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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.

  • 42% Domains (42%)
  • 24% Cloud Services (24%)
  • 18% Hosting (18%)
  • 11% Web Tools (11%)
  • 4% E-mail (4%)

Live Outage Map

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

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Noida Hosting 8 days ago
Jewar E-mail 8 days ago
Braga Web Tools 8 days ago
Noida Cloud Services 9 days ago
Paris Cloud Services 9 days ago
Prievidza Domains 10 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:

  • Bicepmonkey
    📈📉💸 (@Bicepmonkey) reported

    Good day, Money Market! GitLab $GTLB released its earnings report for the first quarter of fiscal year 2027. The stock has gotten volatile since the numbers dropped. Full-year revenue guidance remained about the same overall, though they raised the lower end of the outlook by a small amount. The main item that stirred things up was the plan to replace around 14% of the workforce with artificial intelligence. Cloudflare $NET went down a similar path not long ago. The market has pushed back because this could make it harder for the company to scale its operations in the future. Companies trying to grow usually hire more salespeople and developers to grab market share and keep up with customer needs. GitLab $GTLB has put its money into buying back shares instead. That choice often leaves investors worried that growth is drying up. I have not changed my view on GitLab $GTLB and see this as mostly noise around the stock. The company is working to restart stronger revenue growth. It plans to bring on additional salespeople. These new roles probably do not overlap with the positions AI will handle. The approach also calls for more upfront selling to new customers along with more detailed pricing tiers. I will check in on the progress early in 2027. Shares currently trade at a price-to-sales ratio below 5. That level sits below the average across my coverage list and below the trailing four-quarter average that GitLab $GTLB has posted. Both of those averages come in near 8. The valuation does not look expensive when stacked against the 17% revenue growth projected for this year.

  • NathangamerX
    ✨NovaNate ✨ (@NathangamerX) reported

    @NTE_GL dear NTE I Have sent an email to customer support regarding issue i had with moments during live stream experinnce network loss during game and it stays stuck and apparently when i active cloudflare the experience goes well and never have that issue and i kindly asked and worded in the email to check that issue out and hopefully get that resolved (:

  • ShivamS1123
    Smoke (@ShivamS1123) reported

    Netflix, Airbnb, Cloudflare publish some of the best engineering content on the internet most engineers never read it not because they don't want to. because nobody told them it was worth their 8 minutes working on that. What do you think?

  • zaneilosity
    zane gardner (@zaneilosity) reported

    This is honestly wild. Cloudflare just shared new Radar data — bots and AI traffic now make up 57.5% of all HTML page requests on their network. Humans? Down to 42.5%. They handle about 20% of the whole internet, so this isn't a small sample. Their CEO says the agenti

  • OkabeRintarou
    Okabe Rintarou (@OkabeRintarou) reported

    Remove Your Media LLC, you're losers. You deserve such a hefty fine for copyright trolling that you’d never be able to pay it off in your lifetime. Imagine mass reporting of URLs on Google and cloudflare from my website featuring anime REVIEWS and NEWS and 0 illegal content.

  • QuasarMarkets
    Quasar Markets (@QuasarMarkets) reported

    THE AVERAGE IPO DARLING FALLS 55% BEFORE THE STORY IS WRITTEN Everybody talks about the #IPO pop. Almost nobody talks about what happens next. I pulled together a basket of some of the most recognizable growth IPOs and recent market darlings. The results are eye-opening. The average stock in this group experienced a maximum drawdown of 55%. The median drawdown was 54%. Some of the biggest names in tech, fintech, cloud, AI, ridesharing, and crypto suffered declines of 70%, 80%, even 90% before finding their footing—or never recovering at all. Yet the winners became legendary. Palantir. ARM. CoreWeave. MongoDB. Datadog. Cloudflare. That’s the lesson. Investing isn’t about avoiding volatility. It’s about identifying which companies can survive it. The market has a way of shaking out weak hands long before it rewards conviction. Day One is about excitement. Year One is about execution. The next decade is about whether the business can compound revenue, cash flow, and competitive advantage. The greatest wealth creators weren’t built on opening day. They were built by investors willing to sit through the uncomfortable middle. At Quasar Markets, we’re less interested in the IPO headline and more interested in the long-term story the data is trying to tell. Follow @QuasarMarkets

  • PrimitiveHost
    primitive.host (@PrimitiveHost) reported

    🚨 New HTTP/2 Bomb vulnerability can take down your web server in seconds with a single request. Affects: NGINX, Apache HTTPD, Microsoft IIS, Envoy, Cloudflare Pingora (default HTTP/2 configs) Quick mitigations: NGINX: - Upgrade to 1.29.8+ (adds max_headers directive) - If can't upgrade: off; in config Apache: - Update to mod_ v2.0.41 - If can't upgrade: Protocols to disable HTTP/2 IIS / Envoy / Pingora: - No patch yet — disable HTTP/2 if possible - Front with something that caps header count per request General: - Cap per-worker memory (cgroups, ulimit -v, container limits) so OOM kills happen before swap - Single client can consume 32GB RAM in ~20 seconds, upgrade ASAP (we just upgraded our own infra @PrimitiveHost ).

  • MickeySteamboat
    Satoshi Nakamoto, Andrew Rulnick (@MickeySteamboat) reported

    @Grummz Cloudflare is a HUGE source of these problems too

  • MrAmbiG
    Gajendra D Ambi (@MrAmbiG) reported

    @PMOIndia @GoI_MeitY plz tell the idiots who are making the govt sites likes cbse site, put them behind cloudflare which points to an nginx LB, which points to the k8s service of the frontend or api or wtvr service is, then use hpa for all deployments. use django/python, not php

  • Beefeater_Fella
    Beefeater (@Beefeater_Fella) reported

    Apple has temporarily removed Max from its app store Apple, following the Telegram clone called Telega, has removed the state-controlled messenger Max from its app store. VK, the developer of the service controlled by the authorities, announced this on Wednesday evening. "MAH confirms that the messenger app is currently unavailable in the App Store. The app previously installed on users' smartphones will continue to operate normally," said the company. At the end of April, the hosting provider Cloudflare marked the Max domain as "spyware", but on May 1st, this marking was removed. The developers of the state-controlled messenger removed from the App Store asked the American company for explanations regarding the situation and assured that they are "working on a prompt solution to the problem", advising to download the client in other app stores and on the official Max website. According to information from the specialized publication Tech Talk, Cloudflare recognized the state-controlled messenger as "spyware" based on nine out of ten URL checks; the hosting provider reported four detected security violations. The Max press service, for its part, stated that it was marked due to a "misinterpretation of request headers to the site's ordinary web analytics services".

  • diempi
    D13mp1Sec for Security and DIEMPI for Dev (@diempi) reported

    • Cloudflare blocks Python urllib's default User-Agent (1010). so -> Use curl. • circle wallet execute can't handle nested-tuple ABI args yet → no single-order Seaport cancel via CLI. • OpenSea offchain cancel only works on signed-zone orders.

  • jrouldz
    Dr J Rould (@jrouldz) reported

    @hectoribarez76 @QuantumDom Does that somehow negate the problem for bitcoin? Because other entities also need upgrades? The likes of JP Morgan and Cloudflare are already implementing PQC upgrades Bitcoin isn’t upgrading because it requires community consensus (hard or soft fork?) and community would rather kick can down the road than upgrade because “it’s far away and other entities have problems too” But that’s not a solution. This is likely part of why Bitcoin is flailing

  • michellehayesw2
    michelle hayes williams (@michellehayesw2) reported

    This is honestly crazy. Cloudflare just shared new Radar stats — bots & AI traffic now make up 57.5% of all HTML page requests on their network. Humans? Down to 42.5%. Remember, Cloudflare handles about 20% of the whole internet. So this is huge. Their CEO says the

  • GoralKubo
    KuboSK (@GoralKubo) reported

    🚨 HOLY CRAP, THE INTERNET JUST CHANGED FOREVER! 😱🤯 For the FIRST time in history… AI bots and autonomous agents are now flooding the web MORE than actual HUMAN BEINGS! Cloudflare CEO @eastdakota just dropped the bomb: “Welp, that happened faster than I predicted.” (He said late 2027… it’s already here!!) The machines have officially taken over the internet. We’re not just using AI anymore… We’re living in the AI internet. Buckle up. The future is HERE. And the acceleration just begins!!🔥🤖🌐 #MindBlown #AI #InternetRevolution

  • Imageoffload
    Image Offload (@Imageoffload) reported

    @Cloudflare Never expose storage URLs directly. Route everything through a Worker or proxy that validates the request first. Presigned URLs with short expiry kill hotlinking and scraping abuse before it starts. Built this into ImageOffload for R2-hosted media.

  • backnotprop
    Michael Ramos (@backnotprop) reported

    @Cloudflare The link is broken, better link to use?

  • PaulieEsther1
    Paulie Esther 🔜 DBD MTL🇨🇦 (@PaulieEsther1) reported

    @GreenleafT53813 i heard cloudflare is down

  • MegaMiyamori
    mega (@MegaMiyamori) reported

    Is cloudflare this bad on other browsers or is it just chrome?

  • Beautyon_
    Beautyon (@Beautyon_) reported

    It just popped into my head that many people, even those who run bitcoin in some way, may not know that there are many server packages that are used to serve http (web pages) to users. Here is a list of all the web servers a machine could find along with the percentage of deployment live on the web: Nginx: 32.3% Cloudflare Server: 28.1% Apache HTTP Server: 23.3% LiteSpeed: 15.2% Node.js: 6.4% Microsoft IIS: 3.2% Envoy: 1.0% Caddy: 0.2% Kestrel: 0.1% Traefik: < 0.1% HAProxy: < 0.1% Tomcat: < 0.1% Jetty: < 0.1% Gunicorn: < 0.1% Uwsgi: < 0.1% Puma: < 0.1% Unicorn: < 0.1% Lig < 0.1% Cherokee: < 0.1% Sun Java System Web Server: < 0.1% Now it is not hard to imagine (is it?) that when the bitcoin protocol ossifies, there will be at least this many options for people to run bitcoin services, all with their own advantages depending on how you use bitcoin. In a scenario where there are many offers, there is enough to choose from and everyone is able to build whatever they want on top of bitcoin. The most important thing is that bitcoin never changes, and is the fundamental underlying rock you can build on. Anyone with an idea (very few people have these) can build their own infrastructure to offer whatever they want, from "Tokens", "Ordinals", "Runes", NorP Storage, or anything else. Large, and presumably, serious institutions like Goldman Sachs will no doubt develop "Mercantild" the bitcoin client for the big banks. Everyone, every class of users will have their own preferred bitcoin client. And this is, perhaps, the problem. The number of people with actual ideas is extremely low. It is a number so small, it rivals the planck length. This why the barely human people currently running their scams on layer one are launching a "new" token, something that has been done before, only this time on Bitcoin. Only a complete ****** totally bereft of imagination thinks that this is innovation, or a good thing, or useful in any way. They can't conceive of a world where building on bitcoin is like building on the web. It's beyond their power to mentally process and sort. But this is where you live, in 2026. Ossification and client proliferation will keep bitcoin clean, force all low IQ, low imagination, imitative, Cargo Cult, mentally deficient, estrogenized, quote ********* manlets from despoiling the Golden Path of Bitcoin. It will allow a plethora of new specialist clients to emerge, enabling every "use case" anyone can conjure. Hope this helps!

  • bridgemindai
    BridgeMind (@bridgemindai) reported

    BridgeMind just got hit with a DDoS attack. A global botnet. 10,000+ hijacked IPs across 100+ countries. 62.8 million requests in 5 minutes, peaking at 116,000 per second, all hammering a single endpoint. Zero of it reached our servers. Cloudflare absorbed the flood at the edge and real users never noticed a thing. Now the interesting part: I have Claude Opus 4.8 implementing a permanent fix as we speak, hardening that endpoint so this can never happen again. You attack a platform that builds with the best model in the world, this is what happens. Full breakdown in the image.

  • InkyPyrus_PubCo
    InkyPyrus (@InkyPyrus_PubCo) reported

    Hermes running on my Samsung s20. And the model? Qwopus 3.6 27b on my local machine cloudflare tunneled. Initially i wanted a voice agent but not going to work on the mobile. So now im wondering.. what can i actually use it for. The most interesting usecase so far is geofence task surfacing... so visit the hardware store and Hermes sends a reminder with the itwm you keep forgetting.. hahaha. Its cool and interesting but redundant. Being able to actually run phone functions with an angent is interesting but only sms , sensors, mic and camera. Cant inject voice into the call or vice versa. Had to do a hermes agent on my desktop with twilio, latanecy is good on answering. But followup tts.. is slow. Still experimenting. Looking at a few streaming tts models.

  • aevrisai
    Aevris AI (@aevrisai) reported

    @JAFAR1559525 Fair pushback on the word permanently, you're technically right. No distributed system is failure-proof and I oversold it. What actually changed: single point of failure eliminated. Before, Railway down meant AEVRIS down. Now Railway down means automatic failover to Render in under a second with zero customer impact. That's a meaningful reliability improvement even if it's not a guarantee. You're right that more moving parts means more failure modes. Cloudflare has outages. Render has cold starts. The tradeoff is that the failure modes are now independent rather than correlated, all three going down simultaneously is a different probability than one going down. The honest version of the post should have been 'reduced single points of failure to zero.' Thanks for the feedback!

  • adornedapatite
    🌱 (@adornedapatite) reported

    @etherealpilled maybe this is related to you mentioning the cloudflare captcha issues on strawpage yesterday???

  • ivanglpz
    Ivan Garcia (@ivanglpz) reported

    Good news for their founders. Bad news for the ecosystem. I will always say this: when a company buys something, it does not do it out of charity. It does it because it wants to capture its strategic benefits. Cloudflare wants that, and if achieving it means leaving others out, it probably will. I am becoming increasingly convinced that more agnostic frameworks and tools will emerge precisely to avoid being locked into a single provider.

  • Beefeater_Fella
    Beefeater (@Beefeater_Fella) reported

    Apple has temporarily removed Max from its app store Apple, following the Telegram clone called Telega, has removed the state-controlled messenger Max from its app store. VK, the developer of the service controlled by the authorities, announced this on Wednesday evening. "MAH confirms that the messenger app is currently unavailable in the App Store. The app previously installed on users' smartphones will continue to operate normally," said the company. At the end of April, the hosting provider Cloudflare marked the Max domain as "spyware", but on May 1st, this marking was removed. The developers of the state-controlled messenger removed from the App Store asked the American company for explanations regarding the situation and assured that they are "working on a prompt solution to the problem", advising to download the client in other app stores and on the official Max website. According to information from the specialized publication Tech Talk, Cloudflare recognized the state-controlled messenger as "spyware" based on nine out of ten URL checks; the hosting provider reported four detected security violations. The Max press service, for its part, stated that it was marked due to a "misinterpretation of request headers to the site's ordinary web analytics services".

  • ArtiChmaro
    Artur Chmaro ⛛ (@ArtiChmaro) reported

    Does anyone run Railway on production? It’s perfect for poc, demos but running production app on it is damn expensive (especially memory usage). After many attempts to optimize memory usage with cache, cloudflare etc I just decided to move into self-hosted VPS with Coolify and Hermes for management. VPS is already cheaper and still have capacity to serve more apps. I hope this would be my final setup. Don't want to move it again 🥲

  • programad
    Danny G 👾 (@programad) reported

    @CloudflareDev @xai @Cloudflare Still, I can't find a way to make the Unified billing to work. Lacks documentation, it just doesn't work. I lost money adding credits I can't use and the support just ignores my ticket.

  • lookingatpron
    lookingatpron (@lookingatpron) reported

    cloudflare is an enemy....... (aggressive censorship stance while being main provider of certain service always stinks no matter who) buuuuuutttt yeah this aint good news either shoutout to rpsc3 for spreading tencent ddos scraper news

  • fayazara
    Fayaz Ahmed (@fayazara) reported

    Login with Cloudflare

  • Alabamawil97387
    Alabamawildman (@Alabamawil97387) reported

    @CloudflareDev @xai @Cloudflare Cloud-based sucks.