Cloudflare status: hosting issues and outage reports
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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.
- Domains (41%)
- Cloud Services (25%)
- Hosting (16%)
- Web Tools (13%)
- E-mail (6%)
Live Outage Map
The most recent Cloudflare outage reports came from the following cities:
| City | Problem Type | Report Time |
|---|---|---|
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Domains | 8 days ago |
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Cloud Services | 19 days ago |
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Domains | 21 days ago |
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Hosting | 1 month ago |
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1 month ago | |
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Web Tools | 1 month ago |
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:
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Matt Carey (@mattzcarey) reportedDay 0 support for MCP servers on Cloudflare, with Workers OAuth Provider. Thanks to our customers for working with us to ship this for the wider ecosystem :) Sounds small but this is massive for MCP auth in large companies.
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Japan Anime News (JAN) (@JapanAnimeNews_) reportedA change to our Cloudflare settings appears to have caused access issues for some users. We apologize for the inconvenience this may be causing. Please bear with us for a few days while we work to resolve the issue. 🙏
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David Frosdick (@DavidFrosdick) reportedBeen putting Cloudflare pages to use today. @NotionHQ database on the backend. Customer shops built for brands on the front end. Hold about 120 products. Protected login, stripe checkout or checkout on account. Customer account approvals. Order confirmation emails and invoices. All built so staff can manage products prices from inside Notion setting markup on cost price, customer account management and more. I might start switching my smaller Shopify sites over to this as it’s easier to manage for small ecom stores with 100 products.
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Devine dev (@Andrew652263) reported@elshad_ff @Teknium Had similar websocket issues before. One thing that helped was testing the same dashboard through Pinggy to confirm if Cloudflare was the bottleneck.
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Corey Quinn (@QuinnyPig) reportedMan, at this rate I’m gonna have to do a whole new thread with more issues for @Cloudflare to fix.
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Shantanu Landore (@ShantanuVL) reported@itsasmolsush Oof well my non tech tech company has everything set up over cloudflare so we need to log in with MFA once a day... and the prompt to login comes at the worst point of the day everyday so
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tidux (@skibidiblazor) reported@prestonjbyrne Not to mention because the major cloud providers have their own international cables between datacenters they'd have to put that DPI filter in front of Cloudflare, Cloudfront, Azure and Google CDNs, YouTube, etc.... it would make the Internet unusably slow.
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Rennie M (@therenniem) reportedCodex computer use never ceases to amaze. I was setting up a new hetzner vps and wanted to secure it using tailscale and cloudflare. Computer use and the chrome plugin did everything for me from firewall rules, setting up the vps to domain management. @OpenAIDevs its so good
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Cliff Marquez (@cliff_marquez) reportedFor some it's early, but for me it's late. The night's almost done. And before it goes, I step back and look at things. All this chaos. All this building. This strange, wonderful moment we're all living through. I take a breath and just feel grateful for the chance to be in it at all. There's a lot out there. A lot of noise, a lot of things pulling at you. People will tell you it's all fighting for your attention. I don't see it that way. Some of it deserves your attention, some of it doesn't. You're the one who decides which is which. The one thing you can count on is that things change. Sometimes you're flying high, unstoppable. Other times it feels like everyone's passing you by and you're at the bottom. But regardless of the moment, one thing should stay constant. Your intention. And how do you find that intention? How do you guide it? You look within. Not out. Because most of what's out there won't help you find the answer anyway. Business isn't going to change. It's going to shift. The ones still standing years from now? They're the ones who moved with real intention. The intention to give back. To do good. To actually help the people in front of them. And maybe that's where the next breakthrough comes from. The next leap in technology, in science. Because they cared enough about their society to build something that actually matters. As the tools get better, you'll see more fakes come to light. More people promising to be something they're not. That's the gift, honestly. It gives you room to be humble. To be real. To hold your ground when others fold. A soft heart, but a firm fist. So the question I keep sitting with is intention. Are you just chasing a dollar? Desperate for the next thing? We all want things. There's nothing wrong with that. But watch what happens when it's only about you. With no regard, no care for anyone else. Life has a way of balancing that back out. The more you want something, the more it seems to run. Let it go, and it comes back in abundance. The journey is your own, even when what we're building is bigger than us. I'm no one. Just a stranger on the internet. So I'll leave you with this: What's your intention? You don't have to tell me. Just be honest with yourself. The answer's already within. P.S. Tomorrow I'll drop the next lesson on setting up your infrastructure to work with less friction. We've been going through how I set up my Claude setup. Today was Cloudflare, tomorrow we're covering R2 and S3 spaces. See you then.
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world Evolution (ALT) (@EvolutionALT) reported4/8 Popular Repos (2026): yonggekkk/Cloudflare-vless-trojan (very active, has obfuscated versions) Surfboardv2ray/Trojan-worker & v2ray-refiner vfarid/v2ray-worker derivatives These support Trojan over WS+TLS on 443.
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Sulabh Puri (@sulabhpuri) reportedA lot of problems with @Cloudflare today.
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Otto Lorner (@OttoLorner) reportedBest 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.
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Stefan Mincher (@StefanMincher) reported@betangel any issues currently? I bought keys on 16th June, I haven’t received the email with them on. Can’t log support via the website as there’s a cloudflare error.
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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.
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Elyas (@ElyasAlemi) reported@steipete We hit this in our n8n workflows. PDF intake is slow (Cloudflare queue, async), Supabase lookups are fast. Treating them as different shapes from the start saved a lot of rework. are you running the slow side on a queue or polling?
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сorinthian⚡️ (@corinthian_xyz) reportedCloudflare had an embarrassing outage - so they built an agent that reviews every code and config change before it ships Matthew Prince, CEO of Cloudflare: "we built an agent that not only reviews every code release that we send out, but every configuration change - and it's trained on 10 years of incidents" at an all-hands someone pulled up the incident chart: steady background noise for years, then a cliff straight down. that cliff was the day the agent went live uptime and reliability up an order of magnitude in a year, just from agents reviewing their own releases his real point: a team drifts into shared blind spots, but the agent is uncorrelated to those biases - so it's incredibly good at catching what humans miss bookmark it ↓
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Luca Steeb (@steebchen) reported@baanish @fayazara it's actually not true, you can use the CloudFlare AI gateway by setting it up in the dashboard and you'll get an URL which works with any SDK or library. however, personally I recommend to use @llmgateway as we support the full catalog of models and DevPass coding plan for 3x usage
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Iqra (@AiWithIqra) reported6. Default DNS Resolution Lag What it does: When your TV tries to load the image thumbnails for an app like Netflix, it uses your Internet Service Provider's default DNS server to find out where those images live on the internet. Think of DNS as the internet's phone book. Why it kills performance: ISP phone books are notoriously slow and incredibly outdated. Often, your TV is not actually lagging at all. The processor is fine, but the TV is frozen waiting for your internet provider to tell it where to download the movie poster graphics. *********** it: Settings → Network → Network Status → IP Settings → DNS Setting → Enter Manually. Change the numbers to 8.8.8.8 (Google) or 1.1.1.1 (Cloudflare). You will literally watch your streaming apps load twice as fast.
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max guy 😐 (@GolerGkA) reported@artillain @ThePrimeagen Ok I’m stupid bear with me. Usually with cloudflare on front of static public site, users don’t hit my web service most of time anyway, they hit cloudflare cache. Does it still work? I assume that information that anybody would want to scrape would be on static public endpoints.
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AtomicSpark (@AtomicSpark) reportedX (and likely other platforms and apps) will not preview links to your self-hosted websites unless you support TLS version 1.2 @Cloudflare: SSL/TLS > Edge Certificates > Minimum TLS Version Set to TLS 1.2 @nginx: /etc/nginx/nginx.conf ssl_protocols TLSv1.2 TLSv1.3;
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./can (@shcansh) reportedAdding validity checks for Azure and Salesforce tokens is the real win in the latest secret scanning updates. Instead of chasing ghosts, devs can now see if a leaked credential is still active. But with 11 GitLab token types added and new blocks for Cloudflare, we are putting a lot of trust in automated regex. Are active validity checks actually enough to stop the leak crisis, or are we just treating the symptoms of a broken secret-management culture?
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𝐀𝐤𝐫𝐚𝐦 (@beingakramraja) reportedAkash is processing 1.7 billion tokens every single day on openrouter right now outpacing cloudflare venice, elizaos, morpheus, gensyn all paying customers running real ai workloads on akash the narrative isn't that akash could become the decentralized aws. it's that it already is for a growing list of ai companies who need cheaper compute akash just launched homenode beta people with rtx 4090s and 5090s sitting at home can now connect their gpu to the network and earn from ai inference demand this changes the supply side completely instead of relying on 58 enterprise providers, the network starts pulling in consumer hardware globally more supply means more competitive pricing which means more demand which means more akt burned the things akash is building that most ct hasn't priced in yet virtual machines launching this quarter enterprise workloads that couldn't run on containers now can starcluster acquiring 7,200 nvidia gb200 gpus protocol-owned compute at hyperscale confidential computing via tee the feature enterprises require before migrating serious workloads $akt is at $0.62 the roadmap reads like a company that's two quarters away from being unignorable
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Hira Siddiqui (@identityonchain) reported<Rant Ahead> Every major AI company is building memory right now. OpenAI just shipped Dreaming V3, which updates your ChatGPT profile automatically after each conversation. Cloudflare launched Agent Memory so AI agents can store context between sessions. X released an official MCP server so agents can read your posts and activity in real time. All of this is genuinely useful. But none of it works together. ChatGPT's memory stays in ChatGPT. Cloudflare's agent memory stays with whatever agent you built on Cloudflare. X knows what you post but that doesn't help Claude understand who you are. Every product is solving memory for itself, inside itself. Which means you're still re-explaining yourself constantly. Your job, your preferences, your current project, your writing style. Every new AI tool you try starts from scratch. If you use five AI tools, you have five separate versions of "you" floating around, none of them in sync. The reason this won't get fixed by the big players is pretty simple: memory is how they keep you around. The better ChatGPT knows you, the less likely you are to switch to something else. That's not a conspiracy, it's just product logic. Sharing memory across tools would hurt retention, so nobody does it. What actually needs to exist is a memory layer that sits outside any individual product. Something you own, that you control, that any AI tool can read from if you give it permission. Not because the companies agreed to share your data, but because the memory never belonged to them in the first place. MCP is already starting to act as the connection layer between AI tools. The infrastructure for retrieval exists. The auth patterns exist. The missing piece is a persistent store that any agent can plug into, that travels with the user rather than living inside any one product. Before DNS, every network handled naming differently and nothing connected cleanly. Then one standard emerged and suddenly the whole thing scaled. AI memory feels like it's at a similar point. The question isn't really whether something like this gets built. It's who builds it and whether it's actually user-owned when they do. </Rant Over>
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bigdatachads (@bigdatachads) reportedI've been building AI phone agents on @Cloudflare for a while now. v1. a Python container, fighting for every millisecond. v2. no container, the whole call on the edge. that was the real work. now that I have the stack down, I spent last weekend messing around. this is v3, a cartoon you talk to that remembers you and gets heckled by a second AI. all on Cloudflare primitives. three teardowns, first one tomorrow. follow along. @CloudflareDev
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GROWTH IN WEB3 🙂↔️ (@growthinweb3) reported@Cointelegraph Cloudflare embracing stablecoin payments is another signal that crypto infrastructure is going mainstream. More adoption coming in soon.
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Adam Rush 🛫 (@Adam9Rush) reported@JamesSherlouk Hosted on R2 @Cloudflare, zipballs each dependency and mints it so it can never change. More control, mainly, we can just manage it pretty cheaply, but ultimately do some other stuff with it. I would quite like to build a little internal dashboard that shows our dependency graph, etc.
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Fardeem (@FardeemM) reportedIf you're on your way to building a billion dollar company that involves a web app, here are some of my notes on architecting the frontend. if you don't do this, it's probably fine but one day you'll hire someone to fix it but truly that person could be doing some other higher value thing if you make some key optimizations on day 1 you don't even have to learn anything you're gonna tell your agents to do it anyways! okay here it goes: - Make your server code generate a openapi spec which then generates all the relevant client side code. Never do this by hand. Typing backend types instead of generating them should be banned - You need to make a decision on how the client talks to the backend. rest/graphql works in which case please just use tanstack query. other libraries will look similar but tanstack query truly is goated. - if you want linear style sync setups or offline mode, think about this HARD and architect it from day 1. Bolting this on later is so tedious. - People like using plain react router but things have gotten a lot better since then. Try their new framework mode or just even use tanstack router. Use route data loaders. - If you store a lot of state in query params, make that a first class citizen and make sure its type safe. use nuqs or tanstack query. - Most apps just need a single state management situation for server state and thats it. If you have other bespoke needs, i have quite like zustand and xstate/store. - If you have a super interactive app where things come in and out of view, theres a lot of frontend state to maintain, music is playing and what not, lock in and learn xstate. Trust me if you wanna keep ur sanity, you need to model ur frontend as a state machine otherwise you're gonna be deep in useEffect hell - React compiler is here my friends, the days of useMemo and useCallback are gone. Update your priors accordingly - Tailwind is easy and fun but makes it really hard to maintain a large app with consistent styling. You need a "agent-first design system/component library" but maybe this is a rant for another day - Don't be afraid to hack your routing library to fit your needs more closely. A lot of apps have "drawers" to show additional info. You should 100% be able to say "here's a route, make it a drawer" and everything should be handled from there. - Managing loading and error states using isPending and isError is madness. Lean into Suspense and ErrorBoundary. - Figuring out a blessed path for websockets and SSE on day 1 i think will pay dividends in the long term if you're building anything AI related. - If you're building a SPA, don't use next.js. it literally makes no sense. Why would you do this. - Definitely deploy on Cloudflare or vercel. There are other services but trust, there have weird missing features. - Assuming you build something people want, the next job is to build the factory so it can efficiently build the thing. Act accordingly.
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Thomas Gauvin (@thomasgauvin) reported@joelrunyon @nickgraynews @Cloudflare can confirm humans decided on the new ui for emails we moved email routing from a feature of a domain, to a feature of email service which is a top level product (which includes both routing and sending) what setup steps are unclear? what "locks" are you encountering?
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marcelo mezquia (@IntentSim) reportedStopping the bad guys with Cloudflare: 15,448 malicious requests blocked or challenged in the last month #cloudflare
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seanvfacer (@seanvfacer) reportedBots just beat humans on the internet. For the first time in history. Not coming. Already happened. Cloudflare — the company running 1 in 5 websites on earth — watched the moment it tipped. The old internet was built for people. The new one's built for agents that don't browse, don't linger, don't even see your sign. So if you're building anything in 2026 — your customer might not be human anymore.