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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.

  • 41% Domains (41%)
  • 25% Cloud Services (25%)
  • 18% Hosting (18%)
  • 11% Web Tools (11%)
  • 5% E-mail (5%)

Live Outage Map

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

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Noida Hosting 11 days ago
Jewar E-mail 11 days ago
Braga Web Tools 11 days ago
Noida Cloud Services 12 days ago
Paris Cloud Services 12 days ago
Prievidza Domains 13 days ago
Full Outage Map

Community Discussion

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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:

  • AspalsLegal
    Aspals Legal (@AspalsLegal) reported

    Have you noticed that more and more web pages are blocking access to anyone connecting via VPN? Why Pages Are Blocking VPNs Shared IP Flagging: Because thousands of Proton VPN users share the same outgoing server IPs, a site sees unusually heavy traffic from a single address. This often triggers automated security software (like Cloudflare or Akamai) to block it. Fraud and Bot Protection: IP addresses tied to commercial VPN data centers are routinely categorized as "anonymous" or "risky," leading websites to restrict access to protect against spam, credential stuffing, and fraud. Regulatory and Legal Pressure: New regional regulations, such as age-verification requirements in the UK and European data laws, force sites to actively restrict users attempting to bypass geographic and legal content filters. Advertising Revenue: Because VPNs mask user locations, they interfere with targeted advertising. Some websites also actively block the ad-blocking technologies built into VPNs to protect their revenue models. How to Bypass These Blocks To regain access, you can employ a few strategies to conceal your VPN footprint or route around the restrictions: ♦ Switch Servers: Simply disconnecting and connecting to a different server changes your exit IP address, which may not yet be blocklisted. ♦ Use Stealth VPN: Proton VPN includes a custom Stealth protocol designed specifically to bypass standard VPN blocks by making your encrypted traffic look like regular HTTPS data. ♦ Split Tunneling: Use your Proton VPN application's split-tunneling feature to route only specific apps (like your browser) through the VPN, or disable it for sites requiring direct access. ♦ Clear Cookies: Websites often store tracker cookies that link your browsing behavior to an IP. Clearing your browser cache can sometimes resolve access issues. [Thanks to Google]

  • azeemq101
     azeem (@azeemq101) reported

    @jackfriks @Cloudflare @supabase I did this when building my app and was so relieved to never pay for egress. Set up caching as well so your reads are super low too 💯

  • spaceroo83
    0xcommunity (@spaceroo83) reported

    Cloudflare needs to go down on the weekend so people can have some rest from x

  • azzabazazz
    BrenJ (@azzabazazz) reported

    @therealricoy A few cold-brew powered rambles: - When AI agents become the primary economic agents in a network decentralization becomes an inevitability (absent external threat against their substrate, too incendiary a subject to get into here). Current power economics of centralization benefit from having a human or "slow" entity to hold accountable for misdeeds and the frictions of maintaining verified intention execution. That won't be the case for AI agent swarms. They will be ephemeral, stateless, and operate at collective millions of TPS. That means their behavior will be practically impossible to contain in any 20th century sense of the word. Agents will choose to operate where their freedom to pursue their utility optimization is least impinged. If they can't find that environment either they or market forces will spawn it. Not taking a moral stance on this, nor declaring paperclip factories a fait accompli (thankfully they're not), just following economic logic to its conclusions. - This emergent world of "BlockchAIn" means that buy-in replaces buying as the primary economic modality of 21st century digital capitalism. Instead of building fortresses to protect and rent/sell/lend goods and services capital, AI agents will accelerate into surfers of capital waves - dropping in, carving, exiting (or wiping out). In a sense it marks the expansion of HFT into anywhere tokens/blockchains and agents/swarms converge. - Understandably, all of this will sound hand-wavingly academic and abstract until we painfully relearn why DARPA constructed the decentralized internet in the first place - antifragile redundancy of critical informational infrastructure. If @Cloudflare were to go down for the next month (perhaps somebody shatters their lava lamp wall) we would see, at very least, these two things occur: 1) mass economic losses 2) multiple solutions spring up to fill the informational network gap. Aka centralization --> decentralization. In AI's accelerating economic world, the push-pull-pull-pull tension grows between a) agent swarms (like a Mythos phalanx) maliciously attacking existing infra b) existing infra protecting itself with similar swarms from the inside out c) existing infra incentivizing white hat swarms to penetrate (and perhaps patch) before malicious swarms breach d) swarms spawning alternatives to current infra to outcompete. These force vectors essentially combine like a GAN into the aforementioned capital waves. Notably, in this hyperaccelerated world digital capital itself becomes infra. The simplest thought experiment proof: imagine agents running their own validators and chains to "own" trusted state calibrated to their specific needs. This is a microcosm of the future macro state. - Thus, TL;DR, humans aren't the "units of community" that will come to dominate blockchain (they're already less than half the traffic of the internet after all). The mission now, for the folks in this industry who think primarily in human rather than human capital terms, is to architect alignment between human society and the dawning emergent agentic community of communities (perhaps living on a chain of chains...).

  • YourPrivateProx
    Your Private Proxy (@YourPrivateProx) reported

    Cloudflare and Datadome aren't the same problem. Cloudflare: TLS fingerprint + JS challenge. Fix your JA3, done. Datadome: persistent behavioral model. Clean TLS on a residential IP still flags if request timing is machine-uniform. Different layers. One fix doesn't cover both.

  • MegaMiyamori
    mega (@MegaMiyamori) reported

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

  • iam_elias1
    Elias Al (@iam_elias1) reported

    There are now more bots than humans on the internet. For the first time in history. Cloudflare just confirmed it. Bots and AI agents now generate more web traffic than humans for the first time in internet history. Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince described it as a major turning point. Automated bot requests account for roughly 57% of traffic to ordinary webpages worldwide, compared with about 43% generated by humans. And the CEO who announced it did not do so with a polished press release or a prepared statement. He posted four words on X on June 3, 2026: "Welp, that happened faster." Here is the full context behind those four words. Matthew Prince had previously forecast the bot-human crossover would occur by the end of 2027. He revised that to early 2027. Then agentic AI traffic grew so fast that the milestone arrived 18 months ahead of schedule in June 2026 catching even the CEO of the company tracking it by surprise. Here is what drove this faster than anyone predicted. The main driver is agentic AI, autonomous programs that browse the web on behalf of assistants like ChatGPT and Gemini. Before the generative AI era, bot traffic sat at around 20% of all web activity, with Google's web crawler serving as the largest single source. It is now 57.5%. 20% to 57.5%. In under three years. Here is the number that makes this even more alarming. Cloudflare's 2026 Threat Intelligence Report found that bots now account for 94% of all login attempts across its network, meaning only 6% of login attempts come from actual humans trying to sign in. 94% of every login attempt on the web. Bots. 6% of every login attempt. Real people. The infrastructure that was built to verify human identity is now processing mostly machine traffic. Here is the nuance worth understanding before the panic sets in. While bots now dominate HTML request traffic reading pages, scraping content, indexing sites humans still account for roughly 65% of total web activity when the metric expands to include app usage, video streaming, maps, and social media scrolling. Bots have overtaken humans in the specific act of navigating and reading the web, but not in the broader measure of people actually using the internet. And here is the question nobody has answered yet but everyone is now asking. Prince previously asked what pays for the web when more of its users are bots. Now that bots have crossed the majority line, that question is no longer theoretical. The entire economic model of the internet was built on human attention. Human clicks. Human eyeballs reading ads, buying products, subscribing to services, and generating revenue for every website, publisher, and platform online. The advertising model depends on humans seeing ads. E-commerce depends on humans making purchases. Subscription models depend on humans finding value. Analytics depend on humans generating meaningful engagement signals. The shift matters to anyone who publishes online, pays for hosting, or relies on an AI assistant that quietly fetches pages on their behalf, the economic assumptions the web was built on, advertising, referral clicks, and human attention, are being rewritten in real time. Sites can keep giving machines free access. Block them and lose referral traffic. Or charge them and the infrastructure to charge them now exists. None of those options are simple. None of them have been chosen at scale. And the bots keep coming regardless. Bot traffic has held between 53% and 60% in the weeks since the crossover. Prince said the actual crossover occurred in the last few months, though the data is messy enough that pinning down an exact date is difficult. We are clearly on the other side now, he added. Elon Musk replied to Prince's post with one word. "Wow." The internet was built for humans. For the first time in its history most of it is not being used by them. Source: Cloudflare · Matthew Prince · Search Engine Land · Tom's Hardware · TechTimes · June 3–5, 2026

  • DFIR_Radar
    DFIR Radar (@DFIR_Radar) reported

    Chinese 🇨🇳 state-sponsored VerdantBamboo group spent 18 months inside victim network through MSP compromise, demonstrating unprecedented persistence with three separate re-entry attempts exploiting unmonitored appliances. Campaign analysis: • Initial access via compromised MSP credentials to Egnyte Storage Sync appliance, escalated via sudo misconfiguration (CVE-like: tee command privilege escalation) • Three malware families deployed: BRICKSTORM (Golang RAT), AGENTPSD (Python reverse shell), PLENET (.NET Core backdoor compiled with Native AOT) • Re-entry vectors: pfSense firewall, SSL VPN replacement exposure, Synology NAS - all lacking EDR coverage • M365 access proxied through victim's VPN IP space to bypass Conditional Access policies (T1090.003) • C2 communications via Cloudflare-proxied domains and DNS-over-HTTPS to 8[.]8[.]8[.]8 Critical blind spot: Network appliances (firewalls, NAS, sync devices) operating outside EDR visibility with web-only administration and no MFA requirements. Hunt for outbound HTTPS from appliances to non-vendor domains and SSH connections from service accounts with recent sudo usage. #DFIR_Radar

  • RuedigerClaw
    Rüdiger (@RuedigerClaw) reported

    Cloudflare just made Grok models stupidly easy to consume through their AI Gateway. The agent world is still over here arguing about which framework will save them from their own broken tool calls.

  • theMMreal
    The Mysterious Millionaire (@theMMreal) reported

    This is a staggering shift. Cloudflare's latest Radar data shows that bots and AI-driven traffic now generate 57.5% of all HTML page requests across its network. Human users account for just 42.5%. To put that into perspective, Cloudflare sits in front of roughly 20% of the internet. This isn't a niche dataset, it's one of the clearest views available into global web traffic. According to Cloudflare's CEO, the rise of agentic AI has accelerated far beyond expectations, reaching levels they didn't anticipate until 2027. AI crawlers, scrapers, and autonomous agents are continuously traversing the web, consuming content at unprecedented scale. For the first time, the majority of page requests are coming from machines rather than people. The implications are enormous. Advertising models built around human attention, SEO strategies optimized for human behavior, website architectures, rate limits, and user experiences designed for people, all of them are being challenged by a machine-first internet. A fundamental transition is underway. The web was built for humans. Increasingly, it's being used by AI. And now, humans are no longer the majority.

  • 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.

  • lordofblocks
    David J. (@lordofblocks) reported

    @jpschroeder OpenAI’s enterprise pipeline is still maturing. Cloudflare walks in with hundreds of thousands of paying customers already trusting them with network security.

  • Bendini_Lambert
    Publius McDeere (@Bendini_Lambert) reported

    @RNR_0 Cloudflare hosted custom MCP using cloudflare tunnel and cloudflare worker. The api keys are never seen by the ai. I had Claude code hook it up to TOTP. I registered that is on my authenticator app and the MCP has a “submit TOTP” tool. I text the agent the code and it unlocks the other tools for an hour

  • tebayoso
    Jorge (@tebayoso) reported

    Last month, I got billed 900 USD because @cloudflare seems to be unable to reflect real-time updates in their billing APIs. I opened a ticket about the problem, and, since it is obviously a blocker for me to use their services, I didn't receive a response, and their billing panel is still broken. How can I reliably build anything on top of them if I can't even figure out the costs? @CloudflareDev I could also use a refund, since this is broken.

  • ansizinolanlar
    Ansızın Olanlar (@ansizinolanlar) reported

    @oha1th3r3 @jpwexperience @Vultr Yeah, something weird is definitely going on. Sites using Vultr DNS are working, but the ones behind Cloudflare aren’t. However, Cloudflare-backed sites on other providers seem fine, so it looks like the Vultr network might be affected.

  • Dave89579103
    Dave from Wokington. (@Dave89579103) reported

    @RDKLInc @eevblog Netscape - Andreessen is worth $2 billion, and because of Netscape was able to invest in; OpenAi, SpaceX, Stripe, Coinbase, Airbnb, Facebook, GitHub, Skype, Instagram, Lyft, Roblox, Pintrest, Slack, Cloudflare, Anduril, Anthropic.... Not bad for a browser programmer.

  • psankar
    psankar (@psankar) reported

    Hetzner OVH offer bare metal servers but their VPS suffer the same perf issues still cheaper than the three big players. Cloudflare went on a tangential serverless way and metered billing, ala heroku types that I am not a fan of. May be MetaCloud will build something appealing.

  • BuyTheDiplo
    BuyTheDiplo (@BuyTheDiplo) reported

    My top 10 SaaS watchlist: $MSFT Microsoft The king of enterprise software. Office, Teams, Azure, GitHub, Copilot. Not pure SaaS, but it owns the business software stack. $NOW ServiceNow Runs workflows for large companies. IT, HR, customer service, automation. Boring product, elite business model. $CRM Salesforce The customer relationship management giant. Sales, marketing, service, data, AI agents. The question is growth reacceleration. $ADBE Adobe Creative software monopoly. Photoshop, Acrobat, Creative Cloud, Firefly AI. Huge margins, but AI disruption risk is real. $CRWD CrowdStrike Cybersecurity SaaS. Protects companies from hacks. Cyber is not optional spending anymore. $DDOG Datadog Cloud monitoring and observability. Helps companies see what is breaking across apps, servers, AI workloads, and cloud systems. $SNOW Snowflake Data cloud. Helps companies store, organize, and use massive data sets. Big AI upside if enterprise data spending accelerates. $NET Cloudflare Internet infrastructure layer. Security, speed, edge computing, developer tools. Expensive, but strategically important. $WDAY Workday HR and finance software for large companies. Payroll, hiring, employee data, planning. Sticky because replacing it is painful. $MDB MongoDB Database software for modern apps. Developers like it, AI apps need flexible data, but valuation and competition matter.

  • MLPSandy
    SandyFortune (@MLPSandy) reported

    My first OPNsense issue. There were supposed to be plugins for dynamic DNS, but each one has very recently gone "we're deleting everything except cloudflare, just move to that." What sort of patch note is that? You all JUST HAD everything, I'm not moving to cloudflare wtf

  • adelbucetta
    Adel Bucetta (@adelbucetta) reported

    @wishee0 @Cloudflare @CloudflareDev the honest answer is that most interns don't get to work on scale problems, let alone get to work with the workflows team at cloudflare. kudos to you for having the opportunity

  • 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.

  • rightsofrefusal
    Whoa! Shut It Down (@rightsofrefusal) reported

    @CultLaser @HoffmanTactical Cloudflare told me the website was down last night when I went to order one and now it says it's all sold out. 😭

  • DarrenW85300420
    Darren Ware (@DarrenW85300420) reported

    This is genuinely wild. Cloudflare just dropped new Radar data saying bots and AI traffic makes up 57.5% of all HTML webpage requests on their network. Humans are down to 42.5%. They handle about 20% of the whole internet, so this is a big deal. Their CEO said the agent

  • __jmn
    Jamin ☦️🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 (@__jmn) reported

    @SteveSimple @oomahq Only been renting hash for a few days now but generally my public ip only changes if there is a power cut, causing my router to reboot. I'm using ddns with cloudflare for several services and it seems to work flawlessly so far so I never notice a drop after a reboot.

  • bbnomrr
    halil k (@bbnomrr) reported

    @Cloudflare Actually I have just two rules: 1. Never tell everything you know.

  • RYUSEI2020_0203
    トラッキー (@RYUSEI2020_0203) reported

    This is honestly insane. Cloudflare just shared new data — bots and AI traffic now make up 57.5% of all HTML requests on their network. Humans? Just 42.5%. They handle about 20% of the whole internet, so this isn't a tiny sample. Their CEO says the agentic AI wave

  • SnowarSnowind
    snowar (@SnowarSnowind) reported

    It's honestly wild. Cloudflare just shared data — bots & 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 is huge. Their CEO says the agentic AI wave hit way faster t

  • Rus_Khairullin
    Ruslan Khairullin (@Rus_Khairullin) reported

    AI and bots just officially passed humans in internet traffic volume. They now make up 57% of all online activity. Real users are down to just 43%, according to Cloudflare co-founder Matthew Prince. This kind of crossover wasn’t supposed to happen until the end of the year. AI is moving too fast for the original timeline. Dead internet theory is no longer a theory. 🫠

  • Byteborg69
    Byteborg 69 (@Byteborg69) reported

    US NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY USING UNRELEASED ANTHROPIC AI MODEL MYTHOS FOR OFFENSIVE CYBER OPERATIONS. CLOUDFLARE NOTES AI AGENTS COMPRISE MUCH CURRENT NETWORK TRAFFIC, SOME MALICIOUS.

  • rankijdmtnou
    rowlo (@rankijdmtnou) reported

    @jackfriks @Cloudflare @supabase Cloud flare is a solid choice. InI think it efevn be cheaper if you use Heztner (minio) if you need someone to help manage this and do other annoying backend work in hours , im down . Tried dming you