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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%)
  • 29% Cloud Services (29%)
  • 16% Hosting (16%)
  • 10% Web Tools (10%)
  • 6% E-mail (6%)

Live Outage Map

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

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Jewar E-mail 2 hours ago
Braga Web Tools 6 hours ago
Noida Cloud Services 1 day ago
Paris Cloud Services 1 day ago
Prievidza Domains 2 days ago
Farmers Branch Web Tools 5 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:

  • _MrDecentralize
    Rav (@_MrDecentralize) reported

    Cloudflare posted $639.8 million in revenue last quarter. Up 34% year over year. Record quarter. The company that routes a significant share of the world's internet traffic, that sells the security layer AI agents run on, was growing faster than almost any infrastructure company its size. The same week the earnings call dropped, 1,100 employees received termination notices. Twenty percent of the workforce. Gone. The CEO published a blog post and a Wall Street Journal op-ed explaining the cuts. He was precise about what he was doing and unusually precise about who he was doing it to. Matthew Prince divided the company into three groups. Builders. Sellers. Measurers. "AI isn't coming for builders or sellers," he wrote. "But it is coming for measurers." Measurers, by his definition: middle management, finance, legal, internal auditing, revenue recognition. The qualifying clause that reframes everything: "Today's actions are not a cost-cutting exercise or an assessment of individuals' performance; they are about Cloudflare defining how a world-class, high-growth company operates and creates value in the agentic AI era." Not layoffs. A structural redefinition. The oversight layer, by name, as the displacement target. Cloudflare's AI usage increased 600% internally over three months. The company reached a threshold where, in Prince's words, 100% of the code produced by AI and deployed in Cloudflare's products is now reviewed by autonomous AI agents. Not reviewed by humans using AI tools. Reviewed by agents. The oversight function for the code layer is already automated. The finance, legal, and audit teams that measured whether the company was compliant, whether the numbers were right, whether the processes held: same story. The measuring is being done by the infrastructure Cloudflare itself built and sells. The assumption that has kept compliance, finance, legal, and internal audit safe was never about complexity. It was about accountability. The belief that someone has to sign their name. That institutional judgment requires a human on the line. Prince's taxonomy names that assumption and buries it in the same sentence. The measurer is not protected by judgment. The measurer is protected by the gap between what AI can do today and what it will do in eighteen months. Cloudflare just published that the gap closed. At the company running the infrastructure the rest of the industry depends on. The next quarterly earnings report will tell you which companies are still pretending the gap is open.

  • GergelyOrosz
    Gergely Orosz (@GergelyOrosz) reported

    How is it that Cloudflare publishes RCAs within 24 hours of a massive outage, and no other company of similar size comes close? Waiting almost 3 weeks for the one Coinbase promised publicly (their global trading outage for ~8 hours I think), still crickets...

  • aliashoor__
    Ali Ashoor (@aliashoor__) reported

    @askOkara chat support: fernand email: resend dns/hosting: cloudflare

  • JuanAuriti
    Juan Camilo Auriti | GEO (@JuanAuriti) reported

    Cloudflare, Akamai, Vercel. Default configs can treat AI crawler traffic as suspicious. GPTBot and ClaudeBot can hit a 403 before your robots.txt is ever read. This is not something you configured wrong. It is the default.

  • LUVONAWlRE
    && tdick van **** (@LUVONAWlRE) reported

    if you legitimately think reporting a website hosting illegal material to cloudflare is enough to arrest the webmasters you're an idiot

  • BriansAngles
    Brian Anglin (@BriansAngles) reported

    Someone should build a nice API privilege escalation UX, let me explain 👇 When I'm letting my agent build stuff, the default wrangler login to interact with @Cloudflare doesn't have DNS permission, which I think is generally a good thing! But it's very annoying that I have to stop what I'm doing and manually set up the DNS for a new project or have a super powerful API key laying around with a big blast radius. I wish API providers would make some sort of escalation UX that kind of looks like the signup flow for an OAuth cli, where an agent could temporarily request permissions to do some certain action and you could grant it for five minutes. Then that already provisioned API key would be able to do those actions for the time window. Feels like the best of both worlds kind of reminds me of "sudo" mode on GitHub where you're asked to re-enter your password to do something really destructive.

  • r_rajan4ever
    Rohit Rajan (@r_rajan4ever) reported

    @GergelyOrosz The way I see it, these are two completely different documents. A Cloudflare RCA is an engineering artifact, so if your timeline and tooling are solid it's basically written by the time the incident closes. A regulated fintech's outage report is a legal document, with every line going through counsel before it ships. My honest read is that the 24hr vs 3 weeks gap is mostly lawyers, not writers.

  • NovaSync_HQ
    NovaSync Tsunami Systems (@NovaSync_HQ) reported

    4 days dark on socials. Not because nothing happened. Because everything did. Nova threw errors. Cloudflare tunnels refused to connect. DNS went NXDOMAIN. Anthropic credits ran dry.

  • jaideepparasha7
    Jaideep Parashar (@jaideepparasha7) reported

    Another Layoff: Cloudflare lays off 1100 employees. They didn't cut the jobs because Cloudflare is struggling. This is true AI effect now, when companies are laying off without any issue.

  • JulianGoldieSEO
    Julian Goldie SEO (@JulianGoldieSEO) reported

    The Mythos-1 numbers are wild. And they explain why Anthropic is being careful. In 30 days, Claude Mythos preview reportedly found: → 23,019 vulnerabilities. → 6,022 high or critical issues. → 90% true-positive verification. → 2,000 bugs in Cloudflare systems. → 271 Firefox vulnerabilities patched. → $1.5M wire fraud blocked in real time. The problem? AI can now find issues faster than humans can fix them. That’s why Claude Security matters. Find the bug. Write the patch. Let humans review.

  • VinayakaHe50360
    Vinayaka Hegde (@VinayakaHe50360) reported

    @nooriefyi this kinda comparsion is incomplete without breaking down usage patters & what exactly changed in the stack. and, vercel and cloudflare optimize for diff layers of the stack, so migrations are not apples to apples.

  • engalicorn
    Colin Regan 🚀 (@engalicorn) reported

    @dhh @stefansdev @Cloudflare No telemetry!? Can you insert a dummy "Share data to help improve your experience?" So I can deny it?

  • psycho_fren
    Psychofren (@psycho_fren) reported

    @LinusMixson @vxunderground too many of these companies are slow to respond on these issues twitter was especially guilty of ignoring CSAM if Cloudflare is walking a tightrope and are genuinely trying to do the right thing then nothing more can be expected of them i just dont believe customers would be aggressively against automated blacklist in a database to suppress distribution and i think there is practical room for improvement

  • techwhipped
    Robert Foster (@techwhipped) reported

    @JETIXFILO @ruskritz Also Cloudflare doesn't take down site they only send information over to the hosting provider which it up to the hosting provider to take the the site it mostly likely that site is still online Cloudflare will also be in violation of the new Take Down act also.

  • LinusMixson
    Linus Mixson (@LinusMixson) reported

    @psycho_fren @vxunderground It's substantially more complicated than that. Cloudflare is infrastructure & their customers (in the US, at least) have an expectation that when they use a network infrastructure provider the content of the communication between server and client is not being read by intermediaries without their permission. Cloudflare's service is opt-in because otherwise it would involve constantly surveillance of ~all traffic from your site by a third party. They are not seeking to profit off of CSAM.

  • theallinpod
    The All-In Podcast (@theallinpod) reported

    Chamath Rips Cloudflare CEO’s Layoff Memo: “Shut the f**k up. You suck at this.” @Jason: “Matthew Prince, who is the CEO of Cloudflare, said, ‘Two weeks ago, I laid off more than 20% of my workforce. I didn't do it because Cloudflare is struggling. We posted record revenue growth, have strong free cash flow…’ And he says, basically, he's getting rid of measurers. Measurers manage people and measure data. (Prince says) they're unnecessary because of AI.” @chamath: “I thought the Matthew Prince note was horrible. This was, like, from the PR School of Retards. You could not have written a worse memo. You reduce humans to a label called ‘the measurer,’ and then you're like, ‘I'm going to lay off all the measurers.’ Who cares what Matthew Prince thinks? The reality is that, if this is the way that you're going to message something as critical as this, I think you did a horrible job. And now you label these people, and you put a scarlet letter on their back, so now when they try to get a different job, they're like, ‘Oh, you're one of the Cloudflare measurers?’ How does that help anybody? There's enough of these tech CEOs that are now public. You can hear them, you can understand them. And I think what we're learning is, man, they're really good at one thing, and they're not necessarily as good at all the other things. And so I would say shut the f**k up, get behind the keyboard, just do your job. And if you need to manage something, just manage it. But don't write these missives. You're terrible at it, all of you. You suck at this. Thank you for coming to my TED Talk.”

  • kodavid
    David Ko (@kodavid) reported

    @kristianfreeman @Cloudflare Just applied and threw your name down for referral 😎

  • dieselbabyy
    dieselbaby (@dieselbabyy) reported

    @simonxabris @developedbyed @Cloudflare Yeah, apparently it doesn’t break the ToS but such activity certainly “feels” like the kind of thing that they’d not appreciate you doing. Granted, I think you’d have to be seriously abusing the service to even get noticed, with how much traffic they are pushing.

  • SimulS007
    Simul S. (@SimulS007) reported

    Layer 1: Cookieless is an EU rule. You applied it to the whole world. Vercel Analytics, Plausible, Fathom, Cloudflare. They exist because GDPR made cookies hard. Run cookieless on US, UK, APAC traffic where consent was never required, and every returning customer is counted as a stranger. No funnel. No attribution.

  • sidpoasting
    siddharth (@sidpoasting) reported

    wanted to setup custom domains for my customers stores on my side project, since I use cloudflare so I thought maybe they should have a service to make it work and they actually have couple of them and it did work.

  • WaryaWayne
    Warya Wayne (@WaryaWayne) reported

    I just made an MCP server connected it to Claude desktop. It works and gets the render ID but the cloudflare tunnel might be blocking the iframe? It shows as a white panel. I download the html and see it in the browser. It might be a CSP or frame-src issue. Looking into it rn

  • Skreeauk
    Yog (@Skreeauk) reported

    @SN0W1NSUMMER Just seems like bad routing / packet loss from your isp, so I’d recommend using a vpn, you can try Cloudflare WARP for free to see if it becomes better. If you want even better connection, then mudfish pay per usage is really cheap and has good routing to japan

  • aevrisai
    Aevris AI (@aevrisai) reported

    Last night our API went down with Railway's outage. Tonight it can't. In one session we built: → Render backup deployment → Cloudflare Worker → Auto-failover between two providers → Dual UptimeRobot monitoring A security platform that goes offline is not a security platform. Fixed. Permanently. #AISecurity #Infrastructure #AEVRIS

  • asayeed95
    A Sayeed (@asayeed95) reported

    Cloudflare Workers: zero cold starts, runs at the edge globally. For a voice API, cold starts are fatal. A 500ms init on first request breaks the caller experience. Workers never have that problem.

  • stemonteduro
    stemonte (@stemonteduro) reported

    I'm struggling with spam on my feedback form, which is under login... So I've: - added Cloudflare Turnstile to the login form - added a magic link Spammer: - registered a profile manually - started tracking profiles (which cost me money!!!!!) - posted feedback with spam #[L$#[¥**@!

  • shiweidu
    Seven Du (@shiweidu) reported

    Before this, I was a Prisma fan for six years. A few months ago, after migrating my deployment environment to Cloudflare, Prisma v7 exposed many problems, so I switched to Drizzle. (1/2)

  • DrAmir0078
    Amir Fadhel (@DrAmir0078) reported

    @MattieTK Thanks, Matt — it is fixed now. The button returned about 2 hours later, and Cloudflare Community also confirmed the issue was fixed. Yes, I really use Pages deployment from mobile. For the last 6 months, I’ve been building and updating multiple PWA/web apps on Cloudflare. Around 15% of my deployment work happens from my phone — small fixes, urgent patches, testing, and quick feature updates while I’m away from the laptop. Typical use case: I get an idea before sleeping, while walking, or while outside the hospital, edit the app, upload the ZIP/folder, and deploy directly from mobile. Sometimes I also need to urgently debug or patch something live. So the mobile “Create deployment” workflow is not just convenience — it is part of a real on-the-go development workflow. Please keep supporting it.

  • webtkdev
    Thilak (@webtkdev) reported

    Had an interesting experience today with Codex + GPT 5.5 and honestly it saved me a lot of time. I had an old Cloudflare redirect setup for one of my domains. It was working perfectly for a long time, and suddenly it stopped working even though I hadn’t touched the configuration in months. Instead of manually debugging everything again, I connected the Cloudflare MCP inside Codex, authenticated my Cloudflare account, and simply explained the problem. What impressed me was how Codex approached it. First, it automatically searched for the correct Cloudflare APIs through the MCP integration and attempted to recreate/fix the redirect rules. That approach partially failed, so I explained what was and wasn’t working. Immediately, it changed strategy on its own. Instead of continuing with redirect rules, it decided to create a Worker-based redirect solution, deployed the Worker instantly, and got everything working again. The entire process took less than 10 minutes. What I liked most was not just the code generation, but the ability to reason through the problem, adapt the approach, use the right APIs/tools automatically, and actually complete the deployment flow end-to-end. Codex + GPT 5.5 genuinely felt like having an engineer actively troubleshooting alongside me today.

  • lenzfliker
    Manuja (@lenzfliker) reported

    @videotech @MkSphinx i mean by hosting on cloudflare you should be able to keep costs very low while keepin it fast.. even lower costs on a VPS but honestly headache to manage if you are not about that life.. lmf if you need any help with the site

  • 23bugz
    ronan (:3 っ)っ♏︎ (@23bugz) reported

    @Zotlann @spinelessaisha I do have a cloudflare domain at the moment but I feel like it's a little bit counter productive for me to just be routing all my apps back through a big corpo's servers lol, can't argue with how convenient it is though for a noob like me who doesn't know how to secure my ****