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
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:
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 | 2 |
| Noida, UP | 3 |
| Jewar, UP | 1 |
| Braga, Braga | 1 |
| Paris, Île-de-France | 2 |
| Prievidza, Nitriansky | 1 |
| Farmers Branch, TX | 1 |
| Helsinki, Uusimaa | 1 |
| Crisfield, MD | 2 |
| Nanaimo, BC | 1 |
| New York City, NY | 1 |
| Istanbul, Istanbul | 1 |
| Greater Noida, UP | 2 |
| Augsburg, Bavaria | 1 |
| Bengaluru, KA | 1 |
| Montataire, Hauts-de-France | 1 |
| Attleborough, England | 1 |
| Colima, COL | 1 |
| Leuven, Flanders | 1 |
| New Delhi, NCT | 1 |
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:
-
That Boosted Snep 🔜 Megaplex (@witch_the_snep) reported@joesmith1457 @DoorDash_Help It looks like its cloudflare thats having issue. That who hosts doordash’s website
-
Flandermaxx (@Flandermaxx) reportedA 28 year old Chinese engineer in Singapore bills 11 SaaS startups $63,400 a month for inference they think is running on AWS H100s. Forty NVIDIA Jetson Orin Nano boards stacked inside three IKEA boxes on the floor. A used Quest 3 on the bed. A half empty can of Yeo's chrysanthemum tea on the windowsill, still cold. The whole farm draws less power than his electric kettle. Each Jetson runs Llama 3.3 70B through MLC LLM, quantized to 4 bit. Each one serves embeddings, classification, and draft outputs at $0.40 per million tokens. OpenAI charges $0.60 for the same. A Cloudflare worker rewrites the response headers to read like an AWS us-east-1 region. The startups never check. They never asked. pause at 0:22, the camera holds on the IKEA boxes for two seconds. Everyone saw moving boxes. Almost nobody saw the holes drilled in the back. They were not for shelf pegs. They were the GPU intake. $63,400 in. $0 OpenAI bill. Hardware paid for itself in 11 weeks. His dad still thinks he is studying for the GMAT. He still calls home every Sunday at 8 p.m. He still says he has not picked a school. He still wears the same Uniqlo hoodie in every video call. He still has not mentioned the Stripe dashboard. A data center has racks, cooling, redundancy. He has three IKEA boxes, a kettle, forty boards humming quieter than the AC.
-
PunkXBT (@PunkXBT_) reported@dr00shie that’s not even bad luck at that point, that’s just infra choosing violence specifically on your deploy window lol. cloudflare said “not today” twice in a row. @dr00shie follow back? let’s grow the circle
-
KarenR (@heykarenrc) reportedWhen I built d1-studio, I was still early in my transition from UX to development. At first, I just wanted the simplest stack possible. Something lean. Something affordable. Something I could build with fast. Like many new devs, I started with the familiar stack: Next.js. Supabase. Vercel. AI helping me along the way. Supabase was great to get started. I still like it. But as I built more products, I started noticing the small costs and tradeoffs that you only understand after shipping. Storage. Egress. Deployment limits. The usual “newbie learns the hard way” stuff. That pushed me to look for a stack that fit how I wanted to build. Then I found Cloudflare. Workers. Pages. D1. R2. Queues. Generous free tier. Simple deployment. Close to the edge. I slowly moved more of my projects there and never really looked back. But there was one thing that kept slowing me down: Cloudflare D1 local development. D1 is great, but working with the database locally felt too slow. I didn’t want to keep jumping between CLI commands just to inspect tables, edit rows, run SQL, or check data while building. I also didn’t want a tool that required a long setup. My thinking was simple: The database is already in my Cloudflare project. The wrangler.toml is already there. Why can’t a studio just detect it and work? That became the trigger for D1 Studio. A native database studio for Cloudflare D1. No complicated setup. No extra database connection string. No heavy workflow. Just run it inside your project and start working with your D1 database faster. You can inspect tables, edit data, run SQL, and work with local or remote D1 without fighting the CLI every few minutes. It started as a tool I needed for myself. Now it’s getting used by other Cloudflare developers too. This week it hit 311 weekly downloads. Not a huge number in the grand scheme of things, but for me it means a lot. Because this is the first product I built that truly came from my own pain. Not a random idea. Not a trend. Not something I forced. Just a problem I kept hitting until I finally built the tool I wished existed. That’s been the biggest lesson for me as I move from design into development: The best products are often not born from brainstorming. They come from friction. Something feels slower than it should. Something takes too many steps. Something breaks your flow. And eventually you think: “There has to be a better way.” That’s how D1 Studio started. And seeing people use it for their own Cloudflare projects is still one of the best feelings.
-
Nav Toor (@heynavtoor) reportedThe Dead Internet Theory was a conspiracy. The idea that the internet is no longer human. That bots and AI have quietly replaced real people. It started on anonymous message boards in 2019. Most people dismissed it. Stanford, Imperial College London, and the Internet Archive just measured it. They used the Wayback Machine to scan every new website published between 2022 and 2025. Thirty-three months of the internet, captured and classified. They applied one of the most advanced AI text detectors in the world to every page. 35.3% of all newly published websites were AI-generated or AI-assisted. 17.6% were completely AI-generated. No human involvement at all. In late 2022, before ChatGPT launched, that number was zero. In three years, more than a third of the new internet became synthetic. Not over decades. Not over a generation. Three years. Then they measured what that is doing to the internet itself. Semantic diversity is falling. The range of ideas, perspectives, and ways of saying things is narrowing. As AI content increases, the internet sounds more and more like one voice. Because it is one voice. The same models producing the same patterns across millions of pages. Positive sentiment is rising. Everything sounds upbeat. Polished. Confident. Helpful. The internet is getting friendlier while getting emptier. The tone improves as the substance disappears. The lead researcher, Jonáš Doležal at Imperial College London, said this to 404 Media: "I find the sheer speed of the AI takeover of the web quite staggering. After decades of humans shaping it, a significant portion of the internet has become defined by AI in just three years." Separately, Cloudflare reported that nearly a third of all internet traffic now comes from bots. Imperva reported that automated traffic surpassed human traffic for the first time in 2024. If you read my previous threads on Model Collapse and Retrieval Collapse, this is the final chapter. Model Collapse showed that AI trained on AI gets dumber. Retrieval Collapse showed that search engines indexing AI content get emptier. This paper shows the source of both problems. The internet itself is being replaced. The researchers are now working with the Internet Archive to build a live monitoring tool. A real-time tracker of how much of the internet is human and how much is not. The fact that we need a tool to measure how much of the internet is still real is the finding.
-
Bernardo Gonzalez (@bgonzalesp) reported@CloudflareHelp @Cloudflare how do you expect we can contact support to gain access to my account, if you require to login to send a help request??? It's simple logic... I assume that your really don't care about helping your customers
-
Hunter Bertoson (@BertosonHunter) reported@jamesqquick Watched the network tab, reverse-engineered an undocumented API, and turned it into a Cloudflare Worker that catches failed attendance syncs and emails an alert every night. Workers + cron is unreasonably good for this kind of thing.
-
primitive.host (@PrimitiveHost) reportedAnyone else using @Cloudflare "Email Address Obfuscation" feature having crawl issues on @ahrefs crawler? It detected /cdn-cgi/l/email-protection on ALL my pages and ate up my entire crawl limit for the month 😶
-
ƒrαeყ (@fraey0) reportedit costs about $21/month to run what could become a multi-million dollar startup • human brain = reasoning (free) • claude = coding ($20/mo) • supabase = backend (free) • vercel = deployment (free) • namecheap = domain ($12/yr) • stripe = payments (2.9%/trx) • github = versioning (free) • resend = email (free) • clerk = auth (free) • cloudflare = DNS (free) • posthog = analytics (free) • sentry = error tracking (free) • upstash = redis (free) • pinecone = vector DB (free) everything sums up to roughly $20 to $25 per month so, the tools are not the barrier anymore. most ideas don’t fail because they’re expensive to build. they fail because they never get built at all. what’s stopping you?
-
Mike Chong (@realMikeChong) reported@wongmjane @Cloudflare so what? As long as it solves problems
-
Inu Games (@games_inu) reported@EddCoates @mishuba All those people saying "use Cloudflare" cannot just check the ip and see that it is Cloudflare, unbelievable! Btw, what I do now is to block cloud providers by AS number, seems to help a little.
-
Michael Ramos (@backnotprop) reportedEvery "ADE" is going to be pushed into one of either of (some might try to do all): - Linear competitor - Notion competitor - diffxyz/Ai-review competitor and away from "a harness for harnesses" - and/or misstep into remote execution (this requires all in customer bets. Like you either all go all in into the linear model or you do not - I can't imagine this scaling). But there's a much stronger durable layer nobody's really hitting at other than the infrastructure providers - context/artifacts has a lot of exciting potential. You can see it with cursor origin, cloudflare artifacts, code[dot]storage are pointing at. A lot of innovation to be had here & on top of - beyond "hey, share your HTML with me" There's still room for middle layer execution innovation, and it might smell like memory, but nobody's doing memory right.
-
Elshad (@elshad_ff) reported@Teknium Anyone using dashboard via Cloudflare tunnel? Have you websocket problem?
-
BlockedPath (@BlockedPaths) reported@Howaboua You have to install their multiple mcp servers for that, check out the docs. I’ve been ******* with it for a few days and ported it into just about every harness. The timeout out errors and it randomly spitting out Chinese is funny. I did jailbreak that **** though via cloudflare
-
Ryan K 🌥 (@Yank) reported@tebayoso @Cloudflare Sorry to hear that. Do you have a case or ticket number from support?