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Cloudflare Outage Map

The map below depicts the most recent cities worldwide where Cloudflare users have reported problems and outages. If you are having an issue with Cloudflare, make sure to submit a report below

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The heatmap above shows where the most recent user-submitted and social media reports are geographically clustered. The density of these reports is depicted by the color scale as shown below.

Cloudflare users affected:

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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.

Most Affected Locations

Outage reports and issues in the past 15 days originated from:

Location Reports
Noida, UP 2
Augsburg, Bavaria 1
Bengaluru, KA 1
Montataire, Hauts-de-France 1
London, England 1
Greater Noida, UP 1
Attleborough, England 1
Colima, COL 1
Leuven, Flanders 1
New Delhi, NCT 2
Mâcon, Bourgogne-Franche-Comté 1
Amsterdam, nh 1
Ashburn, VA 1
Rosario, SF 1
Merlo, BA 1
Frankfurt am Main, Hesse 1
Birmingham, AL 1
Dayton, OH 1
Miami, FL 1
Osnabrück, Lower Saxony 1
Bulandshahr, UP 1
A Coruña, Galicia 1
Easton, PA 2
Guayaquil, Guayas 1
El Port de Sagunt, Valencia 1
Medellín, Antioquia 2
Padova, Veneto 1
Farnham, England 1
Goiânia, GO 1
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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:

  • DRessurect
    DarkRessurect (@DRessurect) reported

    @Saviisenpaii Cloudflare problems it seems

  • joanbadiavalls
    Brandon Marin (@joanbadiavalls) reported

    $NET Cloudflare had a nice 3x beat, but the stock is down by nearly 20% after hours. The stock has been priced beyond perfection, but hopefully this marks a shift to a more reasonable valuation where I can buy it. They also announced a layoff of around 20% of their workforce, alluding to part of the reason being AI. "Cloudflare's usage of AI has increased by more than 600% in the last three months alone."

  • ReelDad
    ReelDad (@ReelDad) reported

    I am the Director of Workforce Architecture at Cloudflare. Our headcount went from 5,156 to roughly 4,000 yesterday. Q1 revenue was $640 million. Up 34% year over year. Matthew opened the earnings call by saying we had a very strong start to 2026. I was on the call. I clapped. The blog post we published is titled “Building for the Future.” I helped name it. The first line of the email tells 1,100 employees we are reducing the workforce by more than 1,100 employees globally. The second line says this decision is not a reflection of the individual work or talent of those leaving us. I wrote the second line. In the last three months, internal Cloudflare AI usage has gone up more than 600%. Engineering, HR, finance, marketing. Thousands of agent sessions per day. We are our own most demanding customer. That’s the line Michelle and Matthew put in the email. I keep a slide of that line in my onboarding deck. When an analyst asked Matthew on the call why this would make us stronger, he said just because you are fit does not mean you cannot get fitter. I added the quote to the talking-points archive under “Operating Model / Founder Voice.” Severance and restructuring will cost between $140 million and $150 million for 2026. Q2 guidance is 30% growth. We are not in distress. We are operating at the pace and discipline of an agentic AI-first company. That phrase is mine. I introduced it in a Q4 strategy memo. I recommended that we say agentic-AI-first instead of AI-first because agentic-AI-first cannot be benchmarked yet. The recommendation was accepted. The roles we are reducing are roles we have determined are not the roles we need for the future. I built the matrix. The matrix has columns for AI agent substitutability, function criticality, and operating-model fit. The matrix does not have a column for tenure. We removed tenure in the second draft. We removed empathy in the third. The matrix is now a single sheet. That’s discipline. Most of the people leaving are in support functions for the people directly talking to customers and directly creating code. Matthew said this on the call. The productivity gains from those frontline employees have been incredible. The support roles behind them are not going to be the roles that drive companies going forward. I am a support role behind a frontline employee. I am the role that decides which support roles are not the roles. That is a different category. I confirmed this with my manager. He confirmed it with his. The communications plan we executed yesterday had three phases. Phase one was the all-hands. Phase two was the blog post. Phase three was the earnings call. The order matters. The stock is down 24% this morning. The market needs time to internalize the operating model. I keep a printed copy of the matrix in my desk drawer. I scan my badge to get into the building every morning. The badge still works.

  • techedgedaily
    TechEdgeDaily (@techedgedaily) reported

    Cloudflare just cut 1,100+ employees via email. The reason: restructuring for the “agentic AI era.” Coinbase cut 14% and called it “rebuilding as an intelligence with humans around the edge.” Salesforce froze all engineering hiring. Microsoft offered voluntary retirement to 7% of its workforce. Now Cloudflare joins the list. Every company is using the same three words to justify layoffs: agentic AI era. The playbook is identical. Cut humans. Invest in AI infrastructure. Tell the remaining employees they need to do more with less. 81,747 tech layoffs in Q1 2026. That number is not slowing down. It is accelerating. The part that never makes the headline: 1,100 people found out they lost their jobs through an email. Not a meeting. Not a call. Not a conversation with their manager. An email. From a company that sells communication infrastructure.

  • praveenkoka
    Praveen Koka (@praveenkoka) reported

    What Cloudflare has done is publish a template. Fire the support layer. Keep the quota carriers. Attribute the reduction to AI efficiency. Report record revenue in the same breath. This is a replicable playbook and profitable tech companies have every reason to follow it. Every business unit that doesn't directly own revenue is now answerable to the same question: can an AI agent do this for 1/10th the cost? For a growing number of roles, the answer in 2026 is yes.

  • TxRecon1
    Attas (@TxRecon1) reported

    @zerohedge Good. Cloudflare sucks.

  • AnthonyDiBs
    Anthony DiBenedetto (@AnthonyDiBs) reported

    $NET is a good reminder that “AI beneficiary” is not enough. Cloudflare reported a strong Q1 on the surface. Revenue grew 34% to $639.8M. Non-GAAP operating income was $73.1M. Free cash flow was $84.1M. Full-year guidance was raised. But the stock still got hit. Why? Because the market looked past the headline growth and focused on the quality of that growth. Gross margin fell to 72.8%, down from 77.1% last year. Q2 revenue guidance implies growth slowing to around 30%. And Cloudflare announced it would cut roughly 1,100 employees as it reorganizes around an “agentic AI-first operating model.” That is the tension. Cloudflare may absolutely benefit from AI. More agents. More traffic. More security needs. More developer activity. More edge workloads. But AI is not just a demand tailwind. It can also be a margin test. More infrastructure demand means more investment, more compute cost, and more pressure to prove the economics scale. The bigger point: The market is moving beyond “who has AI exposure?” It wants to know who can turn AI demand into durable, profitable growth. That is the Cloudflare debate.

  • asad_ch3
    Asad Ali (@asad_ch3) reported

    @thinklikekai @dr_cintas Wtf you saying, bypass cloudflare is not piece of cake

  • wijdanri
    Wijdan (@wijdanri) reported

    React Server Components vulnerabilities are starting to feel like a subscription you never signed up for. Another batch just landed - 12 CVEs across React and Next.js. DoS, middleware bypass, SSRF, XSS, cache poisoning. High to low severity. Cloudflare has WAF rules in place for some, but explicitly said several are impossible to mitigate without breaking apps. Bottom line: update your deps. • React: 19.0.6 / 19.1.7 / 19.2.6 • Next.js: 15.5.16 / 16.2.5

  • jasonlk
    Jason ✨👾SaaStr.Ai✨ Lemkin (@jasonlk) reported

    We're back. The B2B Reacceleration Is Real. Twilio, Atlassian, Datadog, Cloudflare, and Palantir just proved it. HubSpot and Shopify still have to. Seven of B2B's most-watched names released earnings this week. Growth is back: 🟣 Datadog: First $1B quarter ever. 32% growth. Stock +28%, biggest pop ever. 5 products at $100M+ ARR. Anthropic on an 8-figure deal. 🔴 Twilio: 4% → 20%. Highest growth in 3 years. Voice fastest in 19 quarters. 🔵 Atlassian: 32% growth, stock +30% in a day. Cloud reaccelerated to 29%. Rovo customers grow ARR at 2x non-Rovo. 🔵 Cloudflare: 34% growth + 1,100-person workforce cut on the same day to "go AI-first." Revenue accelerating, headcount restructuring on the back of internal AI productivity. First time I've seen this combo at this scale. 🟡 Palantir: 85% growth. Highest ever as a public company. US revenue +104%. Rule of 40 = 145%. 11 straight quarters of acceleration. 🟠 HubSpot: Beat the quarter but the "reacceleration" disappears in constant currency. Held the line at 18% CC for 5 straight quarters. Bears were wrong, seats + customers strong. But AI reacceleration hasn't started yet. 🟢 Shopify: $100B GMV quarter. Strong, but pinned in the same 27-34% band for 7 quarters. Q2 guided down to high-twenties. AI commerce is still a slide, not a dollar. 3 things this tells founders: - The "AI is killing B2B" narrative peaked at the bottom. Even the names that didn't reaccelerate held. - Reacceleration shows up as a step-function, not a trend. - AI products tied to measurable revenue lift get rerated. AI features and positioning get a multiple haircut. Atlassian (Rovo +2x ARR), Twilio (voice acceleration), Datadog (Anthropic deal), Cloudflare (workforce restructure on internal AI), Palantir (entire company) all got rewarded. HubSpot and Shopify got sold or held flat. The bottom seems in. For those that have found how to tap into AI budget. Per-seat pricing isn't dead. Vibe coding didn't kill these leaders. But the agents are still coming.

  • ErRahul337
    rahul (@ErRahul337) reported

    🚨 Another Bad News 🚨 Cloudflare lays off 1,100 employees globally.

  • 6oliver6
    Oliver (@6oliver6) reported

    @KaranVaidya6 @composio are the Cloudflare non-engineers useful here because theyve seen the weird customer edge cases up close?

  • paramdipu
    Paramjit Mahapatro (@paramdipu) reported

    Cloudflare is paying affected employees full base pay through end of 2026 + US healthcare. That's generous. But it's still a pink slip. The severance doesn't change the signal. 💀

  • perfectangelgal
    bethy (@perfectangelgal) reported

    Can cloudflare fix its **** pls

  • modpotatos
    modpotato (@modpotatos) reported

    is cloudflare down again or like whats goiing on

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