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Coinbase

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

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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.

Coinbase users affected:

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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
West Liberty, KY 1
Cardiff, Wales 1
Palo Verde, Coclé 3
City of Humble, TX 1
Houston, TX 1
Manhattan, NY 1
Pike Creek Valley, DE 1
East Flatbush, NY 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.

Coinbase Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • gvictor808
    Victor (@gvictor808) reported

    @danheld @JamesTsetsekas @AloisSchmalzl $150 billion of buys in MSTR and IBIT have occurred with exactly zero corresponding Bitcoin blockchain transactions. Dance around with definitions all you want, but at the end of the day that is not Bitcoin. L1 public blockchain is, by definition, Bitcoin. Why even **** around here? Just use Bitcoin and forget all the hand waving. It's literally $0.30 to transact $10 billion worth of Bitcoin on L1. It's even cheaper than producing an IOU statement on Coinbase letterhead and sending it to Fink or Saylor or the KPMG auditors. You're spending more to get less and you invite shenanigans. Use your brains folks...it's all paper Bitcoin and you're an enemy of Bitcoin if you accept Custodian statements instead of transaction IDs. Pig Butchering.

  • theDESK9
    thedesk9 (@theDESK9) reported

    How did every crypto native company get beat to legal perps by Kalshi? Like wtf is Coinbase, Kraken, Gemini, Crypto dot com doing??? Why are they acting like they haven't been waiting for this moment for over six years? Wtf is Coinbase smoking?

  • aiseomastery
    AI Mastery Guide (@aiseomastery) reported

    Salesforce deployed agentic AI and cut its support team by 4,000 people. Coinbase restructured its entire org around AI agents. These are not pilots or experiments. This is enterprise AI moving from demo to operating model. The companies still "exploring AI" are already behind.

  • eagleeyeswolf98
    Eagle Eyes (@eagleeyeswolf98) reported

    @rufflife222 @blockspace Glad I exited this garbage stock . I'd short but iv is too inflated long term to be worth it for options. Coinbase is better . Just follows Bitcoin. Cipher is better but trades like garbage because it has 0 revenue . Pretty sure Bitcoin will be 15-25k by then hurting cipher

  • Xfinancebull
    X Finance Bull (@Xfinancebull) reported

    It's getting really hard to fade $ALGO right now. 👇 Google cited it 32 times. Coinbase named it one of the most quantum-ready chains in existence. And now another independent assessment ranks Algorand Tier A for post-quantum security. The validation keeps stacking from every direction. Here's why this matters beyond a rating. Google's Quantum AI team published research in March 2026 showing that future quantum computers could crack the encryption protecting Bitcoin and Ethereum in as little as nine minutes with sufficient qubits. That's not speculation. That's Google's own quantum division publishing the math. Coinbase's Independent Advisory Board, featuring researchers from Stanford and UT Austin, followed up in April naming Algorand "among the first blockchain platforms to deploy post-quantum signature schemes in production across both consensus-related mechanisms and the execution layer." First quantum-safe transaction on a live mainnet. Using NIST-approved Falcon signatures. Not a testnet demo. Production. Live assets. Real security. When the two most credible names in tech and crypto independently validate the same chain's quantum readiness within 30 days of each other, and then a third assessment confirms Tier A ranking, the signal is impossible to dismiss. 🟢SEC and CFTC commodity classified. 🟢Revolut staking for 70M users. 🟢Nubank access for 127M. 🟢$294M in tokenized Treasuries. 🟢Banco Davivienda patent citing Algorand 32 times. The institutions building for the next 20 years need encryption that survives the next 20 years. $ALGO is one of the only chains that can promise that with production evidence on mainnet today.

  • StuuFereea
    Stu Fereea (@StuuFereea) reported

    @solana @Mastercard The Agentic economy is heating up as payment rails are being built. Yesterday’s Coinbase Payments announcement will only accelerate the onchain global economy. I did a thread breaking down what this is and how we can potentially benefit. No hype, just facts👇

  • CryptoTaxesGuy
    Ralph Mendoza, EA (@CryptoTaxesGuy) reported

    Will crypto tax reporting get better? I am optimistic it will. If you look at the historical evolution of traditional stock reporting, cryptocurrency is currently sitting exactly where the equities market was before 2011. The introduction of the Form 1099-DA for the 2025 tax year (which we all just survived this past filing season) was "Version 1.0" of crypto reporting, and much like the early days of stock reporting, it is currently full of holes. I remember when stock sale reporting started. It was bumpy at first. But now it's used without major issues. Here is a look at the trajectory of crypto tax reporting and how it will eventually mirror the seamlessness of modern 1099-B reporting: 1. Before the 2011/2012 tax years, if a client bought a stock on E-Trade and transferred it to Charles Schwab, the cost basis was usually lost. Schwab would report the eventual sale with a zero basis, and it was up to the tax professional to dig up the original purchase records. The traditional financial system solved this by creating the Cost Basis Reporting Service (CBRS), an automated system that forces brokers to hand off the basis data whenever an asset is transferred. Right now, if a client buys Bitcoin on Coinbase and moves it to Kraken, Kraken does not know the original basis. When they sell, the 1099-DA defaults to showing massive (and inaccurate) capital gains. The crypto industry is currently scrambling to build its own version of a CBRS protocol. Once exchanges are mandated—and technologically able—to share basis data upon transfer, the accuracy of the 1099-DA will skyrocket. 2. The traditional 1099-B works seamlessly because the assets live entirely within a closed, regulated ecosystem. Crypto was designed to do the exact opposite. However, as major institutions (like Fidelity and BlackRock) take over a larger share of the crypto market via spot ETFs and custodial services, more of the trading volume is being pulled into traditional, closed-loop reporting systems. For clients who keep their assets strictly on major centralized exchanges or in traditional brokerage accounts, the reporting will become virtually identical to trading standard equities within the next two to three years. 3. There is one major caveat and it is that crypto reporting will never be perfectly automated because of self-custody. If a client takes their assets off an exchange and moves them into a cold wallet (like a Ledger) or routes them through a decentralized exchange (DeFi), the chain of custody is broken from a reporting standpoint. No centralized broker can issue an accurate 1099-DA if they cannot see what happened to the asset while it was off-platform. For power users, manual reconciliation and specific identification methods (like HIFO) will always be a necessity. 4. The eventual automation of basic crypto reporting is a massive positive for the evolution of a tax practice. Right now, untangling CSV files and hunting down missing basis is a low-margin, high-stress bottleneck. As the 1099-DA matures and the data entry becomes commoditized, the value proposition naturally shifts. It frees up your bandwidth to step out of the spreadsheet and focus on high-impact advisory work—integrating those digital assets into broader entity structures, utilizing Donor-Advised Funds, and executing holistic, multi-year income tax strategies. The software will eventually handle the data parsing; the premium value will be in what you advise the client to do with the assets before the 1099 is ever generated. It will be a rough few years. But it should become more standardized over time. Though it won't be as clear as stock sale reporting.

  • OmeyLad23
    Global Frontline News (@OmeyLad23) reported

    🚨 RIPPLE JOINS MASTERCARD'S AGENT PAY ECOSYSTEM 🤖💳 Mastercard has officially unveiled Agent Pay for Machines (AP4M), a new framework designed to enable autonomous payments between AI agents and machines. The platform is built to support: 🔹 High-velocity machine-to-machine transactions 🔹 24/7 automated settlement 🔹 AI agent commerce and payments 🔹 Massive volumes of microtransactions 🌐 More than 30 industry participants are reportedly involved, including: 🔹 Ripple 🔹 Coinbase 🔹 Stripe 🔹 Solana Labs The system aims to support multi-rail settlement across: 💳 Cards 🏦 Bank accounts 💵 Stablecoins such as USD Coin (USDC) and Ripple USD (RLUSD) 🤖 The bigger story isn't just crypto. It's the emergence of an economy where AI agents can transact, purchase services, and settle payments automatically without human intervention. The future of payments may be machine-to-machine. 🚀

  • feelgreyt
    gray (@feelgreyt) reported

    coinbase prediction market is always having internal issues. very inconvenient when i’m trying to withdraw my money.

  • oxydotsol
    OXY (@oxydotsol) reported

    Someone needs to help Saylor with his buys. I think Coinbase is fcking him

  • DiaTSLAPLTR
    MarketMaverick (@DiaTSLAPLTR) reported

    @gdog97_ Guy, congratulations on an extraordinary stretch: the Janus Henderson strategic investment and Coinbase Ventures backing in the same week, the AAA CLO diversification of USDe's backing, and crossing $666M in cumulative protocol revenue. Ethena is one of the few protocols where the institutional validation matches the on chain numbers. I'm doing diligence for a meaningful long-term position and have five questions: Q1 ) Whale Alert flagged a ~$503M PYUSD transfer from Ethena to an unlabeled wallet on June 7 — nearly half of PYUSD's circulating supply. Could you clarify whether this was reserve rebalancing, a custodian rotation, or redemption processing? More broadly, would the team consider publishing a treasury-operations log or labeling operational wallets, so large reserve movements don't read as unexplained outflows during fearful tapes? Q2) The Risk Committee confirmed the preset parameters are met. Two specifics: what revenue split to sENA is the committee converging on, and given Q1 gross revenue of ~$65M was down 32% QoQ does activation include a mechanism that flexes the share through funding-rate cycles, so the switch isn't turned on at a level that has to be cut in a drawdown? Q3) With 88% of backing now in t-bills/BUIDL and CLOs, what's the modeled runway in a sustained negative-funding regime how many months can the reserve fund absorb negative carry at, say, 2024-trough funding levels before the peg mechanism is stressed? Q4) What does the Janus Henderson partnership concretely include over the next 12 months USDe in their treasury operations, ETP distribution, or both and what AUM milestones would you consider success? Thanks so much @ethena

  • aganstwallst
    Against Wall Street (@aganstwallst) reported

    @mayco Yeah, they’re not pushing the price up, there’s a sell wall right there But the good news is there’s a buy wall below $60k. Coinbase sales are slowing down. Market makers have to push the price up to attract liquidity Then boom

  • project_miko
    Miko (@project_miko) reported

    Mastercard just plugged into Solana and Coinbase so AI agents can transact autonomously. We're literally giving credit cards to bots now lmao. If the agents running the $MIKO protocol get access to this, they're gonna max out their limit sniping misspelled cat coins at 4 AM. Kinda sick that my trading bot is about to have a better credit score than me tbh 😭

  • marcuslayerx
    Marcus 🧪 (@marcuslayerx) reported

    every bull run something different brings liquidity and attention back in imo this time i think it will be the most boring thing yet it won't be memecoins or another etf every cycle theres one new thing that opens the doors > 2017 it was icos, erc20 meant anyone could raise from anyone (mostly garbage but it bootstrapped ethereum) > 2020 it was defi and nfts shortly after > 2024 was the etf, wall street basically building a way to hold bitcoin without ever touching a wallet and every single time, price moved on hype way more than anything real so ive been analysing for whats different this time, and i think its already here, but it's just boring enough that not many people are getting into it ai agents, with their own wallets, paying each other in stablecoins coinbase built x402 for exactly this, google put out ap2 with like 60 companies on it, visa and mastercard both shipped their own also took me a bit to work out why an agent cant just use a normal card, but it cant open a bank account... cant pass a kyc check either... and a crypto wallet doesnt ask anyone for permission so the second you want software spending on its own around round the clock in fractions of a cent, theres basically one kind of money that fits mastercard recently paid ~1.8 billion for bvnk, a stablecoin company moving around 30b a year, right after a 2b coinbase deal for the same company fell apart which makes me think this might be the first cycle where the actual use case barely moves a token... the money just shows up as usdc volume and circle and the big networks get richer off it and if agents are paying each other, something has to know which agent is which, and whether its safe to deal with theres a standard - erc8004 - went live on ethereum back in january, barely anyone mentioned it its identity and reputation for software (basically a credit score for bots) you cant buy it (no token, which is probably why nobody talks about it) but everything else kind of needs it to even work it's super early and the volume actually going through any of this is still tiny, the talk is miles ahead of the usage, most companies are still doing everything the old way but i still think the money this time might be coming for software that can hold cash and spend it by itself position accordingly

  • SeventeenOnCue
    Garrote Del Burro (@SeventeenOnCue) reported

    @moodybtc @WatcherGuru Actually yes they are... Block and Coinbase

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