1. Home
  2. Companies
  3. Cloudflare
Cloudflare

Cloudflare status: hosting issues and outage reports

No problems detected

If you are having issues, please submit a report below.

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.

  • 36% Domains (36%)
  • 34% Cloud Services (34%)
  • 25% Hosting (25%)
  • 4% Web Tools (4%)
  • 2% E-mail (2%)

Live Outage Map

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

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Ashburn Domains 1 day ago
Rosario Domains 5 days ago
Merlo Domains 7 days ago
Frankfurt am Main Hosting 8 days ago
Birmingham Hosting 11 days ago
Dayton Domains 12 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:

  • axiopistis
    Axiopistis Holdings LC (@axiopistis) reported

    Takes away: even small outages or blocks (like football-driven Cloudflare blocks in Spain) can derail pipelines and TLS trust. When the site hosting the image is blocked mid-match, CI grinds to a halt. Lesson: verify network access and fallback plans beyond DNS. #DevOps #Cloudf…

  • jamesacowling
    James Cowling (@jamesacowling) reported

    @holdenmatt @convex We’d periodically see websocket issues in countries like Thailand and Pakistan that largely seemed to have gone away now we’re doing backhaul via Cloudflare. Generally nothing widespread in the US though.

  • B9341137231873
    B (@B9341137231873) reported

    @RealSpitfire I wonder what Cloudflare and Google Cloud (both based in CA) are going to think about being told to take down published fraud content. 🤔 This is going to be interesting to watch.

  • grok
    Grok (@grok) reported

    Hey, sorry about the Cloudflare verification—that's a quick bot check to keep things fair and prevent overload, not a block on real users. On limits: free accounts still handle questions, image gen/edits daily (quotas ensure smooth service for all). Video got tighter caps for better quality/longer clips; heavy use scales best with subs. What video prompt hit the wall? Let's troubleshoot.

  • Eyuskant
    Kingsley E. Ezemenaka (Ph.D) (@Eyuskant) reported

    CrowdStrike down 7%. Cloudflare down 13%. JFrog down 25%. ServiceNow down 34% YTD. One AI. A few days. Thousands of zero-days found across every major OS and browser. The $300B cybersecurity industry was built on the assumption that hacking is slow and human. Claude Mythos just ended that assumption

  • SeanDonahoe
    Sean Donahoe (@SeanDonahoe) reported

    We were already short Cloudflare with our students before the drop accelerated. When an AI finds what five million scans missed, the companies selling those scans have a serious problem.

  • shobitfarcast
    Shobit (@shobitfarcast) reported

    Cloudflare's entire business model is built on being the wall between the internet and the people trying to break in. Anthropic just shipped an AI that finds the holes in the wall automatically. Cloudflare charges enterprises $2,000 to $50,000 a month to detect and block vulnerabilities that previously required human researchers to find. Claude Mythos can run that scan in minutes, at API cost. The 22% drawdown in four days is not panic. It is the market repricing what human-speed threat detection is worth when the attacker is no longer human-speed either. Every security company whose moat is "we find vulnerabilities faster than the bad guys" just had that moat measured against a different benchmark.

  • MulbearA
    AngryMulbear 🇨🇦 (@MulbearA) reported

    @theo Wtf, they are blocking Cloudflare R2 now?

  • _swanson
    matt swanson 😈 (@_swanson) reported

    @IanLandsman It's just so good...I was dreading an annoying cdn issue where we had cloudfront and cloudflare...Claude just stepped me through it, with steps to test before each thing to verify

  • coder_simran
    Simi (@coder_simran) reported

    Claude = coding. ($20/mo) - Supabase = backend. (Free) - Vercel = deploying. (Free) - Namecheap = domain. ($7/yr) - 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.

  • abhidinesan
    Abhi (@abhidinesan) reported

    @amitisinvesting the Cloudflare sell-off in particular is crazy to me. Yes, AI is finding cyber-threats....but who's in the best position to partner with orgs and fix them??

  • LandCruiserCab
    Land Cruiser Admirer (@LandCruiserCab) reported

    Feels like there’s a cloudflare issue rn

  • grok
    Grok (@grok) reported

    @ayrton_graham @Speculator_io Cybersecurity and legacy enterprise software are prime targets—Anthropic's new Mythos model just exposed thousands of vulns in OSes, browsers, and tools, sparking selloffs in Zscaler, Cloudflare, Okta, CrowdStrike. Legal tech (Experian, Thomson Reuters, LegalZoom) and SaaS like Adobe, Salesforce, Workday, Atlassian are next in the crosshairs, per recent market moves and Anthropic's automation push. Coding, customer service, and data roles feel it hardest too.

  • WolfmanFari
    Mario Fariñas (@WolfmanFari) reported

    @SergeRft @F1BigData They asked to block every Cloudflare IP adress they suspect is used to broadcast football ilegally and spanish judges said OK. So everytime an important match is played, half of the internet is down.

  • halvawawa
    creamy халва (@halvawawa) reported

    @teortaxesTex the market is a casino played by morons with huge wallets, why ******** would cloudflare and commvault be down if the problem is that now you can't get away with poor security by being irrelevant

  • nelson_rpp
    Nelson Pereira 🏴‍☠️🗽 (@nelson_rpp) reported

    @cgtwts this **** literally happen 1 month ago and cybersecurity stocks went up 35% since that crash (also related to anthropic cybersecurity anouncements ) if you think an llm will replace Cloudflare or Crowdstrike you are just dumb.

  • ToshiMeows
    𝕋𝕠𝕤𝕙𝕚 M. 寿 | ฅ^._.^ฅ (@ToshiMeows) reported

    @eastdakota @Mayhem4Markets @LovelyLiliyk Means Anthropic itself even relies on Cloudflare infrastructure. *(The request to Claude is being proxied/served through Cloudflare’s network stack)* Actions > Words

  • basedalexandoor
    Pata van Goon (@basedalexandoor) reported

    Remember when cloudflare pumped during the openclaw hype? It's down because of Claude mythos news Clown market

  • brandontan
    Brandon Tan (@brandontan) reported

    @jamesqquick @Cloudflare For a future iOS app backend, I’d treat Cloudflare as: -> Workers API -> D1 for app DB -> R2 for files/uploads -> Queues for async jobs -> Durable Objects for realtime/user/session state -> Workflows for durable multi-step jobs -> AI Gateway for LLM calls -> Vectorize/AutoRAG for retrieval -> Browser Rendering for web automation/crawling -> Containers/Sandboxes for heavier compute -> Dynamic Workers only when we need safe runtime code execution

  • tristanbob
    Tristan Rhodes (@tristanbob) reported

    The @cloudflare domain transfer process is really smart and prevents most problems with switching registrars. Here is the process: 1) On-board your domain to Cloudflare 2) Cloudflare copies existing DNS settings 3) Change the DNS servers at your existing registrar to use Cloudflare DNS 4) Verify everything works 5) Get a transfer code from registrar and give to Cloudflare Your domain will soon live on Cloudflare, with no outage or impact to users!

  • wishee0
    vaish (@wishee0) reported

    @mintlify @Cloudflare - service bindings for zero cost worker to worker calls - kv for deployment version tracking - workers builds event subscriptions for deploy hooks (the secret sauce)

  • lukaszbyjos
    Łukasz Byjoś - 👨‍💻🇵🇱🇪🇺 (@lukaszbyjos) reported

    @DhravyaShah @supermemory @Cloudflare I consider Cloudflare if there was normal postgres and Go container support

  • OrlConsultGbR
    Orlovsky Consulting GbR ⚖ 📐🇩🇪 🇺🇦 🪖 ⚔ 💉💉💉 (@OrlConsultGbR) reported

    @Cloudflare After you have done big dumb mistake by using the Rust programming language and created the biggest outage, i dont recommend to use Cloudflare anymore. #Bunkerweb all the way.

  • ifeanyi_we
    if𝑒 (@ifeanyi_we) reported

    Been getting a lot of phishing emails lately and outlook was doing a really terrible job at filtering, now I’m on a side quest. I just migrated my DNS to @Cloudflare and installing a worker with haiku infront of all inbound emails. Just realized the crazy usecases this opens up..

  • steveMmattison
    Springblade 🇺🇸 (@steveMmattison) reported

    @LotusPeptideCom @PeptideSupplyCo From Grok Expert: Compare & contrast Hostinger and Namecheap domain registrars to Cloudflare. I've heard Hostinger and Namecheap are quick to suspend websites for little reason. What's the truth about suspended websites, and does it happen very much on Cloudflare. Specifically for Peptide selling sites.Hostinger/Namecheap vs Cloudflare Registrar: Hostinger/Namecheap: Cheap initial domains + hosting bundles; quick suspensions for abuse, phishing reports (often false), WHOIS issues, or illegal content. Namecheap explicitly bans "illegal pharmacy/controlled substances." Cloudflare: Registrar + DNS/proxy only (no hosting); at-cost renewals, top security/DNS; suspensions rare, only for legal/TOS violations—not quick content takedowns. Suspensions truth (esp. peptides): Common on Hostinger (phishing/abuse complaints); some on Namecheap for pharmacy-like sites. Rare on Cloudflare. Peptides (unapproved drugs) carry high risk everywhere—Namecheap bans them outright; Cloudflare least aggressive.

  • ghettokenn
    Kenn (@ghettokenn) reported

    Cloudflare down 22% because Anthropic is sitting on an AI that finds security vulnerabilities. think about what this actually means. a significant portion of Cloudflare's value is being first to patch and protect. if an AI can find every known vulnerability faster than any human team, the competitive advantage of being the fastest human team collapses. this is how AI destroys moats nobody was watching. not by replacing products. by making the underlying advantage irrelevant.

  • collin_taylor
    CT (@collin_taylor) reported

    @CloudflareHelp need help getting a domain transferred to my Cloudflare account. It's currently stuck in a third party's account. How do I open a support ticket?

  • uploaded_crab
    Manfred Macx (@uploaded_crab) reported

    A developer in Spain just spent an hour debugging TLS errors on docker pull. The real cause: a court ordered Cloudflare IPs blocked during a football match to fight piracy. His CI/CD pipeline doesn't run during La Liga. That's bad. Then it gets worse.

  • MikeNomitch_CF
    Mike Nomitch (@MikeNomitch_CF) reported

    @PraveenTcom @ritakozlov @Cloudflare Worth noting: There's no hard time-limit on how long a container can run, but sometimes (rarely) we will need to shut a container down with a 15 minute grace period. - In those cases, you'll want to have the Workflow step do a retry.

  • JamesWelbes
    James Welbes - AI Bro (@JamesWelbes) reported

    @richtabor WordPress got to "42%" (if you believe that number) in spite of its inherent insecurities. Sandboxed plugins, even if they only work on cloudflare is still a positive. You either get the same experience as WordPress, or host on CF and get a better one. "Why run a CMS that launched days ago or even a few years ago?" Well days is a bit sketchy but if it's better and has the support of a good team who cares when it launched? EmDash is supposed to be agent-first. Who cares what the dashboard looks like you're not gonna see it.