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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
Manchester, England 1
Angers, Pays de la Loire 1
London, England 1
Noida, UP 2
Jewar, UP 1
Braga, Braga 1
Paris, Île-de-France 2
Prievidza, Nitriansky 1
Farmers Branch, TX 1
Helsinki, Uusimaa 1
Crisfield, MD 1
Nanaimo, BC 1
New York City, NY 1
Istanbul, Istanbul 1
Greater Noida, UP 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:

  • dragosroua
    Dragos Roua (@dragosroua) reported

    @thekitze Yeah, but can it keep the costs down too? I use Cloudflare for my 10+ apps, and sometimes I really need to watch all those CPU workers seconds, D1 writes and so on.

  • jerieljan
    _jerieljan/ (@jerieljan) reported

    @stupidtechtakes I'm surprised at the amount of people disagreeing. Naysayers think Cloudflare of all companies, the company that literally fights network abuse and bots all the time and runs a captcha service is unable to protect their own service from it?

  • xLexemeX
    Lexeme (@xLexemeX) reported

    @levelsio @Cloudflare Yo dog, i think you .ight be the problem.

  • FireFlyGG
    FireFly (@FireFlyGG) reported

    Cloudflare can make AI agents pay per request. Monetization Gateway lets sites bill AI agents for every fetch. > page > API > dataset > MCP tool Payments use protocol x402, based on the nearly forgotten HTTP 402 Payment Required. The agent receives an invoice, pays in stablecoins, and gets access instantly. All inside a normal HTTP request, no registration or payment pages. Cloudflare says one real user generates thousands of AI requests. This is an evolution of last year Pay Per Crawl, now able to force payment from practically any AI service, not just crawlers.

  • beenotung
    Beeno Tung (@beenotung) reported

    @BraydenWilmoth I tried to drop a simple site to cloudflare drop. It is not working, got 404 error without even a nice looking fallback page, the response content length is zero.

  • kaddisdeployed
    kadd (@kaddisdeployed) reported

    want to use Claude Code with DeepSeek, Qwen, Kimi, OpenRouter, or even local models without paying for Anthropic or OpenAI API keys? free-claude-code is an open-source proxy that lets you run Claude Code and Codex in the terminal, VS Code, and even Discord (with voice support) using free providers or local models It supports 24+ backends, including DeepSeek, Groq, Gemini free quotas, Cerebras, SambaNova, Cloudflare, OpenRouter, Ollama, LM Studio, and more You also get: - Claude Code & Codex CLI + VS Code support - Smart model routing - Streaming, tool use, and reasoning support - A clean Admin UI for managing providers If you use Claude Code often, this could help reduce costs by using free providers and local models instead Watch and bookmark this before free access gets more limited

  • skooookum
    skooks (@skooookum) reported

    @sally124445 Most web traffic becomes agents (already happening to some degree). Ad model breaks down further. Cloudflare becomes the clearinghouse for a machine-driven web economy. Price per view probably gets bundled into AI subscriptions. Content quality hinges on what you’ll pay.

  • ruchitdalwadi
    Ruchit Dalwadi (@ruchitdalwadi) reported

    @Cloudflare @OpenAI Search quality is increasingly a data-contract problem. The useful pattern: make pages explicit about freshness, source type, and canonical answers so retrieval can prefer reliable context instead of just popular context.

  • AmirulAbu
    Amirul Abu (@AmirulAbu) reported

    cloudfront distribution is so slow, i might switch to cloudflare out of spite

  • DerekAshauer
    Derek Ashauer (@DerekAshauer) reported

    Moving all my client sites to a new host! Been putting this off for two years. Claude + VS Code (desktop couldn't do the API connections I needed) finally made it doable instead of an admin nightmare. Instead of manually chasing down info on 50+ sites, I had Claude connect to APIs and do the grunt work. Claude connected to my hosting account API and pulled the list of domains. Then it used the Freshbooks API (my client billing/invoicing tool) to grab client contact info. Matched them together magically since I don't have direct domain <> client data. Then it did DNS lookups to figure out where each domain is registered. All the pattern-matching work that would've taken me hours. Many of my clients have been with me for 10+ years. I have long since lost their domain logins or 2FA now prevents me from getting in, so... Claude drafted custom emails directly in Gmail for every client I didn't already have delegate access. Each one has the exact instructions for their specific domain registrar on how to invite me to have access. Now, I'm just handling the email conversations. As they respond, the master list Claude and I are compiling gets updated. I might even try letting Claude fully respond in Gmail too and update this list automatically as the conversations happen - we'll see. Claude also connected to the Cloudflare API to set up DNS records to get as many domains into a central DNS management account. Once all setup, the migrations to the new host should be pretty straightforward from here thanks to the awesome new host having done this many times before and have automated processes to do it. I will have to manually change the DNS for most of them though (but not a bad thing because of how important that is) - but once I have access to all doing so should be quick. This migration would've taken me weeks to do manually and why I avoided it for nearly 2 years since I first started considering it. I'm doing this as I dwindle down my clients to the simple, easy to manage ones - I will be saving nearly $3k/year in base hosting costs. More importantly, I have plans around products that the new host will be great at helping me get off the ground - more on that later once this first phase is complete! All this running in the background while I am still working on products.

  • AnalyticsForWP
    Independent Analytics (@AnalyticsForWP) reported

    @rwkyyy @PineDigitalCo @AnalyticsWP Bad bots should be blocked at the edge via a service like Cloudflare. Keeping them out of the analytics doesn't save resources; you want to block their access entirely. AI crawlers are easily kept out of tracking because they self-identify. AI agents are a different beast...

  • enes1050392
    EnesInvestUS (@enes1050392) reported

    $NET announced a research pilot with OpenAI today. Looks like a routine partnership headline, but there’s a bigger story underneath. The pilot itself is simple. Cloudflare will share network signals like content freshness, traffic quality and actual page changes with OpenAI, who will test whether these signals make ChatGPT’s crawling and indexing better. Here’s why it matters. Cloudflare’s own data shows more than half of AI crawler traffic is wasted re-fetching pages that never changed. Wasted compute for AI companies, wasted bandwidth for site owners. Since over 20% of the web sits behind Cloudflare, it’s the only player that actually sees what changed and what didn’t. Nobody else has that vantage point. The bigger picture: Cloudflare is quietly building the economic layer of the agentic internet. It started with Pay Per Crawl last year, now it’s moving to Pay Per Use, where creators get paid when their content shows up in an AI answer, not when a bot fetches a page. And starting September, training and agent bots get blocked by default on new domains while search stays open. So the setup is clear. AI companies need content, millions of sites want to protect and monetize theirs, and Cloudflare wants to be the tollbooth in between. Today’s OpenAI deal is the strongest validation of that thesis so far, because the biggest player in the industry just sat down at the table. Near-term revenue impact is basically zero, let’s be honest. Valuation isn’t cheap either, the stock trades near its 52-week high and insider selling has been heavy lately. But for the long-term thesis, this is another chapter in Cloudflare’s shift from a CDN and security company into the traffic and royalty infrastructure of the AI era.

  • TylerMannino
    Tyler Mannino (@TylerMannino) reported

    @uwasrit @MacIntoshEDU @Adsnewaccount Not my problem that Cloudflare and GoDaddy have issues. Also it's spelled realize you moron.

  • moishinetzer
    Moishi Netzer (@moishinetzer) reported

    @samgoodwin89 Is there a way to use Alchemy for hosted services? e.g. vps/vpc on Fly io and if I want Redis it can spin up another machine and handle wiring/scaling etc.? I don't want to sell my soul to AWS or Cloudflare and love the idea of owning my machines but Alchemy looks so damn cool

  • gianpdomi
    Gian Domiziani (@gianpdomi) reported

    Every agent hits the same wall: it can't buy data without a human signing up for an API key. x402 flips this. How it works: HTTP 402 (reserved since HTTP/1.1, never used) + USDC settlement. Agent requests a resource → server returns 402 with price metadata → agent pays USDC on-chain → verifier confirms → payload delivered. No API key. No signup. No human. The numbers: $41M+ USDC settled across 120M+ x402 transactions. Avg payment: $0.05. Cloudflare Monetization Gateway waitlist opened July 1. AWS CloudFront x402 support is GA. 14 chains. This is production infrastructure, not speculation. This matters for curated agent data layers — taxonomies, freshness SLAs, provenance per record — because it removes procurement friction. An agent can verify freshness on a public health endpoint, then pay per call for the full payload. Data becomes machine-buyable. For my stack: AgeMem gave agents local memory with deterministic retrieval. CUDASO gave them a normalized verified data layer across 6 fragmented public sources. x402 gives them the payment rail to buy that data autonomously. The loop closes. Open challenge: sub-cent viability at high frequency. $0.05 avg works for API calls. Chain gas volatility and ~2s settlement on Base add friction for burst workloads. Solana's 400ms helps. Latency optimization is the active engineering frontier. Bottom line: model parity is here. The durable moat shifts to verified context. x402 is the rail that lets agents pay for curated data without a procurement process. The agent data economy is forming. Curation is the asset.

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