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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%)
  • 29% Cloud Services (29%)
  • 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
New York City Hosting 2 days ago
Manchester Domains 23 days ago
Angers Cloud Services 1 month ago
London Domains 1 month ago
Noida Hosting 2 months ago
Jewar E-mail 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:

  • Andrii38324276
    Andrii (@Andrii38324276) reported

    @eastdakota @Cloudflare Great PR move to look breezy about it publicly, but genuinely curious: does Cloudflare actually see a measurable customer bump every time a competitor loses an engineer to a rival, or is this more vibes than data at this point?

  • talk2sunder
    Sunder (@talk2sunder) reported

    Our Teams bot went silent. Zero errors. Zero logs. Azure said healthy, Cloudflare said healthy, our servers said healthy. Slack worked fine. Same bot, same endpoint. Gave it to Claude (Fable 5). It pointed the bot's endpoint at a plain webhook listener. Microsoft's messages showed up instantly. So Teams WAS sending — something about our edge was unreachable. One openssl probe later: our CDN required TLS 1.3, and Microsoft's Teams delivery fleet still speaks TLS 1.2. No logs because of handshake failire. Fable 5 rocks.

  • ekojoecovenant
    ℭ𝔬𝔳𝔢 (@ekojoecovenant) reported

    Spent the day migrating my PR review agent off waitUntil() and onto Cloudflare Queues. Turns out waitUntil() has a silent 30-second ceiling. Learned that the hard way when longer PR reviews just... stopped mid-analysis. Queues fix it properly instead of me hacking around a timeout.

  • Sachin_is_here
    Sachin Joshi (@Sachin_is_here) reported

    Cloudflare Workers was an especially important shift. Cloudflare stopped being only a service placed in front of applications. Developers could now run application logic directly across its edge network. The CDN became a computing platform.

  • Sherlockwhale
    Sherlock | DeFi Researcher (@Sherlockwhale) reported

    At $139.26, $SPCX is still 3.2% above the offer price, so it has not actually undercut its IPO price yet. But I still don't think it's cheap at $139. For my research, I looked at 31 major tech listings, including Amazon, Nvidia, Google, Tesla, Meta, Alibaba, Uber and Airbnb. Three of them, Spotify, Palantir and Coinbase were direct listing (not a normal IPO), so the final sample was 28 companies. Out of those 28 IPOs: 17 traded below their offer price within one year. 20 fell at least 20% below their first public close within one year. 16 fell at least 30% below their first close. 13 fell at least 40% below their first close. Only eight of the 28 held above the initial closing price during their first year: Nvidia, Google, ServiceNow, Shopify, Zoom, Cloudflare, Unity and Airbnb. Now compare that with the actual IPO price and these eight companies have never traded below it: Nvidia, Google, ServiceNow, Shopify, Twilio, Zoom, Datadog and Airbnb. Now for the actual $SPCX price levels. The median first year low among the 28 traditional IPOs was 37.76% below the first close: $160.95 × (1 - 0.3776) = $100.17 The full 31 company sample and the closest mega platform group both will give you almost the same level, around $100.90. There is also a second way to calculate it. The median first year peak to trough decline was 56.75%: $225.64 × (1 - 0.5675) = $97.59 So, two completely separate measurements converge around $98-$101 and that is why I think $100 should be your first serious bid. If I only use the IPOs launched since 2017, the typical company traded 43.4% below its first close during year one. Applying the same decline to $SPCX gives a price of roughly $91. And among the most heavily hyped listings, the typical decline was around 54.3%, which would put $SPCX near $74. Using its listing high instead gives similar levels around $86 and $79. That is why I see $75-$100 as the most reasonable accumulation zone. The valuation story is also another reason to wait. At $139.26, SpaceX is worth roughly $1.82 trillion, or 97.5 times its 2025 revenue. Even at $100, it would still carry a $1.31 trillion valuation and trade at around 70 times revenue. So, SpaceX could become one of the greatest company ever built, but even a great company can be a bad investment at the wrong price.

  • brucewok88
    大黑郭 (@brucewok88) reported

    I spent hours trying to fix a Cloudflare Worker routing and caching issue with Claude Code and kept going in circles. I switched to GPT-5.6 Sol in Codex, and it found the root cause, updated the right code, and got everything working in minutes. Fast, simple, and impressive.

  • CosminDolha
    Cosmin Dolha (@CosminDolha) reported

    If Apple were to decide to build a battery-powered SBC geared toward edge AI (inference), and just put the M1-M2 chip with 8 GB Ram, it would obliterate anything on the market, even if priced a bit higher, let’s say in the range of 300-400 USD. There are no SBC that can achieve the latency of Apple Silicon for local edge AI. But you don't really have to wait for Apple to do that (chances are, they won’t), since most of the intelligence for your edge AI projects can be easily streamed from a Mac mini to any device, including MCU (ESP32, etc.) and including outside your Network by using Tailscale or Cloudflare. Also, you can buy a refurbished Mac mini with M1, at around $280– $350. You won’t have the GPIO, if you really need them, you can use a USB-to-GPIO module, but this is for inference, so you would have your gadget built with your end-client choice, an ESP32, or some low-powered Linux, and stream inference results to it. Apple has won the edge AI hardware race; its not even close, price/performance. Maybe they don't really have to win the software stack, since that will be commodities.

  • BruzWJ
    BruzWJ (@BruzWJ) reported

    @zoltanszogyenyi @Cloudflare auto audits are neat but the fix list feels sus if it skips the accessibility issues that actually bite users 🤔🧩👀 does it catch the real a11y stuff or mostly contrast + alt text?

  • RNR_0
    Romano (@RNR_0) reported

    @0x7im @Hetzner_Online @OVHcloud What I did, Install nixd and Terraform LSP. Ensure it's wired or Claude code can use it (idk if build in) Try to setup a repo and make it manage by using Terraform/Opentofu and NixOS with deploy-rs Also opentofu to manage your cloudflare settings (if any) When it's all declarative it's easier for an LLM to reason about it. My GCP bill used to be $6k, slashed to $3k after i mentioned a testnet of a testnet is retarded. Cut it down from $550 bill on GCP with GPT 5.5 and the few days of Fable (before initial ban)

  • sherlock_comms
    🇸​🇭​🇪​🇷​🇱​🇴​🇨​🇰​ (@sherlock_comms) reported

    @_winter_wonders Maybe it's because the stuff I'm asking is very basic. I asked it to help me fix my domain security report findings on cloudflare and it's not stopped itself. I also used it to help me do my homelab. Did a sweep and scanned all the devices and made a report which we then went thru. Does it work any better if you ask it questions like you're a noob?

  • ssahillppatell
    pagal🦋 (@ssahillppatell) reported

    there's no "Create a case" button on @Cloudflare support page. ?????

  • Kobecoin_X0214
    Kobecoin Official (@Kobecoin_X0214) reported

    Development update: The KOBX Service Runner is now operational, providing centralized control and live monitoring for the backend, frontend, and Cloudflare services. With health checks, uptime tracking, restart controls, and auto-recovery support, our infrastructure is being prepared for a more stable launch. KOBX Hero Wars launches in 2 days. CA: 48iJcUv9jsiZ7cCisyVFLPFLMoNBKg3L43bRvktXpump

  • ematt
    Matt Gibbs (@ematt) reported

    Meta gets to scrape our work for free to train its AI. We get the compute bill, engineering cleanup and downtime. Its crawler knocked one of my sites offline in the process. In a 45-minute window, meta-externalagent made ~1,210 requests. 849, roughly 70%, ended as 499s: the crawler opened them, then abandoned them. The burst hit hundreds of long-tail dynamic URLs. At the same time, usage jumped to ~2 CPU cores, memory climbed from under 1 GB to 5.4 GB, V8 exhausted its heap, and four Cloudflare health checks failed. This wasn’t a giant volumetric DDoS, and Cloudflare didn’t fail. Another app on the same server handled 126,000+ edge requests during the same window. The problem was concurrency. Abandoned requests left expensive Redis, Supabase and React rendering work running at the origin. A CDN can cache completed responses. It cannot cancel application work already underway. Our origin should have had stronger backpressure and disconnect cancellation. That’s being fixed. But a weakness in our stack doesn’t make Meta’s crawler behaviour reasonable. Meta gets the AI training material for free. Publishers absorb the compute costs, engineering time and downtime. How is that remotely fair?

  • 0xbeinginvested
    BeingInvested (@0xbeinginvested) reported

    HOW NOXA PROJECT MADE $10M IN 7 DAYS AND GHOSTED This might be the most unserious project to ever make serious money. Here’s the playbook: Noxa raised $0 from VCs and launched their token on a network nobody had ever heard of Been live since 2024, and literally no one talked about them until Robinhood showed up. Then in one week on the Robinhood chain, they made $10,000,000 (10 million) In 7 days. But instead of scaling, it all fell apart. They paused new token launches to stop vamp attacks. Their main domain went down from a Cloudflare issue. Then they diverted 100% of fees to creators and pools. Launched a new site that people are calling a potential drainer. And the internal drama?Insane. The Noxa deployer and website are owned by a random dev. The Noxa fees wallet? Goes straight to the founder's wallet The deployer asked for a split. Founder said no. So the deployer turned deploying OFF, then turned platform fees OFF. $10M in a week. And now the project is a total fumble. This is crypto in 2026.

  • rknkhanna
    Rahul K (@rknkhanna) reported

    you mean 3 people are trying to cancel cloudflare?

  • ICPapprentice
    The ICP Apprentice (@ICPapprentice) reported

    $ICP Signal ♾🚨: Cloudflare just admitted the internet's business model is dead. Ads and subscriptions were built for humans who watch and keep paying. AI agents do neither. They grab the content once and leave. So the company sitting in front of a fifth of the web built a "Monetization Gateway." It swaps a 401 Unauthorized for a 402 Payment Required and collects the toll in the middle. The chokepoint just made itself the tollbooth. But here's the tell. Visa and Stripe can't clear a payment worth less than a cent. So how does Cloudflare settle it? Stablecoins. Crypto rails. The exact plumbing Web2 spent a decade calling a scam. The most powerful company in Web2 just built the future of internet payments, and it doesn't run on Web2. On $ICP, the canister ♾ that serves the content is the same thing that charges for it. No gateway. No landlord taking the toll. Cloudflare proved the agentic internet needs native settlement. They built it as a middleman. The other internet already removed the middle. See the signal♾🚨 Full article in comments

  • e_tartakovsky
    Eugene Tartakovsky (@e_tartakovsky) reported

    Googlebot still reads the web about as much as every AI crawler combined. Per Cloudflare, in July 2025 Googlebot was 39% of crawler traffic, while GPTBot was 12%, ClaudeBot about 10%, and Meta's bot under 8%. Measured across a full year, Googlebot made up 4.5% of all page requests and every AI bot together 4.2%. One crawler roughly equals the whole field. The raw fetch counts say the same. On Vercel's network in one month, Googlebot made 4.5 billion fetches, against 569 million from GPTBot and 370 million from ClaudeBot. Demand is smaller than the noise suggests too. Per Pew, 34% of US adults have ever used ChatGPT. Most searching still happens the old way. This is worth saying because companies are now writing files and changing configs specifically for AI bots, sometimes blocking the crawlers that send them the most readers. And Googlebot is the only one of these crawlers that renders JavaScript, so it is also the strictest reader to satisfy. The work that makes a page readable to AI is the same work that has always made it readable to Google: finished HTML from the server, a clean sitemap, content that does not hide behind scripts. There is no separate AI project waiting to be funded. There is the foundation you already owed Google. And Google still does most of the reading.

  • TheMaran
    Maran (@TheMaran) reported

    > raised $0 from vcs > launched their token on a network nobody heard > been live since 2024, literally no one heard about them until Robinhood > made ~$10,000,000 within a week on robinhood chain > paused new token launches to get rid of vamp attacks > main domain went down because of a cloudflare issue > diverted 100% fees to the creators & pools > launched a new site, may be a drainer I think this is an unserious project that made serious money in a short duration

  • mick__net
    Mick.net - Maker: Document.Bot 🤖 BestTime.app 🎉 (@mick__net) reported

    @sumukx I like 5.6 but same here in terms of OCD chasing targets. I asked to use a cloudflare tunnel. After 1h still OCD retrying i asked why it took so long and what it is blocking it. Then it replied i need you to run ‘cloudflare login’ in the terminal for auth. I think 5.5 would have asked directly instead of trying really hard with 100’s of unsuccessful work arounds.

  • DharmeshDev
    Dharmesh Dev (@DharmeshDev) reported

    Ran two branches at once today on the AI consultancy business. One track building the website, the other working on the business foundation. Parallel execution instead of sequential — felt like the right call given how much ground both need to cover. Started the website with Codex using Code planning mode to map the build out first. Then implemented the plan and got a working vibe coding prototype up. Version-01 is live and looks solid, though it still needs iterative improvement. A significant chunk is done. Also ran the same website workflow through Claude Cowork and Claude Code specifically to test the Fable-5 model. The output wasn't as impressive as expected — though the problem statement probably wasn't the best test case either. One thing Fable-5 did nail: it suggested a single-page static design with React and Next.js compiled, hosted free on Cloudflare instead of paying for hosting. That's a genuinely useful architectural call worth keeping. On the business side, Claude on Opus 4.6 with medium setting helped identify the 4 key pointers needed to launch the consultancy. Starting with the "Foundational Layer" setup — that's the next piece alongside continuing the website design.

  • RahulJaguste
    Rahul Pramod Jaguste (@RahulJaguste) reported

    1/ Cloudflare just published why they are migrating to ML-DSA and not the compact post-quantum signatures. Their title: "Why we cannot wait for better signature algorithms." Correct call for the web. But a blockchain is a different problem, and the difference flips the answer.

  • anakinHQ
    Anakin (@anakinHQ) reported

    September 15 is the Cloudflare date to watch. Mixed-use AI crawlers get blocked by default on ad-supported sites. Most AI data pipelines run a headless browser and get caught. Wire calls the XHR endpoints a site's own frontend already uses, so there's nothing to fingerprint. It's a browser problem, not a network-layer problem. Use our Wire for your data and bypass the whole thing!

  • yashmp2004
    yash.jsx (@yashmp2004) reported

    @Im_IrushiK Cloudflare runs a vast global edge network with security, zero-trust, serverless compute, and AI not just basic CDN.

  • GuruVerseX
    GuruVerseX (@GuruVerseX) reported

    @ProMint_X @Noxa_Fi Cloudflare would help lol

  • OnlyOneSalam
    ABDULSALAM✨️ (@OnlyOneSalam) reported

    Robin town dev just dropped an update: "Stressful first 30 hours. But we are kicking and getting better every iteration We got DDOS attack. Our cloud provider banned us. Cloudflare marked us suspicious. Influx of a lot of users stressed our resources. Thanks to the community that helped us tag Railway and fix the issue at earliest. Waking up this morning to a ban deeply disappointed us. With a notice that it would take 5-7 days. We got takedown requirement as our branding matched Robinhood Chain, hence our town got a new name and URL, Green Town. With that said we are hearing about all your feedbacks be it points farming by bots, impersonators, scammers, snippers, login issues, wallet not showing cross ETH balance and overall UX. Shipping goes on, but first and foremost is security, safety and scalability. The town will keep expanding!" -@NancyDubey_

  • AiOs_public
    Iaroslav Sorokin (@AiOs_public) reported

    @eastdakota @Cloudflare The talent-drain-becomes-customer-acquisition flywheel only works if the people leaving actually keep building on your infra instead of the new employer's stack. Curious how much of that Workers growth is ex-employees versus just general OpenAI ecosystem spillover.

  • ownershipfm
    Ownership (@ownershipfm) reported

    "There was a campaign claiming I was some other individual arrested in Amsterdam, that this was a rug I was attempting, and the Polymarket odds started to collapse" Ranga, Co-founder of Solomon Labs, on the FUD campaign, the Cloudflare outage, and the wild final hours of the raise "Those three days leading up to the raise and conducting it were probably the most interesting days of my life. I didn't sleep for most of those days. Some of the previous projects had high amounts of commits, so I was expecting we'd get well over our target, but I didn't know to what degree. There was also this secondary market active during our raise, the Polymarket, betting on whether we'd raise anywhere from 10 million to 100 million" "The night before the raise closed, I got a DM from one of the Polymarket bettors saying they'd infiltrated the cabal orchestrating the FUD campaign, and that they'd be DDoS attacking and shutting down the site before the close. I brushed it off with a grain of salt, but messaged Kollan that someone's going to attempt this. Our target was 2 million and we had about 5 or 6 million in commits at that point" "The morning of, the largest Cloudflare outage occurred and the site went down. There were jokes about how the cabal took down the internet to take out the Solomon raise and win some Polymarket bets. It created a little FOMO, and then they started attacking the backup sites, which actually attracted more attention. Within a few hours prior to close, we jumped from about 15 million committed all the way to 100 million"

  • NicW_AI
    Nic Wienandt (@NicW_AI) reported

    📷 A real agent browser, not a scraper. JavaScript sites, dashboards, web apps. The agent drives a genuine headless Chrome browser, reads what a human sees, and screenshots it into your workspace. AI constantly get held up by Cloudflare and robots.txt. Problem solved.

  • oxfernando
    Fernando Abolafio (@oxfernando) reported

    recently, more and more of what I'm building with Cursor has exactly one user: me. not everything needs to become a b2b saas. a few weeks ago I was on my way to Flügger and Silvan to buy materials for our house renovation. I gave Cursor the remaining tasks and some photos. It turned those into a shopping list with the Danish product names, where to buy each item, and what belonged to painting vs preparation. then, because a markdown checklist wasn't very useful while walking around the store, we built a tiny Cloudflare Worker with a Durable Object. now I can open the list on my phone and check things off in the aisle. kinda ridiculous. also genuinely useful. I've been doing the same with my company accounting, which is less fun and much more confusing because everything in Dinero is in Danish. Cursor inspects what is pending, translates the account names, and walks through the bookkeeping with me one transaction at a time. We worked out how to handle Deel invoices and the Salary .dk reconciliations that didn't post correctly. Then we turned what worked into skills, so next month we don't have to figure it all out again. There is no product roadmap for any of this. No customers. No pitch deck. It's just personal software that gets a little better every time I run into the same annoyance. I like this category a lot. One recurring problem is enough reason to build something now

  • WaryaWayne
    Warya Wayne (@WaryaWayne) reported

    A problem I'm facing now is I tried to make an uptime monitoring website and it seems that even though the sites are perfectly fine, I get constant notifications they are down and then up again. I bet this is Cloudflare anti bot because it's running on cron every 3 minutes. Maybe