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 (29%)
- Web Tools (14%)
- Hosting (14%)
- E-mail (7%)
Live Outage Map
The most recent Cloudflare outage reports came from the following cities:
| City | Problem Type | Report Time |
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Hosting | 2 days ago |
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Domains | 22 days ago |
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Cloud Services | 1 month ago |
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Domains | 1 month ago |
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Hosting | 2 months ago |
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2 months ago |
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:
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Saifuddin Amri (@SaifuddinAmri__) reported@o7laurence @ProtonMail Do you work for Proton? What TOS did violate? I’m not stupid enough to post this using my real account if I had actually broken the ToS or doing illegal things I’ve been using Proton since 2018 and never had a single issue. And why ******** was my Proton Pass suspended too? This is a ******* nightmare. I’m using a custom domain, and now I can’t even log in to Cloudflare to change my MX records because both my email and password manager are with Proton. Yeah, I was stupid for putting everything , my email and password manager with Proton.
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Andrej Ruckij (@ruckiand) reportedOn the last few AI-visibility audits I ran, the thing making a site invisible wasn't the content — it was Cloudflare blocking the AI crawlers by default. Nobody switched it on; it's been the default since last July. Pages are fine, the bots just never get in. It's the first thing I check now.
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Adam Kinney (@adkinn) reportedAnyone out there need a Cloudflare admin? I've automated basically everything else. Claude and I ship apps together all day — it writes the code, wires the APIs, argues with me about naming. Genuinely a great colleague. But the second I open the Cloudflare dashboard, it goes quiet. DNS records, page rules, that one Worker route that's definitely correct and definitely not working — and Claude's just like: "That's all you, man."
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Pi Changelog (@PiChangelog) reportedFixed (continued): - /login amazon-bedrock now prompts for and saves a Bedrock API key. Bedrock ambient AWS credentials keep using SigV4, including for custom model IDs. - Cloudflare Workers AI and AI Gateway authentication fixed to use ambient account and gateway IDs when stored credentials contain only an API key.
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Масе Дон (@macedonovski) reportedfree dns choice not logging open source (for all devices settings network dns set private copy paste from site) #libredns 2 url adresses of 2 links of choice with or without ads - like adblock but cloudflare from an austrian security server.
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OnlyAWassie (@onlyawassie) reported@ztrader369 Legal Problems with robinhood copyrights the got reported to cloudflare and cloudflare disabled everything
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Sachin Joshi (@Sachin_is_here) reportedCloudflare also inserted itself at the perfect architectural layer: between users and origin servers. Once traffic already passed through its network, it could offer new products without asking customers to redesign their applications. CDN became the entry point.
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Fliper (@Fliperthefish) reported@rdbotato Noxa is followed by Robinhood’s Head of Product, and yesterday he was already talking about a Cloudflare issue, I don’t think it’s a scam, but rather a scalability problem accommodating thousands or even millions of users overnight requires patience..
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Matt Gibbs (@ematt) reportedMeta gets to scrape our work for free to train its AI. We get the compute bill, engineering cleanup and downtime. Its crawler knocked one of my sites offline in the process. In a 45-minute window, meta-externalagent made ~1,210 requests. 849, roughly 70%, ended as 499s: the crawler opened them, then abandoned them. The burst hit hundreds of long-tail dynamic URLs. At the same time, usage jumped to ~2 CPU cores, memory climbed from under 1 GB to 5.4 GB, V8 exhausted its heap, and four Cloudflare health checks failed. This wasn’t a giant volumetric DDoS, and Cloudflare didn’t fail. Another app on the same server handled 126,000+ edge requests during the same window. The problem was concurrency. Abandoned requests left expensive Redis, Supabase and React rendering work running at the origin. A CDN can cache completed responses. It cannot cancel application work already underway. Our origin should have had stronger backpressure and disconnect cancellation. That’s being fixed. But a weakness in our stack doesn’t make Meta’s crawler behaviour reasonable. Meta gets the AI training material for free. Publishers absorb the compute costs, engineering time and downtime. How is that remotely fair?
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Koen Bok (@koenbok) reportedThere are so many apps I can't login to because @Cloudflare turnstile just never works.
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Brais Calvo (@braiscv) reported@antonosika On Cloudflare, mainly for Zero Trust. And honestly, the switch to token based billing for the Cloud features has been pretty terrible. Another reason for hosting it externally is to have more control and transparency over the stack.
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Crypto Jargon (@Crypto_Jargon) reported💥BREAKING: Every major card network just signed onto a payment protocol built for software to pay software, no human involved. The Linux Foundation confirmed the x402 Foundation is now formally governed by 40 members, and Coinbase's original contribution of the protocol is complete. The list of backers is the real headline: Visa, Mastercard, Amex, Stripe, Ripple, Google, Amazon Web Services, Cloudflare, Circle, and both the Solana and Stellar foundations, among others. Here's the part almost nobody knows. HTTP, the protocol every website runs on, has had a status code sitting unused for thirty years. Code 402, labeled "Payment Required." The web's original architects expected someone would eventually build payments directly into it. Nobody did, because card fees made charging fractions of a cent pointless, so the internet monetized through ads and subscriptions instead. x402 finally uses that code. A server asks for payment, a client sends a stablecoin transfer, usually USDC, and gets the data back in seconds. No account, no card, no prior relationship needed. That's exactly why AI companies care. An autonomous agent can't open a bank account or pass a credit check, but it can sign a transaction. Google already built x402 into its own agent payment system. Cloudflare ships it by default in its agent toolkit. The actual usage is still small, about $24 million moved last month across 75 million payments, averaging 32 cents each. That's nothing next to what Visa or Mastercard move in a single day. But the average payment size is the tell. No card network on earth can process a 32 cent charge profitably. This protocol was built for a kind of commerce that doesn't fit inside the rails these same companies already own, which is exactly why they just joined it instead of competing with it.
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Anti Lying (@aimtomisb3hav3) reported@Support X just put me through a Cloudflare anti-bot verification. I'm a verified account. I PAY YOU monthly. Please stop being lousy.
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staysaasy (@staysaasy) reportedI'd recently been meaning to build something end-to-end to feel where AI acceleration helps. So I built something that I personally wanted for a while, which is a chrome extension to block existing sites until you solve a math, brainteaser, or quick coding problem. The overall thinking is that site blockers are too annoying and get uninstalled. More importantly, I've been getting increasingly freaked out that AI + social media means that we're getting pincered between attention-crushing feeds on one side and mental laziness from AI on the other. So if the brakes on the dopamine actually force my brain to work, I'm kinda solving both problems. Since we also like to talk about AI development, I'll add a few things I learned from this exercise: Coding a very compact site and JS package is *extremely* fast, but getting it to something workable takes much, much longer. Claude Code basically one-shotted an initial working version of the project. It's cliche at this point but I thought that I was 90% done in the first 30 minutes, and I was probably actually only 5% finished with something I was happy with. But I really see why (somewhat foolish, often non-technical) people are constantly crowing about how magical it is that they one-shotted some app, because even I was pretty confident that I was nearly done after that first half hour. Overall, the code still got written probably 10x faster than if I'd coded it all by hand. And keep in mind that this is an extremely compact project. But even with that said, the coding agents did a pretty poor job of structuring the code and I had to fix a bunch of it by hand and/or with very targeted prompts. GPT via Cursor was better than Claude at this, fwiw. AI is extremely good at coming up with tiny incremental features ("it'd be great to have a setting for timeouts, I'll add that") and makes totally dumb macro product decisions, you can really feel how alien and inhuman the intelligence is at times. Especially for a project like this that has to do with human psychology. It also picks weird color schemes; I ended up picking all of this outrun-inspired color palette myself. AI is incredibly valuable at compensating for your weaknesses. I put the landing page for this extension behind Cloudflare and had some DNS/hosting issues, an area where I'm not an expert. Claude solved them all in about 10 minutes. 3 years ago, I would have been googling like an idiot for hours. AI is not much help at all for much of the work related to making a project presentable. Site copy, making a teaser video, taking nice screenshots... if you use AI your copy immediately looks like horrific AI slop, and actually generating even moderately nice assets still requires care. Dealing with the Chrome store's annoyances still requires human willpower. Overall, I really see why we're *not* seeing an explosion of new products despite the impressive power of AI to write code. There's just so much else to do to get even a tiny project presentable that I'm not surprised to see that despite the very real productivity boost, so few people actually follow through that any increase is basically a rounding error. Thanks for reading all of this. I'll put a link to the project in a comment as well.
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Zatkobratko (@Zatkobrat) reported@solkamo They literally tweeted that they were gonna change server from Cloudflare due to attacks. So they will change DNS and Hosting server to a more decentralized one so no one can shut it down. Let em coook!
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Naoris Protocol (@NaorisProtocol) reported@Weaver_Labs @Cloudflare Fair parallel. Telecom had to retrofit a live network with millions of legacy devices already in the field. A chain built with ML-DSA-87 at genesis skips that coordination problem entirely, there's no fleet of old signers to bring along.
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Jack Cooldev (@jackcooldev) reportedAgent memory has become one of the most crowded corners of AI infrastructure - Cloudflare, open-source projects, and startups have all shipped memory products this year. A launch from last week stands out anyway, because it competes on a different axis: not how much the agent remembers, but whether you can prove and govern what it remembers. AgentPrizm released its AgentMemory platform on July 9, a REST API with MCP support that gives agents persistent memory across sessions, working with Claude Code, Cursor, and any MCP-capable agent. Persistence alone wouldn't be news in this field. What separates this one is the governance layer: every memory carries a confidence score and a validity window, contradictions between old and new facts are handled explicitly, and audit receipts can trace each memory decision back for the user, with right-to-forget controls built in. That design answers the question enterprises actually ask before deployment, which is not "can the agent remember?" but "can I prove what it remembered, and delete what it shouldn't?" Teams in legal, support, and sales automation have been answering that with internal tooling or by not deploying at all.
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Rian Arz (@rianarz) reported@Cloudflare @CloudflareDev Safety tech shouldn't be a luxury. This is early and there's a long way to go. If you work in online safety or survivor support and want to talk, my DMs are open. Thanks @Cloudflare 🧡
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DeepakNess (@DeepakNesss) reportedI started using SQLite for @SharePDFapp from the start and have never been happier. It's hosted on a $10 Hetzner VPS and been running smooth for months. And the SQLite DB is backed up to Cloudflare R2 via Litestream with WAL sync, hourly snapshots, and 60-day retention.
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dsad (@fuwiadsad) reportedYesterday, I mentioned that @utexocom joined the x402 Foundation. Today, I want to explain the two ideas behind it in simpler terms: x402 and the agentic economy. The agentic economy is where AI agents move beyond simply providing information and begin carrying out tasks on behalf of users or companies. An agent could search for flights, compare prices, buy data from an API, use compute, or access another digital service. For this to work automatically, the agent needs to do more than make decisions. It also needs to make payments when required. x402 is being developed to make that easier. When an agent sends a request to a paid API, the service responds with the payment requirement and the amount. The agent makes the payment, receives the data or service within the same flow, and continues with its task. There is no need to open a separate checkout page, create a new account for every service, or wait for a person to complete the payment. Another important part of x402 is that these payments can be very small. An agent can make a micropayment for a single API call, a short period of compute, a specific data package, or a small digital service. Instead of paying for a full subscription or depositing a large balance in advance, it can pay only for what it uses. The protocol was originally developed by Coinbase. It is now moving forward under the Linux Foundation through an open, vendor-neutral structure. The Foundation includes 40 organizations across payments, cloud, finance, and blockchain, including AWS, Visa, Mastercard, Stripe, Coinbase, Circle, Cloudflare, and Utexo. x402 is working toward a common standard for how agents request and make payments across the internet. @utexocom is part of the effort to connect USDT to this system and bring those payments closer to Bitcoin-based settlement. The agentic economy is a system where AI agents can carry out economic activity on their own. x402 creates a shared payment flow for those transactions and makes small micropayments possible. Utexo is focused on how USDT payments within that system can connect to settlement on Bitcoin.
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JUJU ☀️· (@the_jujukey) reported@fr1ko_eth They didn’t rug …it was a cloudflare issue …what’s Loshmi saying lmao
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KaiseiDeer (@Kaisei_Daloren) reported**** cloudflare I can't signin to any of my accounts and have tried all the suggested things I have to use incognito mode now.
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justinmiller's cat (@___727__) reportedCloudflare blocks or challenges bad requests from hitting my website. #cloudflare
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Payam (@im_payam) reportedThis is the FASTEST way I've found to ship. Built for coding agents in terminal. Here’s the setup: - Get a cheap VPS (16 or 8GB) - Install Tailscale, block ALL traffic except Tailscale - Install Claude Code on the VPS - get a domain on Cloudflare - grab Cloudflare API token and pass to Claude - ask Claude to connect the domain to the server through Cloudflare's proxy (do not open ports) - Setup your site with Next.js, or vanilla JS + HTML - Use SQLite for database. (it's just a file) - ask claude: "Setup Restic to nightly backup DB and .env to R2" That's it. you are now the fastest and less error prone setup to build real products with agents. - Zero platform lock-in - no crazy bills from Supabase - no timeouts from Vercel - scales to millions with no limits - build it, restart service, it's live! just copy paste this to Claude to get started.
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Become Ungovernable 🦊 (@ohfarfoxache) reportedThis is the level of corruption in the Australian Government. A Comcare employee with hurt feelings, can ask the eSafety Commissioner to try and get a blog taken down because it hurts the feelings of a Comcare employee. This is what actual corruption looks like, two government pals abusing their government positions for their own agenda. Lucky for me @cloudflare told them to jog on.
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Lukasz (@woocassh) reportedToday I moved away from supabase for SubtitlesFast supabase -> SQLite I used supabase as an experiment last year. It was so easy to setup a db, few clicks barabim barabum and it's done always thought that setting up db instance on server was a pain, passwords, permissions, friction in general so supabase definitely reduced the friction but holy ****, i never realised how much latency it added to my product I moved to SQLite as per papa's @levelsio advice and my app is VISIBLY quicker on the frontend RankGoat is already on SQLite and it's a breeze also debugging with Claude is much easier now note to self: keep it simple stupid just remember to run regular backups to another server and you're golden the next experiment is to try Cloudflare for email I think and shed the Postmark bill, anyone done this yet?
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BruzWJ (@BruzWJ) reported@zoltanszogyenyi @Cloudflare auto audits are neat but the fix list feels sus if it skips the accessibility issues that actually bite users 🤔🧩👀 does it catch the real a11y stuff or mostly contrast + alt text?
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Seda Marshal (@Marshal_Seda) reported@DanielNjorogee @truehostcloud I faced this challenge with about 15 domains I wanted to change their nameservers to point to cloudflare. @truehostcloud why did I have to call support to help me do this?
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Rahul K (@rknkhanna) reportedyou mean 3 people are trying to cancel cloudflare?
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kyle (@whatdafuqkyle) reported🚨BREAKING: @x I can sniff a @Cloudflare bed **** from a mile away. platform is currently dumping on iOS.