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 (36%)
- Cloud Services (31%)
- Hosting (17%)
- Web Tools (11%)
- 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 | 3 days ago |
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Cloud Services | 14 days ago |
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Domains | 16 days ago |
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Hosting | 29 days ago |
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29 days ago | |
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Web Tools | 29 days ago |
Community Discussion
Tips? Frustrations? Share them here. Useful comments include a description of the problem, city and postal code.
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Cloudflare Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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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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Special Situations 🌐 Research Newsletter (Jay) (@SpecialSitsNews) reportedNew Activist Name: Shares of $MTN are trading up 13% at $141.65 on Thursday, rebounding sharply from their 52-week low of $118.51 hit earlier this year, as the Semafor scoop circulates across trading desks. The intraday move lifts the company's market cap to roughly $5.05 billion. According to Semafor, Vail's bankers are tasked with assessing vulnerabilities across a broad front: labor unrest, weather-related demand swings, and the specific pressure campaign being waged by Prince, who co-founded Cloudflare (NET). Prince told a local Colorado publication in June 2026 that he is willing to invest $500 million in Park City Mountain Resort and admitted he has already fielded calls from activist investors probing Vail's weaknesses. His preferred blueprint would see Vail pivot to an asset-light model, acting as a partnership facilitator rather than a direct mountain owner, a structure that would almost certainly require carving up the company's core real-estate holdings. The timing is awkward for management. Vail reported fiscal Q3 2026 earnings per share of $8.81, missing the consensus estimate of $9.09 by 3.1%, while revenue of $1.21 billion came in roughly $10 million below forecasts. The company subsequently cut its fiscal 2026 net income guidance to a range of $128 million to $162 million and trimmed Resort Reported EBITDA guidance to $735$755 million, down from the prior range of $745$775 million. Net debt has climbed to $2.65 billion from $2.24 billion a year earlier, pushing net leverage to 3.5x trailing twelve-month EBITDA as of April 30, 2026, while cash on hand stood at $371.4 million. Into that environment, the board moved in May 2025 to recall Rob Katz, the executive who originally built Vail into a multi-mountain empire, ousting his hand-picked successor in the process. Katz has since focused on the operational grievances that drove customer dissatisfaction, particularly lift-line congestion and chronic labor shortages, introducing products like Epic Friend Tickets and discounted super-advanced lift tickets that are showing early traction. The move signals that Vail's board views operational credibility as its first line of defense against any activist pitch centered on mismanagement. Management also has a financial lever to highlight in any proxy fight. The company pays a quarterly cash dividend of $2.22 per share, with the next payment scheduled for July 9, 2026, equating to an annualized yield of roughly 6.6% at current prices. That yield argument, steady cash returns while the turnaround plays out, is a standard defensive talking point, though it carries less weight when leverage is rising and guidance is being cut. Investors will get a clearer read on whether Katz's operational fixes are gaining traction when Vail reports fiscal Q4 2026 results, tentatively scheduled for September 24, 2026. The setup is challenging: consensus EPS for that quarter stands at -$5.05, with eight analyst downward revisions in the past 90 days and no upward revisions, reflecting the structural headwinds Prince and any allied activist would likely exploit.
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Ankur Agrawal (@ankuragrawal420) reported@araseb_ The ease of use primarily and native support for nextJs application out of the box with just 1 click. They have been charging people more and more with all the ridiculous upsells. They changed my build configuration to turbo automatically and charged me for build minutes. Thats when I decided to move to Cloudflare and its completely free
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kocer (@kocer_eth) reported7 FREE AI API/TOOL TIERS YOU CAN USE TODAY BEFORE BUYING ANOTHER AI SUBSCRIPTION If you build agents, bots, research tools or small automations, start with this stack. 1. OpenRouter Use it as the router. It exposes free-priced models in the model list, so you can test routing before paying per token. 2. Google AI Studio / Gemini API Good for prototypes, evals, long-context tests, and agent experiments. Check the free tier before you burn paid credits elsewhere. 3. Cloudflare Workers AI Best when you want inference close to your app. The useful part is not just “free AI” — it sits inside the same place you can deploy Workers. 4. GroqCloud Use it when speed matters. Great for bots, voice loops, extraction, and any workflow where slow responses kill the demo. 5. GitHub Models Best for prototyping inside the GitHub flow. If your code, prompts, and tests already live there, this removes friction. 6. Tavily Research/search API for agents. Free plan shows 1,000 API credits/month, useful for browsing agents and research bots. 7. ElevenLabs Voice layer. Free plan shows 10k credits/month, enough to test narration, agents with voice, and demo content. > My rule: never build production on a free tier first. > Use free access to test: - latency - rate limits - output quality - tool calling fit - billing behavior - whether your agent actually needs the premium model Then pay only for the part that survives real usage. Most people skip this and buy 3 subscriptions before they even know which API call matters.
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ƒrαeყ (@fraey0) reportedit costs about $21/month to run what could become a multi-million dollar startup • human brain = reasoning (free) • claude = coding ($20/mo) • supabase = backend (free) • vercel = deployment (free) • namecheap = domain ($12/yr) • stripe = payments (2.9%/trx) • github = versioning (free) • resend = email (free) • clerk = auth (free) • cloudflare = DNS (free) • posthog = analytics (free) • sentry = error tracking (free) • upstash = redis (free) • pinecone = vector DB (free) everything sums up to roughly $20 to $25 per month so, the tools are not the barrier anymore. most ideas don’t fail because they’re expensive to build. they fail because they never get built at all. what’s stopping you?
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Mike Chong (@realMikeChong) reported@wongmjane @Cloudflare so what? As long as it solves problems
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Nick Sunny (@suny_nick) reported@EddCoates I had similar issues. If you use Cloudflare, you can do what I did
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Peter (@DivineTrading) reported@betangel Have successfully logged in at the 3rd attempt but was getting a Cloudflare issue (code 521)
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David Herrmann (@herrmanndigital) reportedMeta ads in 2015: 1. Take a photo of product with iPhone. Open Power Editor, launch ad in under 2 mins. 2. Refresh PE and see 1:1 conversions in under an hour, scale within 3-4 hrs. 3. Spend the rest of the day coming up with fun ideas for new offers, new landing page ideas, new product ideas, new copy ideas. Meta ads in 2026: 1. Hire creative strategist -> Who hire creative agencies / editors -> who build batches of creative. 2. Open ads manager, go through 25-30 prompts of things you have really no clue about, but Meta is insistent it'll lower your CPA by 7.9% based on a study from 2 advertisers in 2022. Click publish after 1 hr of building out 10 new concepts. 3. You're then hit with an error publish with messages like: "you have no shops select," or "you don't have page permissions," or "this creative has expired, please try a new one" you finally are able to hit publish. 4. Finally, you can go on with your day. But wait, client sees that they are getting discounts on the ads you just launched coming in. You open up ads manager and go to ad level to go through multiple areas to figure out why. 5. Ah, Meta has randomly turned the promotions automatically on. No worries, you pause it. On with your day. 6. Someone who knows someone at the company for whose ads you just launched flags to friend that the ads are appearing with a dubstep version of a Beethoven song and seem out of touch for the brand. You're then texted to go pause the music. 7. Open ads manager, navigate to ad level, pause music. You're then hit with a prompt from Meta: "WHY ARE YOU TURNING THIS OFF?!" You hastily respond, "BECAUSE IT SUCKS!" 8. Visibly irritated now over Meta you finally settle in to do the other part of your job, analysis! 9. But wait, there appears to be an outage! Everyone texting, "Is Shopify down?," "Is it Cloudflare?," "Is it AWS?," "No! It's Meta!" Ok, well now you're in fight of flight. Should we wait? Should we pause? Let's wait, yeah let's wait. This is just a minor blip. 10. Meanwhile you're not left refreshing things every 5 min instead of doing analysis and research. Finally, it is night time and you can relax (not)! On this particular day you managed to launch 10 ad sets and do nothing else. Feeling defeated because what once took 2-5 min to do now feels daunting. It feels like you now spend the majority of your day in defense mode. Not because the work has changed or the people, but the process for doing it all has. And that's why you're feeling burnt out media buying friends and creative friends.
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Headmaster Duck (@HeadmasterDuck) reported@specialkdelslay First thing, put a free cloudflare account in front of this, see how much their basic bot mitigation helps. Next, if you don't mind throwing $20/mo at the CF pro plan, this is a mostly solved problem between their super bot fighter and ability to issue challenge requests from the predictable regions of the globe. If $20/mo isn't in the cards, you can keep blocking IPs and also look into blocking by certain headers and user agents.
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doeyor.sol (@Doeyor) reported@trunoest Last night I bought into algopub at 140k and the website linked had a cloudflare login I clicked and it asked me to enter something in my windows run which was to allow the attacker to install a remote Trojan they could use later. I realized at the time like something was wrong here but didn’t immediately know what was up and was constantly checking my balance to essentially see everything disappear 5-10 minutes go by and nothing start thinking I’m in the clear go on with my night end up going to bed left my computer on but not locked wake up to find 0 SOL balance and a bunch of tabs open on my pc. Thankfully didn’t have any eth on based bot and he opened up axiom and exported my private keys and sent just the 5 sol (3 wallets) I have to this (BBNpySDumyS3k4mULaunbMfyZz1Bpbt2B5PwVVWZVy3F) looks like he got a few other people as well. can even see my sns doeyor.sol Could have truly ruined my life with the access he had to my full computer. Just a reminder to be ever vigilant; went ahead and wiped the 3 hard drives that were connected to my computer with kill disk and reinstalled a fresh windows this morning.
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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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Martin Stepanek 🏳️🌈 (@techseovitals) reported🟣 Underrated #TechSEO Tip GPTBot, ClaudeBot, and PerplexityBot all respect robots.txt. Block them and your content never appears in AI answers. Worth flagging that Perplexity's compliance has been disputed – Cloudflare found evidence they used undeclared crawlers to bypass robots.txt. I see site owners block these crawlers without realizing they killed an entire traffic channel. Check your robots.txt right now. Look for blanket `Disallow: /` rules targeting AI user agents. You might be invisible in AI search and not even know it.
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Christopher Johnson (@cj_enlighten) reportedVanilla web search in an always-on agent gets blocked. Not a Hermes bug. A structural 2026 problem. Cloudflare and Akamai are aggressive enough now that any general-purpose agent hits the wall. You need Tavily or equivalent. Budget time for it.
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ShadeNoah (@ShadeNoah) reported@EddCoates Yeah that sucks... Has been an issue forever, though. Nobody gives a **** about robots.txt... No wonder CDNs like Cloudflare pretty much have over half the internet on their servers by now. See if you can rate-limit every request, or bite the bullet and use a CDN. Godspeed, mate.
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Michael Williamson (@BeachTruck) reported@EddCoates There's always Cloudflare. It kind of sucks having to give up SSL encrypted content to a 3rd party (they re-issue another SSL connection), but sucks less than getting ddos's by these stupid clanker suckbots.
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Nikhil Agarwal (@nikhildp) reportedEveryone please don't fall for false advertising of @Cloudflare @CloudflareDev. They have several billing issues that you can find easily on reddit and their customer support is bad. I moved from GCP to Cloudflare and that was a terrible mistake. Got to move back now!
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Fingertight (@5Fingertight) reported@EddCoates Cloudflare has some decent free tools that can help a lot with this….
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NOVA 🇷🇺 (@NOVA360HD) reported📌 The Illusion of Decentralization: Who Owns the Backbone of the Internet & AI in 2026? (Updated List) As you scroll daily, you might think you're navigating thousands of independent sites and apps. The reality? 90% of global data traffic flows through channels controlled by a select few. Here is who actually controls the world's digital backend: 1. The Cloud Big Three If these three companies went offline, half of the internet’s apps, banking systems, and aviation networks would vanish in seconds: * Amazon Web Services (AWS): Controls roughly a third of the entire global cloud market. It hosts giants like Netflix, Airbnb, and even highly sensitive government databases. * Microsoft Azure: The largest backbone for massive corporations, government institutions, and global digital identity systems. * Google Cloud: The third engine powering YouTube, massive big data research, and global startups. 2. The Gatekeepers These are the invisible shields you rarely see, but they control and protect your access to the internet: * Cloudflare: Manages and secures roughly 20-25% of all global web traffic. If Cloudflare goes down, half of the world's news outlets and crypto exchanges drop with it. * Akamai: The oldest and largest Content Delivery Network (CDN) in the world. They dictate how videos, live streams, and games reach billions of people without lagging. 3. The Hardware Monopoly Software is useless without processors, and this is where the greatest monopoly lies: * NVIDIA: Controls over 80% of the AI chip and data center GPU market. They essentially decide who has the compute power to train AI (like OpenAI and Meta) and who gets left behind. * TSMC (Taiwan Semiconductor): The Taiwanese giant that manufactures almost all the world's advanced chips for Apple, Nvidia, AMD, and Qualcomm. If TSMC stopped, the production of global smartphones and military hardware would freeze. 4. The Submarine Cables (Who Owns the Physical Internet?) The internet isn't in the sky (satellites only cover a tiny fraction). 99% of global data travels through cables at the bottom of the ocean: * SubCom & ASN: The two companies responsible for laying and maintaining most of the world's underwater fiber-optic cables. * The Big Tech Alliance: Today, Google, Meta, Microsoft, and Amazon have become the largest investors and tenants of these cables, meaning they now physically own the routes data takes between continents. 5. The Institutional Masters If you dig deep into the shares of every media, tech, aviation, and defense company globally, you will always find three names repeating as the top institutional investors: * BlackRock (Manages over $10 Trillion in assets). * Vanguard Group (Manages roughly $8 Trillion in assets). * State Street These funds don't run the companies day-to-day, but they hold massive voting power to dictate board members and the strategic direction of these giants (from Apple and Microsoft to oil and defense contractors). 💡 The Bottom Line: The internet is no longer the free, distributed network it was once touted to be. It has evolved into a highly centralized infrastructure where a few massive corporations and investment funds dictate what you see, what you hear, and how your data flows.
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Ann the cat herder (@ann1knit) reportedIf cloudflare is so buggy and easily broken or hacked, why the frell hasn't someone come up with a better system or solution?
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kiosa (@thegreatest_sv) reportedTHE 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
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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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dmsimon (@dmsimon) reported@EddCoates I had the same problem and moved to @Cloudflare and am using pages and workers. Pages is free on a free account for a ridiculous amount of volume. Keep you host running the dB and move the front to CF. I also think it is much better than gh pages.
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Maaz Perwez (@MaazMz) reported@Aurarri How is it easier to install another app and then turn it on rather than doing it inside the app for which I want to use proxy? Plus cloudflare will control all of my network while telegram proxy only changes telegram...
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Kamil Fabian (@KamilFabian) reported@EddCoates cloudflare free tier. Solved my 1mil req per minute problem. Just make sure to set up properly.
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special k | CEO of stressed out era (@specialkdelslay) reported@TelepathicPug If u run a ping the ones causing an issue recently seem to belong to open ai gpt bot. Whether or not this is actually open ai doing this, or someone spawned their own tool using theirs, I do not know. IPs below. In order from worst to less worse for us: Meta bot Amazon bot Perplexity bot Cloudflare seems to block petal bot pretty effectively just by rate limiting but then we end up seeing that stupid chungus cloudflare page on the frontend. I blocked the entirety of China on nginx bc we don't do business there & I see no reason to take the hit for them. I am afraid to block Google bot even tho it's annoying bc then it might tank actual search, but idk I'm torn on that one.
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Yi (@imhaoyi) reportedOracle’s 4-core 24GB setup for Hermes was overkill and not worth it. Just migrated everything over to Google Cloud’s free tier today — a basic 2 vCPU, 1GB RAM VM. The standard network tier gives 200GB egress per month (no CDN or Cloudflare needed). More than enough. Only three regions offer free VMs. Picked us-west1 since it’s closest to Asia. e2-micro machine type, standard persistent disk up to 30GB, network tier set to standard for the bandwidth. Allow HTTP/HTTPS in the firewall, disable disk protection, and skip Ops Agent — those two are paid features. Migration was straightforward. Installed Hermes on the new VM, packed up what I needed from the old server, uploaded and extracted it, then ran hermes doctor and hermes setup. That’s it.
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KarenR (@heykarenrc) reportedWhen 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.
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Aidan Quinn (@BwcDeals) reported@EcomCJ Man email me. This damn site dms I almost never get! I’m sorry. I’m close to passing Akamai. I can do it now with proxies but it’s expensive and I know I can do it without them. I’m doing it with Cloudflare and PerimeterX already.
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BlockedPath (@BlockedPaths) reported@Howaboua You have to install their multiple mcp servers for that, check out the docs. I’ve been ******* with it for a few days and ported it into just about every harness. The timeout out errors and it randomly spitting out Chinese is funny. I did jailbreak that **** though via cloudflare