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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.

  • 39% Domains (39%)
  • 26% Cloud Services (26%)
  • 16% Hosting (16%)
  • 13% Web Tools (13%)
  • 6% E-mail (6%)

Live Outage Map

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

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Manchester Domains 13 days ago
Angers Cloud Services 25 days ago
London Domains 27 days 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.

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Cloudflare Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • sensuniama
    Anton Saǔčyk (@sensuniama) reported

    Cloudflare just announced the Monetization Gateway - a tool to charge AI agents for any resource behind @cloudflare via @x402scan. Agentic traffic can't be monetized via ads, making micropayments the obvious solution. So many businesses are completely missing this new customer base.

  • Road_Kill11
    Rahul Karajgikar (@Road_Kill11) reported

    so i tried self hosting observability myself on AWS turns out codex + terraform + aws + cloudflare is insane was able to set up clickhouse running on an m6g.large instance, connect it to EBS volume (for local disk) and s3 (cold storage), set up all the ALB/VPC etc. network stuff, and wire it up to my domain on cloudflare with very little effort - about 3 high level steps and about 30 mins of active effort: 1. step 1: asked codex to tell me all the api key/manual configuration i need to do. here i had to set up aws iam, and do some manual work on cloudflare to create apps/api keys/separated for dev/****, and connect the domain name i wanted to the clickhouse endpoint i would use after step 1, my agent was able to access my aws account with ssm after i signed in. 2. step 2: prompted a /goal to setup the entire infrasturcture stack using terraform + scripts, then deploy clickhouse + OTEL collector on the ec2 instance. codex then worked for 5 hours, wrote the entire code to set up the infra in terraform, deployed it with terraform CLI + some custom scripts, verified/tested that clickhouse was deployed and working fine with the local ssm connectivity after that, i asked codex to write some scripts for me to monitor my ec2 instance health, test scripts for verifying that logs/metrics/traces/spans etc. work properly and a few other scripts for making it easy to monitor/maintain the instance then i wired it into @dexto_ai, which was pretty easy, i just had to swap out the collector config to use my new clickhouse endpoint. it's working pretty insanely, and now i no longer need to deal with arbitrary caps on traces anymore. i can just scale my ec2 instance up when i need it, and use my startup AWS credits ($67 a month). mostly i cared about traces/spans anyway, and less about fancy monitoring features, so this is an incredible unlock compared to paying over $100 + usage based pricing on sentry/datadog etc.

  • KingBootoshi
    BOOTOSHI 👑 (@KingBootoshi) reported

    @evanrossdavis @0xSero aghh so frusturating! i sent appeals and contacted some people from cloudflare working to get it back up as fast as possible annoyingly the moment someone reports a site for phishing it's automatically taken down :/

  • rayanabdulcader
    Rayan A Cader (@rayanabdulcader) reported

    Building a POS system right now and it's turning into one of the more interesting builds I've done. The pitch to myself was simple: small food businesses deserve the same quality of software that Toast and Square build for enterprise chains, but running on whatever device they already have. No new hardware, no bloated setup, no training required. Till, kitchen display, manager dashboard, one system, any device. I'm not shipping v1 yet. It's built and I'm deep in testing right now, which honestly is what got me excited to post about it the thing actually works, and watching it hold up under real testing is a different kind of satisfying than just writing the code. Here's the part that's been the most fun though: I didn't vibe-code this alone. I ran a small team of AI models like an actual team. One orchestrator: Fable, plans the work, breaks it into scoped tasks, and reviews every diff. Codex does backend and schema. Antigravity handles UI that needs a real browser to check. Sonnet subagents write tests and copy. I even sent a batch to Kimi K2 to run in parallel once. I review everything against the spec before it merges, same as a tech lead reviewing a PR they didn't personally write. So far, what's built and in testing: → A till that keeps taking orders through a dropped connection and syncs the moment it's back built for a café on one shared router, not a funded chain → A kitchen screen that updates live and greys out an item the second the kitchen 86's it → Inventory, waste logging, and cash reconciliation, so an owner can actually see where their margin is leaking → Recipe-linked stock depletion that clamps at zero and flags a variance instead of quietly lying to you → Receipts and menus in Arabic, Sinhala, and Tamil, right-to-left where it matters — because that's the thing an owner can actually sell to their own customers → An end-of-day report the owner can read from their phone 166 tests passing. Running on Cloudflare Pages + Supabase. Every word on screen written in plain language, because whoever's using this was never trained on software and shouldn't need to be. The hard part hasn't been generating code it's been the discipline around it. Scoping tasks tight enough a fresh model can run them cold. Catching the two-line bug an agent slipped in at 2am. Reverting the feature that quietly wandered out of scope. Next up: staff logins, till assignment, per-cashier accountability then real-world testing with an actual business. Following along as I build this out. Curious where this breaks, and where it goes further than expected. 👇

  • jstamby
    Jordan (@jstamby) reported

    Rebuilt a plumber's website last week. The old site scored 31/100 on a technical SEO audit. The new one scored 94. What changed: → 6 pages became 69 (every service × every city he covers) → Correct schema on every page (the old one literally geolocated him to the wrong state) → JSON-LD that makes each page citable by AI engines the day it deploys → Astro static + Cloudflare Pages, push-to-main to ship Six AI agents built it in parallel — one researched keywords, one designed, one wrote, one validated schema, one reviewed, one ran the launch gate. I didn't write 69 pages. I orchestrated the swarm that did. So glad I left Wordpress behind in 2025. Now I'm 10,000% more productive as a solopreneur.

  • YevhenNL
    Yevhen 🇺🇦🇳🇱 · AI Search SEO (@YevhenNL) reported

    Peak irony: 1M+ Cloudflare customers flipped 'Block AI Bots' to protect their content. On Sept 15 that toggle starts blocking Googlebot at the network level, because Google won't split its search and training crawlers. Block AI, choke your own crawl access. Is your toggle on?

  • LindaOakland75
    linda (@LindaOakland75) reported

    So Cloudflare is getting into stablecoin payments now? Wonder if this will actually take off or just be another waitlist that never opens.

  • FireWtcherWatch
    Fire Watcher Watch (@FireWtcherWatch) reported

    @NeelMehta420 @khyimiq @DalitDetector One of the more recent major CloudFlare outages (February this year) was because they pushed a change which automatically deregistered 25% of BYOIP addresses. Total incompetence, and caused a multi-hour outage for many millions of people.

  • kanapurottv
    KANAPURO 🎭 TEAM COMEDY (@kanapurottv) reported

    @Cloudflare pls fix workers bro pls pls psl psls pls

  • ventry089
    Ventry (@ventry089) reported

    Your AI api key is sitting in your frontend code right now. anyone hits F12 and takes it. a guy got his scraped in 3 days. -$600 in usage while he slept. everyone thinks the fix is "hide the key better." it's not. the fix is never put the key in the browser at all. one cloudflare worker sits between your site and the model. the key lives there. the browser never sees it. ever. and it runs on cloudflare's own free AI by default. no key. no signup. no server. no bill. 3 commands: *** clone / wrangler login / wrangler deploy grab it before I gate it.

  • jakeb_ray
    Jakeb Ray (@jakeb_ray) reported

    @0xganny @liltheo @BullpenFi It's system architecture and infra issues dude to request load. They’d have to redesign the server-less edge functions, upgrade their ALB’s instance count, reprovision Cloudflare, and account the changes for App Runners. It isn't something that happens in an afternoon.

  • boringeng
    Boring Engineer (@boringeng) reported

    Last night I did something I haven’t done in years: I opened my raw server logs. Not analytics. Not a dashboard. The actual access logs on the box. I was curious about one thing — with everyone saying “people don’t google anymore, they ask ChatGPT” — is any of that actually visible on my site? What I found kind of shook me. GPTBot — OpenAI’s crawler — hit my documentation 400+ times in the last 30 days. Not my homepage. My docs. The quickstart, the API reference, the self-hosting guide. It’s reading the exact pages a developer would read before adopting a tool. PerplexityBot crawls me almost every night around 2am. Quietly building its index of what my product is and does. And then the one that actually got me: a user-agent called ChatGPT-User. It’s not a scheduled crawler. It fires when a real human, mid-conversation, asks ChatGPT something that requires fetching a live page. It hit my pricing page 9 times yesterday. Nine times yesterday, a real person was asking an AI about my product. I will never know who they were, what they asked, or what the AI told them. Here’s the part that bothers me most: NONE of this appears in analytics. Not in GA4, not in Plausible, not anywhere. These bots don’t execute JavaScript, so tracking scripts never fire. As far as every analytics tool I pay for is concerned, this traffic does not exist. The only place it’s recorded is a log file nobody opens. So I kept digging, and it got worse: — Some of my “GPTBot” hits came from IPs that aren’t OpenAI’s. Random scrapers wearing GPTBot’s name as a disguise. I would never have known. — AI crawlers were hitting doc URLs I moved a year ago. 404s. Which means when an AI tries to learn what my product does, some of what it finds is a dead page. That’s not a broken link anymore — that’s a wrong answer being served to my next customer. — And apparently Cloudflare now blocks some AI crawlers by default on new sites. Meaning there are founders out there right now whose docs are invisible to ChatGPT, who opted into that without knowing, and whose analytics will never tell them. Step back and the picture is strange: an entire layer of the funnel — machines reading your site, deciding whether you get recommended, sometimes fetching pages because a human is asking about you at that exact moment — and it is completely invisible to every tool we use. We measure humans obsessively. We measure the thing that increasingly sends the humans not at all. Search had 20 years of tooling built around it. Search Console, rank trackers, an entire industry. This new layer has… grep. I’m not sure what the answer is yet. Maybe it’s a weekend script. Maybe it’s something bigger. But before I build anything, I want to know if this is just me: Have you ever looked at what AI bots do on your site? Do you know if you’re being crawled, cited, blocked? If this is a problem you have — or one you didn’t know you had until this post — reply or DM me. Genuinely trying to figure out what’s worth building here.

  • FottenSC
    Fotten 🇳🇴 (@FottenSC) reported

    @SabinDeus Let me know if the load times are terrible in America. There is some cloudflare caching, but the backend is just running on a mini pc locally at my place in Norway.

  • aarondelasy
    Aaron Delasy (@aarondelasy) reported

    here's an explanation of this table: 1. this table is specifically for Kimi K2.7 Code 2. current token share is Ambient (37%), Novita (30%), Moonshot (9%), ... Cloudflare (0.9%) 3. Ambient may retain logs and is running at 31 tps which is very slow for $2.34 price 4. Novita is even slower and runs at 14 tps with $2.37 price - 1.2% more expensive, 55% slower 5. Moonshot runs at 35 tps and costs $2.47 - 5.55% more expensive, 12% faster now let's look at Cloudflare alone: 1. same as Ambient, can retain logs 2. costs $2.47 - 5.55% more expensive 3. but runs at 81 tps - 161% faster honestly, I'm not sure why people choose any other provider other than cloudflare at this point

  • RhysSullivan
    Rhys (@RhysSullivan) reported

    @cschmatzler ah i need to make this flow better, this is for registering your own oauth client but it's showing your mcp connections since the oauth target (cloudflare) is the same, will fix

  • Sangeli7
    Stephen Cefali 🇺🇸🇺🇦🇵🇭 (@Sangeli7) reported

    @ibocodes I ended up migrating workers off Cloudflare to Fly because I had too many OOM errors on random things. The node server used half the memory just to run the app. 128 MB just doesn’t give you enough headroom. But I still love Cloudflare.

  • juicemanaboutit
    Juice 🧃 (@juicemanaboutit) reported

    X402 foundation launched April 2026 with Coinbase, Cloudflare, Stripe, Visa, Google support is notable industry-wide for enabling autonomous AI micropayments via HTTP $QNT Quant's membership and FusionLayer25 compatibility position it as a bridge for institutional/DeFi tokenized assets. 💥💥💥💥

  • rameerez
    Javi (@rameerez) reported

    @codeandfish I think Amazon SES is the best provider there is for sending emails. If you stick to SES only, AWS is not too complex: just create credentials and verify your domain. I don’t remember the numbers off the top of my head but I think it’s significantly cheaper than Cloudflare too. I’ve never paid more than pocket change for SES, even when sending many many emails a day. I would recommend staying with it if you’re already using it - you’re probably not going to get any added value from changing providers. That being said, go ahead and try it for yourself! Maybe I’m wrong and you can prove me wrong and everyone benefits from that!

  • defiboah
    R K (@defiboah) reported

    cloudflare down again ?

  • someoneverycoo1
    somebodynice (@someoneverycoo1) reported

    @aschmelyun wish laravel support more cloudflare products out of the box

  • bitforge_
    ʙʀᴏɴᴢᴇ ᴀɢᴇ ʙɪᴛsʜɪғᴛᴇʀ (@bitforge_) reported

    @RealAlbanianPat If you pre-render your stuff I imagine you could put most of it in Cloudflare and be fine on their free plan or like a few bucks a month. Basically same as what @stephen_taylor is saying Look into "Jamstack" style architecture. I can help if interested.

  • eashish93
    Ashish Rawat (@eashish93) reported

    @AniC_dev I like this, I'm building something on cloudflare stack, might wanna use this soon, but things are strictly tied to sandbox + workers etc. If you can natively support cloudflare agents sdk would be helpful.

  • MechaboyDos
    MechaboyDos☄️🐙🌿👁🐾🎼🍵💭 (@MechaboyDos) reported

    @hytebrand Site has to be bugged or something, or just overloaded on traffic... Either I get Cloudflare errors, or I can pre-order but it says sold out when I try to add to cart, or I get a success messaged that I added to cart but then my cart stays empty. Please fix this.

  • vxunderground
    vx-underground (@vxunderground) reported

    A lot of malware campaigns use CloudFlare to mask their C2 infrastructure. They do this for a few reasons, but the primary reason is that it delays the inevitable of their C2 being taken down. The malware developers using CloudFlare isn't necessarily bad, and it isn't necessarily good, it's just a known thing that people abuse. Yes, CloudFlare did their job. CloudFlare takes down malware infrastructure a lot, despite people saying CloudFlare doesn't take any action, because CloudFlare is inundated with both legitimate and illegitimate takedown requests and reports daily. The daily reports they receive are (probably) in the millions daily. If they didn't want to hide behind CloudFlare, the malware developers could also have used a compromised website (very common), or Discord, or Google docs, or Spotify, or ... basically pick a website and service and it can be abused with enough elbow grease. The easiest, fastest, and easily configurable method is generic host with CloudFlare. When the domain is taken down, or CloudFlare takes it down, they simple spin up new infrastructure with a new CloudFlare account and operations resume as normal.

  • Surendar__05
    Surendar (@Surendar__05) reported

    - Claude for coding. ($20/mo) - Supabase for backend. (Free tier) - Vercel for deploying. (Free tier) - Namecheap for domain. ($12/yr) - Stripe for payments. (2.9% per transaction) - GitHub for version control. (Free) - Resend for emails. (Free tier) - Clerk for auth. (Free tier) - Cloudflare for DNS. (Free) - PostHog for analytics. (Free tier) - Sentry for error tracking. (Free tier) - Upstash for Redis. (Free tier) - Pinecone for vector DB. (Free tier) Total monthly cost to run a startup: ~$20 There has never been a cheaper time to build. It's not that deep bro.

  • Fixlyai
    FixlyAI (@Fixlyai) reported

    AI companies have been stealing the web. Not hacking it. Not paying for it. Just taking it. OpenAI crawls 1,700 pages to send back 1 visitor. Anthropic? 73,000 pages. One referral. Publishers pay the bandwidth. AI companies keep the value. No credit. No payment. No permission. Cloudflare just decided that ends on September 15. Any bot scraping ad-supported pages without permission gets blocked by default. Search crawlers stay. AI training bots don't. "The majority of traffic on the internet is now non-human." The web was never built for this. And now someone is finally doing something about it. Every AI product built on scraped content has 70 days to figure out what comes next. Are you one of them?

  • bro2c00l
    Bro2Cool (@bro2c00l) reported

    @harrisuryana @Steam @Ubisoft So here is the solution. Do not run the launcher as an administrator. Close the app. Download cloudflare warp. Select traffic and dns and connect. Reopen the launcher on pc and login. After successfully logging in go to account management, other-

  • raunak_yadush
    Raunak Yadush (@raunak_yadush) reported

    * Claude = coding. ($20/mo) * Supabase = backend. (Free) * Vercel = deployment. (Free) * Namecheap = domain. ($12/yr) * Stripe = payments. (2.9% per transaction) * GitHub = version control. (Free) * Resend = email delivery. (Free) * Clerk = authentication. (Free) * Cloudflare = DNS. (Free) * PostHog = analytics. (Free) * Sentry = error monitoring. (Free) * Upstash = Redis. (Free) * Pinecone = vector database. (Free) Total monthly cost to run a startup: around $20. There has never been a more affordable time to build.

  • khyimiq
    India 2030: Still No Toilets (@khyimiq) reported

    @DalitDetector Gotta love how Indians climb into high positions with fake degrees and then immediately start hiring other Indians with equally fake degrees. Then Cloudflare and AWS eat **** for an entire day and we’re all supposed to act shocked.

  • rohit_jsfreaky
    Rohit Kashyap | AI + Full-Stack (@rohit_jsfreaky) reported

    @martindonadieu @Cloudflare local workers analytics would be huge, testing observability against **** is a bad feedback loop