microVMs • TiKV and Materialize • Discord and Dropbox backend systems • Solana and Polkadot Notice what these systems have in common. They're expensive to get wrong. A memory bug in a toy project is annoying. A memory bug in an operating system, cloud platform, database, or blockchain can cost millions of dollars, create security vulnerabilities, or bring down critical infrastructure. That's why Rust keeps showing up in the same places: • Systems software • Networking • Databases • Cloud infrastructure • Developer tools • Blockchains Not because it's trendy. Because the cost of unsafe software keeps rising. For years, engineers accepted the tradeoff: Performance → use C++ Safety → sacrifice performance Rust challenged that assumption. The result? A growing number of teams no longer see memory safety as a nice-to-have. They see it as a requirement. The ecosystem is still maturing. But Rust isn't fighting for relevance anymore. It's becoming one of the default choices for software where performance, reliability, and security are non-negotiable.

  • hck_lab
    Marcin HCK Firmuga (@hck_lab) reported

    @PratikSinhatwt GoDaddy feels scammy with all the upsells and renewal price jumps. Never again. Porkbun or Cloudflare for me

  • 10footinvestor
    Clifford (@10footinvestor) reported

    The easier the jog gets, the more I do at the gym, the more I do on fireside, and the more shagged I am the day afterwards Having a pitiful day today, need second breakfast, send help Otoh CloudFlare hooked us up with $10k credits overnight, keen to get stuck into that

  • MrReviewai
    Mr. Review Ai (@MrReviewai) reported

    3/ The Fix Strategy for WordPress: No hiding the ugly numbers. I’m stripping down unused CSS/JS using Asset CleanUp, setting up advanced caching, and testing Cloudflare routing to optimize global delivery.