Coinbase Outage Map
The map below depicts the most recent cities worldwide where Coinbase users have reported problems and outages. If you are having an issue with Coinbase, 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.
Coinbase users affected:
Coinbase is a digital asset broker headquartered in San Francisco, California. They broker exchanges of Bitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin and other digital assets with fiat currencies in 32 countries, and bitcoin transactions and storage in 190 countries worldwide.
Most Affected Locations
Outage reports and issues in the past 15 days originated from:
| Location | Reports |
|---|---|
| City of Humble, TX | 1 |
| Houston, TX | 1 |
| Palo Verde, Coclé | 2 |
| Manhattan, NY | 1 |
| Pike Creek Valley, DE | 1 |
| East Flatbush, NY | 1 |
| Petaling Jaya, SGR | 1 |
| Denver, CO | 1 |
| Louisville, KY | 1 |
| Wix, England | 2 |
| Guayaquil, Guayas | 1 |
| Rome, Latium | 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.
Coinbase Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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Crydit Unlimited Crypto Card (@CryditCard) reported@WatcherGuru historic day = coinbase stock up 3% and my altcoin portfolio still down 40%. ill take the clarity though
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raps (@2rapspoint_) reported5/ MetaMask, Rabby, and Coinbase Wallet all support Base Sepolia. A quick setup is all it takes to access your $ACEPYR balance. @acepyr
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paulus (@pavlospaulus) reportedThe AI layoff wave has names now: Block/Square cut 4,000+ Cloudflare 1,100+ Coinbase ~700 Upwork 24% BILL up to 30% Oracle thousands Atlassian ~1,600 Continue…
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Yannimoto (@Yannimoto) reportedAlready a big day for stablecoins. CLARITY Act markup at 10:30 AM ET by The Senate Banking Committee, one step from the Senate floor. And Coinbase is now Hyperliquid's USDC treasury deployer with USDH winding down. $5B+ of USDC on Hyperliquid and reserve yield flowing back into the protocol. Stablecoin supercycle. 🫡
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x256.hl (@x256xx) reported@iwantlambo @coinbase markets are slow
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zach (@batata92604) reported@BNBastronaut I'm getting detached from it I've been down since September and deleted coinbase and kraken to not stare at it but I recovered with perps
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zoinky 👴🏻 (@coinjunky) reportedVolatility up? Coinbase down.
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Austin Barnhill (@bh30317) reported@ThisisMarcG @emiliemc @dorvonlevi Of course. This is Coinbase we’re talking about. This Linkden jargon she’s spewing doesn’t change a thing about their support process. “It’s been escalated to a special team for review. Which team, sorry, it’s internal, we can’t tell you. Just wait for an email.”
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Mippo 🟪 (@MikeIppolito_) reportedThe winner of the Coinbase vs Hyperliuqid deal depends on the end state of stablecoin market structure. It all comes down to whether there are many or very few stablecoins. In the world of many stablecoins, there are thousands of issuers (banks, payment providers, etc...). Interop solutions are very important and end up extracting the majority of the value. Issuers compete in a fragmented, highly competitive market, and keep almost none of their NIM. In the world of many stablecoins, interop layers are the big winners and it sucks to be an issuer. There's another world where there are very few stablecoins. In this world, interop isn't necessary (90% of activity is concentrated around only a few coins). These issuers pay out a large amount of yield, but they make up for it in volume. Over time, once they have dominant market share, they can slowly reduce the amount of reserve yield they pay out. In this world, it's good to be an issuer (if you're one of the big ones), and interop is largely useless. Folks who have paid attention to crypto over the last ten years may see some parallels, especially if you spent time in Cosmos. Personally, I think everyone is underestimating the network effects at the asset level for USDC and USDT. Becoming an issuer is difficult, and if you could get 90% of the NIM for 0% of the work, I find it hard to believe most venues won't choose that route. I would take the breathless takes on CT with a heaping tablespoon of salt, and wouldn't write off Coinbase or Circle's stablecoin businesses just yet.
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CG (@Gillion_Capital) reported@_masterinvestor Size at IPO matters. Here are hype companies that went public at market caps 70 billion to 150 billion: Rivian - 82% down Snowflake - 27% down Coinbase - 30% down Doordash - 20% down A lot easier to explode when you IPO at small market caps.
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froggir (@Keetaaahhh) reportedAnyone use the DEX feature on Coinbase? I sent USDC to my Base wallet that I use for DEX trading on Coinbase but the balance won’t show up in the Coinbase app. Support is elevating the issue.
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Seth Rosen (@TavCannaLLC) reported@coinbase How about instead of making silly posts you take care of the customers you inconvenienced when your platform was down for 7 hours. Absolutely no accountability from Coinbase. Shameful
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Leaving Tech (@leaving_tech) reportedThe People Manager career is OVER. The recent layoffs by Coinbase, Cloudfare, Block, Meta, etc, sent a clear message: pure manager roles are gone from the org chart. Their "AI Native" vision: everyone should be able to ship products, from idea to production. If you're an engineering manager or any kind of people manager in your company, you must to adapt quickly: 1) Stop doing just pure management functions 2) Use AI tools to build and deliver to production fast 3) Don't depend on others, demonstrate agency and do whatever it needs to be done, from design to infra, by yourself. You might not like it or disagree but this is the future, or better said the present, of management in this fast evolving tech industry.
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Enkhmanal 🟠 (@Enkhmanal) reportedHyperliquid Just Got Coinbase As Its USDC Treasury Deployer And Two US Spot ETFs In One Week — HYPE Ripped 23 Percent And Wall Street Just Got Onboard Three things happened to Hyperliquid this week that nobody expected at the same time. On Tuesday, 21Shares launched $THYP, a spot Hyperliquid ETF on Nasdaq. On Friday, Bitwise launched BHYP on the NYSE, with staking baked in and a first-month fee waiver on the first $500 million in assets. On Thursday, Coinbase and Circle announced that Coinbase will be the official USDC treasury deployer on Hyperliquid under a new framework called AQAv2 — Coinbase manages reserves, stakes HYPE, and shares the majority of reserve yield back to the Hyperliquid protocol. HYPE jumped 23% in 24 hours, hitting $47, its highest level since October 2025. For the perps-DEX category, this is the inflection. Hyperliquid has been the dominant decentralized perpetuals venue for eighteen months, generating real fee revenue and paying $51 million to token holders in just the last 30 days. The HYPE token has been treated as a tier-one DeFi asset for traders but a tier-two regulatory asset for institutions. Two spot ETFs flip that overnight. A16z reportedly bought $67.5 million of HYPE in the month leading up to the launches, according to Lookonchain wallet tracing. The crypto-native institutional positioning was already happening before traditional institutions could even access it. The Coinbase deal is the bigger structural story. Coinbase is the largest US crypto exchange and a public company. By becoming Hyperliquid's USDC treasury deployer, Coinbase is now economically aligned with Hyperliquid's growth — they earn a fee for managing the reserves, they stake HYPE on Hyperliquid's behalf, and they share yield back. This is the first time a public-company crypto exchange has plugged itself directly into a competitor's DEX revenue stream. The framing matters: Coinbase isn't trying to kill Hyperliquid. Coinbase is trying to participate in Hyperliquid's success. The implicit message to the industry is that the DEX-vs-CEX wars are over, replaced by a layered model where centralized players provide stablecoin infrastructure to decentralized venues. There is a regulatory subtext. CME and NYSE were reportedly moving to rein in Hyperliquid earlier in the week — pushing for restrictions on US users accessing Hyperliquid's perpetual products. Then two US ETFs got listed and Coinbase signed a deal. The regulatory pressure didn't stop the institutional adoption — it accelerated it. This is the same pattern we saw with Bitcoin in early 2024: SEC pressure cresting just as the spot ETFs got approved. Once the regulated venue exists, the regulatory case for restricting access collapses. The trade structure on HYPE is now multi-layered. Direct token exposure is the most volatile leg. The two ETFs (THYP and BHYP) offer regulated exposure with staking yield baked in — they are managing $3.17 million in total assets as of Friday, which is rounding error compared to the $5 billion Bitwise and 21Shares deployed into BTC products at this same stage of their launch cycles. Inflows will be the signal. If the HYPE ETFs hit $1 billion combined AUM by July, the institutional thesis is real and the token reprices to $80-100. If they stall at $50 million combined, it was a launch-week pop and the token retraces hard. The technical setup matters here. HYPE has been forming a textbook accumulation pattern from $25 to $47 since late February — three months of higher lows, declining volume, then a Friday volume spike on the ETF and Coinbase news. That is the kind of chart that either continues to $60-65 in the next two weeks or rolls over hard on the first failed retest of the $40 support. The 200-day moving average sits around $32 — that is the line that defines whether this is a new bull leg or a reflex rally. The bigger story is that the perps-DEX category just got institutional infrastructure. After Hyperliquid, the next venues — dYdX, Aevo, GMX — all benefit from the precedent. Spot ETFs on DEX-native tokens are the new product category of 2026. Wall Street is watching. The clearest signal of where this goes next is whether HYPE crosses $50 with sustained volume. Friday showed it can. Whether it holds is the next question.
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Let’sGrooow (@HereWeGrooow) reported@ayewaken @coinbase I meant it’s not $wLuna going off that chapter 11. Mirror protocol I’m sure of it is the one who kicked off the $wLUNA FRAUD. I have no doubt $lunc was used along with the shorting by minting $wLUNA. We need to collect the data and map it out properly. Zk let us down.