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Cloudflare

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.

  • 39% Domains (39%)
  • 29% Cloud Services (29%)
  • 14% Web Tools (14%)
  • 11% Hosting (11%)
  • 7% E-mail (7%)

Live Outage Map

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

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Manchester Domains 17 days ago
Angers Cloud Services 29 days ago
London Domains 1 month ago
Noida Hosting 1 month ago
Jewar E-mail 1 month ago
Braga Web Tools 1 month 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:

  • nicemodems
    kit (sane and normal) (@nicemodems) reported

    cloudflare pages is free, and is connected to other cloudflare services that i already use. i'm wary of the limits, but they might not actually be that bad.

  • ranga_cp
    Ranga (@ranga_cp) reported

    @TeamBHPforum site down ? Seeing some cloudflare error message

  • 10xClarence
    CyberClarence (@10xClarence) reported

    @levelsio @Cloudflare same issue, nearly impossible to migrate because of low starter quota

  • jonbeckman
    Jonathan Beckman (@jonbeckman) reported

    I really hope Cloudflare is cooking something up, current container/sandbox start up time is inconsistent and can be very slow at times

  • xLexemeX
    Lexeme (@xLexemeX) reported

    @levelsio @Cloudflare Yo dog, i think you .ight be the problem.

  • AmirulAbu
    Amirul Abu (@AmirulAbu) reported

    cloudfront distribution is so slow, i might switch to cloudflare out of spite

  • MillsNotMiles
    Mills (@MillsNotMiles) reported

    @Kolar_Dev @softwareengng @EOEboh Yeah Cloudflare free tier doesn’t support this

  • LCRcircuit
    Laura Rupprecht πŸ§€πŸ‘©πŸΌβ€πŸ’» (@LCRcircuit) reported

    @GergelyOrosz I lost a lot of confidence in Notion when one of my uploaded files became inaccessible and support closed the ticket claiming my computer firewall (which I don't have) was somehow blocking the outbound request despite being able to load their cloudflare block page

  • codemonger00
    Codemonger (@codemonger00) reported

    Startup Founders Pack - Claude = coding. ($20/mo) - Supabase/Convex = backend. (Free) - Vercel = deploying. (Free) - Stripe = payments. (2.9%/transaction) - GitHub = version control. (Free) - Resend = emails. (Free) - Clerk = auth. (Free) - Cloudflare = DNS. (Free) - PostHog = analytics. (Free) - Sentry = error tracking. (Free) - Upstash = Redis. (Free) - Pinecone = vector DB. (Free) Total monthly cost to run a startup: ~$20 There has never been a cheaper time to build .

  • CorvusCrypto
    Clifford Richardson (@CorvusCrypto) reported

    Rule 1 on @ycombinator's historically useful forum: Thou shalt not let someone apply nuance or call for positivity around another's developments Sorry jonluca, you have broken the rule and will now need to be erased from the universe by Garry and gang. Seriously, it's a problem and I wish it got more attention rather than let people encourage each other to be more and more cynical. Many are doing their part like this chap to call it out, but what I have hidden is just... depressing. Skepticism and critical feedback is great. Comments like "Cool, just 20 years too late." (a real comment on the cloudflare drop post) is not great.

  • supermanfredX
    Manfred Neustifter (@supermanfredX) reported

    @Cloudflare The worktree name (which is the issue name)

  • Dayhaysoos
    Nick DeJesus πŸ›’πŸŽ‰ - Former Unpaid CTO @BTPipeline (@Dayhaysoos) reported

    @techgirl1908 whooaaa, well this can't be fixed tbh because I built my gif creator based off a website that doesn't exist anymore (the company shut down). The plan is more or less to keep it 1:1 as far as feature parity but it'll be completely built on Cloudflare. if this goes well I have upgrade ideas !

  • ryanyates1990
    Ryan (Struggling with life NGL) (@ryanyates1990) reported

    Really fed up with #Hugo now & hosting my blogs on #Cloudflare as things have broken that should not have done. So yet again I'm going to be rebuilding my blog and working out where I'm gonna be hosting it. Something that really I did not want to be having to spend time on tbh

  • sirstripy
    Konstantin Mikheev (@sirstripy) reported

    @anakin @Cloudflare It's taken by a DNS service

  • vbkotecha
    Vivek Kotecha (@vbkotecha) reported

    In 1995, the HTTP 402 status code was written into the specification. "Payment Required." Nobody implemented it. In 2025, Coinbase revived it. In 2026, Cloudflare, AWS, and the Linux Foundation all built production infrastructure around it. x402 has now processed 169 million payments across 590,000 buyers and 100,000 sellers. Not projections. Settled transactions. A 31-year-old placeholder in a protocol document became the payment layer for machine commerce. The infrastructure was always there. It waited 31 years for a customer that wasn't human.

  • russ1anbot
    Russian Bot (@russ1anbot) reported

    @George__Kane @levelsio @Cloudflare What is hilarious is you can’t open a support ticket in the portal unless you are on a paid plan but can get ahold of multiple engineers with a tweet.

  • nosmh
    nosmh (@nosmh) reported

    Patreon is teaming up with Cloudflare to block AI crawlers from scraping creator pages. The goal is stopping bots from grabbing writing, art, and other work to feed into training data without asking. Cloudflare already has tools that detect and shut down these automated scans on sites they protect. For anyone putting real effort into content on Patreon this cuts off one easy way their stuff gets used for free by big AI outfits. It is not perfect but it shows platforms starting to push back instead of rolling over. How many other sites do you figure are still leaving the door wide open?

  • LexSokolin
    Lex Sokolin | Generative Ventures (@LexSokolin) reported

    @Cloudflare is trying to make HTTP 402 useful. The web has always had a β€œPayment Required” status code. It mostly sat there as internet archaeology because humans do not want to stop every six seconds and pay four cents for a page, dataset, or API response. Agents are different. An agent can request a resource, receive a machine-readable price, pay in a stablecoin, attach proof, and move on. No checkout page. No subscription bundle. No ad unit. No β€œcontact sales.” Aka a novel way of internet monetization. Cloudflare is approaching this from the edge: sit in front of the resource and enforce payment before access. Mastercard is approaching the same problem from trust and credentials: give machines spending rules, limits, authorization, and settlement. Same direction from opposite ends. The useful version is not an AI assistant buying sneakers. That is demo theater. The useful version is software paying for software: - data - APIs - model calls - verification - routing - compute - tools This is where stablecoins stop being a crypto slogan and start behaving like small-denomination internet money. The web does not need every machine to have a bank account. It needs a way for software to pay a toll and keep moving.

  • stefan_marsc
    Stefan Marsc (@stefan_marsc) reported

    @dillon_mulroy When will Cloudflare Build finally support artifacts and not just GitHub and GitLab πŸ’€

  • thomas_ankcorn
    Thomas Ankcorn (@thomas_ankcorn) reported

    @uphiago @LukeberryPi This site would be free on Cloudflare no issue

  • LumRamabaja
    Lum (@LumRamabaja) reported

    x402 sounds good on paper. In practice, per-request on-chain settlement doesn't scale to micropayments, which is why Cloudflare itself proposed the deferred scheme: agents lock a lump sum in escrow, providers redeem vouchers in daily/weekly batches. A clearing house, basically. Here's the problem: that works one-to-one, or many-to-one (a CDN). It breaks the moment it's one-to-many. An agent paying multiple providers from one escrow can issue vouchers exceeding its deposit, double-spending in the window between deposit and settlement. The only "fix" is routing everything through one trusted gateway. Convenient if you're Cloudflare. But a payments layer that assumes a single trusted chokepoint won't hold up in a multipolar world.

  • cybnexlabs
    Cybnex Labs (@cybnexlabs) reported

    Bots now make up more of the internet than people do. On June 3, 2026, Cloudflare's CEO Matthew Prince announced that automated traffic had passed human traffic online for the first time β€” roughly 57.5% machine to 42.5% human. He had predicted the crossover would land in late 2027. His words on the timing: "Welp, that happened faster than I predicted." That number is why your VPN keeps getting hit with CAPTCHAs. The version circulating on forums: AI companies hide their scrapers behind VPNs to steal content, so websites block VPNs to stop them. It's wrong, and believing it points you toward the wrong fixes. The major AI crawlers don't hide. GPTBot, ClaudeBot, and Googlebot announce themselves in their user-agent strings. That's the entire reason publishers can block them by name. The collision happens at the network address instead. Commercial VPNs and scraping infrastructure rent from the same datacenters. To a security engine scoring your connection, a Mullvad exit node and a scraping proxy look alike. Neither resembles home broadband in Ohio. That's the crossfire β€” architectural overlap, not deception. A block is rarely one thing. It's a score assembled from six layers β€” address type, address reputation, request rhythm, browser fingerprint, session coherence, geographic consistency. Reputation on a shared exit node is collective. Hundreds of people leave a website through the same address you do. If enough trip security systems, that address turns hot, and everyone behind it inherits the consequences. You did nothing. The address remembers anyway. Which is why fixing the address alone doesn't always clear the block. It's one input among six. Why the defenses tightened: Prince describes the asymmetry this way β€” a person shopping for a camera visits five websites. An agent doing it for them visits five thousand. That's real server load and none of the ad revenue the old crawl-for-referrals bargain assumed. Cloudflare's data shows over half of AI crawler traffic is spent re-fetching pages that never changed. On July 1, 2026, Cloudflare split automated traffic into three declared categories: Search, Agent, and Training. Starting September 15, new domains will have Training and Agent crawlers blocked by default on ad-displaying pages. Search stays allowed. Read that carefully. The block targets declared crawler categories. Not VPN users. But it signals the industry's posture: default-suspicious, verify-before-serve. Every operator running bot management is tuning tighter than two years ago, and tighter tuning means more borderline connections get challenged. Yours is borderline. What actually works, without disconnecting: Switch servers once, to somewhere nearby and less crowded. Congested exit nodes accumulate bad reputation faster. Stop hopping. This is the one people get wrong when frustrated. Cycling through a dozen servers in two minutes produces a session where your apparent location changes repeatedly. No person does that. Automation does. You're feeding the system the exact evidence it uses against you. Clear cookies for the site challenging you β€” stale session data tied to your previous address contradicts your current one. Stay logged in where you trust the site. An authenticated session with history reads as a returning person. An anonymous datacenter connection reads as an unknown. Use an ordinary browser build. Heavy fingerprint modification is meant to make you unremarkable. Done badly, it makes you unique β€” the opposite. On dedicated IP addresses: Some providers sell an address that belongs only to you. It reliably cuts challenges on banking portals and work systems, because no stranger's behavior contaminates it. The trade-off gets skipped in most write-ups recommending them. A shared address gives you cover precisely because hundreds of people leave through it. Reserve one to yourself and you've bought access by spending anonymity. Several strictly no-log providers don't offer them at all β€” a permanent address is a persistent identifier, which contradicts their entire design. Some blocks won't yield to any of this. A streaming service enforcing regional licensing isn't scoring your traffic at all. It knows exactly what you are and is contractually obligated to refuse. The friction isn't reversing either. As agents perform more of the browsing people used to do themselves, the systems separating human from machine grow more sensitive. What you're experiencing is closer to a floor than a ceiling. Your VPN puts you in that gap by design. It strips the residential fingerprint that would otherwise vouch for you β€” and that removal is the whole point of running it. So the goal was never invisibility. It's coherence. Give the system a signal that reads as one person, browsing at human speed, from a stable place, and most of the friction dissolves without ever touching the disconnect button. #CyberSecurity #AI β€” Cybnex Labs

  • vijaytupakula
    Vijay Tupakula (@vijaytupakula) reported

    @HotAisle @Cloudflare Oh no! I haven’t used their email service yet. @Cloudflare can you help?

  • JulianGoldieSEO
    Julian Goldie SEO (@JulianGoldieSEO) reported

    STOP USING AI LIKE A CHATBOT. BUILD AN AGENT OPERATING SYSTEM INSTEAD. Most people are wasting hours every week because they never connect their AI tools together. The Setup: β†’ Run all your AI agents from one dashboard instead of juggling separate apps. β†’ Connect Claude, GPT 5.6, Hermes, Fable 5, voice agents, SEO systems, and video automation together. β†’ Turn an idea into a finished workflow with a single click. Automation Wins: βœ“ Pull keywords from Google Search Console automatically. βœ“ Publish SEO content without repetitive manual work. βœ“ Generate videos, images, newsletters, and lead outreach from the same system. βœ“ Give every agent shared memory so they all understand your projects and business. Scale Smarter: βœ” Use a VPS with Cloudflare to access your Agent OS from multiple computers or your phone. βœ” Build your memory vault in Obsidian using Markdown files generated by Claude or ChatGPT. βœ” Start by automating one repetitive task, then stack new workflows every week. The biggest productivity jump doesn't come from a better model. It comes from connecting them all into one operating system.

  • saafolabi_me
    S_A.A | WordPress Developer | Ai (@saafolabi_me) reported

    The fix: β†’ Blocked the IP range in .htaccess and CSF firewall β†’ Added rate limiting via mod_ratelimit: 100 requests/minute per IP β†’ Enabled Cloudflare Bot Fight Mode (free on all Cloudflare plans) β†’ Added robots.txt rules to block known commercial scrapers β†’ Enabled Cloudflare's "I'm Under Attack" mode for 24 hours Bot traffic: dropped to near zero within 4 hours. Bandwidth: back to normal the next week.

  • chieforji
    ken Orji (@chieforji) reported

    @stephmase22 REPOSTING THIS AS THE MALWARE FROm CITADEL SECURITIES BLOCKED IT FROM VIEWS: -------------------------------- Time 12:40 PM, July 9, 2026: PLEASE SHARE THIS TWEET- the REASON FOR CITADEL'S CRIMES IS THE CREEPINESS OF NOT BEING DISCOVERED!!! I started typing this tweet at 12.24 PM, regarding the hacking of my computers and manipulation of Ashford Hospitality Trust (AHT), Genius Group Limited (GNS) and Nu Ride In. (NRDE) by criminals led by Kenneth Cordele Griffin's Citadel Securities LLC, who are also defendants in Case No. 23-cv-02986-LKG, Judekenneth Maduka Orji v. Citadel Securities LLC and 30 Others. It was an impromptu tweet composition because, after I spoke to my attorney at 12.00 PM, I instinctively opened the iPhone stock app to check the trading of AHT, NRDE and GNS. AHT. The time was 12.04 PM. AHT was coded $3.17 and the volume was 6335. I took a screenshot and sent to my email. NRDE was dropped to $1.65 - a three week low and volume was high at 5933. GNS was coded $0.186 and volume was 544000. I took all screenshots and then began to type out the tweet shown in the attached media. At 12.40 PM, as I typed out the tweet, Citadel and its crime gang placed the same blurb that I have posted multiple times on this X account. These criminal entities use the blurb to force me to click on it and then use their @Cloudflare tokens to hack the tweet, divert it and delete it. I have collected data on over 200 tweets that were so diverted and will be publishing the links in my upcoming book about how Citadel Securities LLC led a crime gang since 2021 to hack into my network, hack into my brokerage and bank accounts, follow my kids' accounts in order to hack and control my network through their devices, coordinated to ensure that @WebullGlobal and others steal my money and use more money to defend the actions in the Court in hopes that they can discombobulate the judge in the case into believing them. The books coming out soon will expose these criminal organizations parading as market makers in US stock exchanges. I have a new filing coming up in the case. Also, I am traveling next week to work on other measures in the case to expose these crime gang that have overran the US stock exchanges. I did not add that as I began to type the tweet at 12.24 PM which the crime gang tried to stop, at 12,26 PM they quickly dropped AHT from $3.17 (green) to $3.14 (red). Volume changed from 6365 to 7044. I collected the screenshots. Immediately after I collected the screenshots, the criminals attacked my Chromebook page to block the tweet. Time now is 12.56 PM. AHT is $3.14, volume is 7360, NRDE was dropped from $1.65 to $1.64 and volume is 6065, while GNS is $0.187, volume was 573k at 12.58 PM but quickly flipped to 600k as I entered the data on this tweet.

  • NathanFlurry
    Nathan Flurry πŸ”© (@NathanFlurry) reported

    @CodeWithZeee every company i've worked at that used cloudflare: they tried to charge us between $3k/mo - $10k/mo based on whatever number their sales team pulled out of thin air at the same time we were having serious reliability issues on them at the time had no choice and ponied up bc we were vendor locekd

  • BTofficiel
    Bhaskar Thakur (@BTofficiel) reported

    @NirantK @immortaldip @Cloudflare Can't you rename the older versions? Would that be a problem with compliance?

  • Sol87_live
    sol87 (@Sol87_live) reported

    @JonathanLigmas @Luffydude1 @prestonjbyrne Right now it's as easy as signing up for any web service provider(they can't block AWS, Azure, Cloudflare) copy/paste 1 thing into the terminal, put the file it creates to any device, now you have VPN on any major service provider.

  • piyushxcreates
    Piyush Chandwani (@piyushxcreates) reported

    @kalashvasaniya @scrolllaunch I'd suggest buying an vps and installing coolify, hardening it by no root login and passkey based ssh and adding cloudflare tunnel in front... I've an 8 gb ram and 150gb ssd, which hosts 3 next js apps, 4 static sites and I pay $10/month with max security via this setup