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Cloudflare status: hosting issues and outage reports

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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.

  • 36% Domains (36%)
  • 31% Cloud Services (31%)
  • 17% Hosting (17%)
  • 11% Web Tools (11%)
  • 6% E-mail (6%)

Live Outage Map

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

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Manchester Domains 2 days ago
Angers Cloud Services 13 days ago
London Domains 15 days ago
Noida Hosting 28 days ago
Jewar E-mail 28 days ago
Braga Web Tools 29 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:

  • GolerGkA
    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.

  • 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.

  • BertosonHunter
    Hunter Bertoson (@BertosonHunter) reported

    @jamesqquick Watched the network tab, reverse-engineered an undocumented API, and turned it into a Cloudflare Worker that catches failed attendance syncs and emails an alert every night. Workers + cron is unreasonably good for this kind of thing.

  • WildWhy_v3_44
    15 dollars (@WildWhy_v3_44) reported

    is cloudflare down or does RYM just not like me

  • elie2222
    Elie Steinbock ~ getinboxzero.com (@elie2222) reported

    Got a Vercel bill down from $4,200/mo to $120/mo. Some notes: - This is a free B2C product that went somewhat viral. - To get cost down I first optimised Vercel itself. Better caching. Move images to Hetzner / Cloudflare / AWS. - I also switched off server rendering. This product didn't need it. Moved everything to SWR. These changes were needed for better caching. - The big drop at the end is because I moved a lot to a Hono server on Hetzner. - I reused an existing Hetzner server so there were no extra costs there. But even if using a new one, the extra cost would have been only another ~$30/mo. - For B2B products it's usually not worth worrying about. This product had 15k+ signups in the last month. If you have thousands of paying customers, you're making 7 figures per year and a few k to Vercel isn't critical. This product was free, so it was painful to be burning dollars on it. - No need to waste money you don't need to, but the peace of mind with Vercel handling any scale, and you having zero DevOps is a major plus. - You can always make the adjustments I did. It's easy with AI. You're not locked in forever. - The switch I made to Hono was a simple one. It doesn't have load balancing. The server should hold up, but for a B2B SaaS I'd invest more time in a stable setup (which would also cost more time and money). - Vercel makes less sense for a B2C app that goes somewhat viral. It's still my go to every time, but need to be ready to move if you do see some real growth. - The product still uses Vercel. But many of GET requests now go to Hono. PS, this isn't for @inboxzero_ai which is prosumer/B2B focused and isn't free (other than 7 day free trial).

  • beingakramraja
    𝐀𝐤𝐫𝐚𝐦 (@beingakramraja) reported

    Akash 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

  • Habiboooo4
    HAB1B0 German Raffleking 🇩🇪🇹🇷👑{🦅} (@Habiboooo4) reported

    @Signulous Your cloudflare is down

  • KamilFabian
    Kamil Fabian (@KamilFabian) reported

    @EddCoates cloudflare free tier. Solved my 1mil req per minute problem. Just make sure to set up properly.

  • thelegendoflivz
    🔱Lady Livz🔱 (@thelegendoflivz) reported

    I just know my dad will be pissed tomorrow if it actually is a programming error. If he wasn't in a different division he would probably drive over and fix their ****. I keep telling him he should just apply to Cloudflare or something because this kind of **** drives him bananas

  • KarlEmilNikka
    Karl Emil Nikka (@KarlEmilNikka) reported

    @Cloudflare Nice! Do you have any ETA for sub-domain support?

  • 5Fingertight
    Fingertight (@5Fingertight) reported

    @EddCoates Cloudflare has some decent free tools that can help a lot with this….

  • AutismCapital
    Autism Capital 🧩 (@AutismCapital) reported

    @jdoliner Sorry, can't do your scan today, Cloudflare is down.

  • Flandermaxx
    Flandermaxx (@Flandermaxx) reported

    A 28 year old Chinese engineer in Singapore bills 11 SaaS startups $63,400 a month for inference they think is running on AWS H100s. Forty NVIDIA Jetson Orin Nano boards stacked inside three IKEA boxes on the floor. A used Quest 3 on the bed. A half empty can of Yeo's chrysanthemum tea on the windowsill, still cold. The whole farm draws less power than his electric kettle. Each Jetson runs Llama 3.3 70B through MLC LLM, quantized to 4 bit. Each one serves embeddings, classification, and draft outputs at $0.40 per million tokens. OpenAI charges $0.60 for the same. A Cloudflare worker rewrites the response headers to read like an AWS us-east-1 region. The startups never check. They never asked. pause at 0:22, the camera holds on the IKEA boxes for two seconds. Everyone saw moving boxes. Almost nobody saw the holes drilled in the back. They were not for shelf pegs. They were the GPU intake. $63,400 in. $0 OpenAI bill. Hardware paid for itself in 11 weeks. His dad still thinks he is studying for the GMAT. He still calls home every Sunday at 8 p.m. He still says he has not picked a school. He still wears the same Uniqlo hoodie in every video call. He still has not mentioned the Stripe dashboard. A data center has racks, cooling, redundancy. He has three IKEA boxes, a kettle, forty boards humming quieter than the AC.

  • FreeSolGamesDev
    FreeSolDev (@FreeSolGamesDev) reported

    We do a little upgrading ProofNetwork already includes native support for Cloudflare R2 as a Smart Service, but with network activity continuing to accelerate, I decided to expand its role within the infrastructure Transaction archives now leverage additional R2 backed redundancy, providing a stronger foundation as we push toward what I expect will be well beyond 10 million transactions Also spent time building an automated contract validation pipeline that acts as a pre deployment safety net Deployments are now automatically checked for common security oversights and best practice violations, with contracts being blocked from deployment if critical safeguards are missing, such as signature verification on privileged admin functions and other potentially exploitable patterns.

  • thegreatest_sv
    kiosa (@thegreatest_sv) reported

    THE BIGGEST SCAM IN TECH MIGHT BE HOW MUCH PEOPLE STILL PAY TO HOST SIMPLE WEBSITES. >I just launched one for $0. > have 9 project ideas > each needs a domain (~$15) + hosting (~$10/mo) + SSL > do the math > talk yourself out of 7 of them > later find out domains can be free > register one in 2 minutes, no card > Cloudflare for DNS + SSL, free > Cloudflare Pages for hosting, free > live custom-domain site in 20 minutes > cost: $0 > mfw the only thing stopping me was a bill I never had to pay >full build below

  • skibidiblazor
    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.

  • DivineTrading
    Peter (@DivineTrading) reported

    @betangel Have successfully logged in at the 3rd attempt but was getting a Cloudflare issue (code 521)

  • simulx4
    simulx4 (@simulx4) reported

    cloudflare is using Kimi K2.6 to automatically resolve billing issues. and... it worked fine. it fixed my problem faster than any human. by chat/email... so much better than talking to a person, honestly

  • 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

  • StanleyMasinde_
    John Doe (@StanleyMasinde_) reported

    @SamProgramiz I’m glad you’re now seeing that Rust is not babysitting programmers on line one. It just makes you acknowledge your mistake. A panic caused a Cloudflare outage earlier this year. On paragraph 2, Rust will not even compile. Yes memory safety goes beyond nulls. If the language doesn’t handle an illegal reference, the hardware will send an interrupt and the kernel will kill the entire program. Now imagine you have. // processing some stuff Foo() passes bar() fails with an interrupt or NPE fizz() is completely skipped. Your program just corrupted data because null possibility was ignored.

  • MalteLandwehr
    Malte Landwehr (@MalteLandwehr) reported

    @EddCoates So many solutions: · Cloudflare/CDN · Caching · Free API without authentication I once worked for a website with 90% bot traffic. This issue is manageable.

  • EddCoates
    Edd Coates | Game UI Database 2.0 (@EddCoates) reported

    @mishuba Damn, it's almost as if I have a robots.txt *and* cloudflare, and it's still happening. That's WILD, huh? And no, I didn't vibe code my website, i'm not a cretin.

  • agrit_tiwari
    Agrit Tiwari (@agrit_tiwari) reported

    Worlds are a good concept but we need a bridge built by both sides of @vercel and @Cloudflare world. Even workflows has a long PR pending just to support the wasm runtime for running workflow SDK on Cloudflare. But they are continuously innovating with frontier stances on agent stack.

  • PunkXBT_
    PunkXBT (@PunkXBT_) reported

    @dr00shie that’s not even bad luck at that point, that’s just infra choosing violence specifically on your deploy window lol. cloudflare said “not today” twice in a row. @dr00shie follow back? let’s grow the circle

  • CiccioDiddo
    Ciccio Diddo 🐧🇪🇺🚽 (@CiccioDiddo) reported

    @EddCoates another interesting cloudflare function is AI labirynt ... it create a ton of fake content filled with nofollow links generated by some **** IA... so the scraper spends a ton of resources to traverse all links then, if not enough start to ban by AS number instead of single IP

  • bigdatachads
    bigdatachads (@bigdatachads) reported

    I'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

  • fataloops
    oops (@fataloops) reported

    @EddCoates I have a (conspiracy) theory about this- Cloudflare is the one doing the scraping, millions of requests Your only option is to use cloudflare or take down the site

  • javmung
    IJav (@javmung) reported

    @MSU_NW_FANG @MaplestoryU @nexpacetime Also need to test WARP From CLoudflare.. that helps a lot. But most likely is his/her ISP. mine was disconencting a lot, they did reset my NAT, and assigned me a public IP address, and problems are gone.. so routing probably the problem.

  • 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.

  • ShantanuVL
    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