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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
Leipzig, Saxony 1
Maquoketa, IA 1
West Liberty, KY 1
Cardiff, Wales 1
Palo Verde, Coclé 3
City of Humble, TX 1
Houston, TX 1
Manhattan, 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:

  • Cancer_kkkun
    Abyss 🔺🤞 (@Cancer_kkkun) reported

    @Stupifff @himgajria 30m to coinbase will fix this

  • TaheraTani19144
    tania tahera (@TaheraTani19144) reported

    @coinbase Coinbase, your team made a terrible decision. My account is fully verified and compliant, yet after restricting it for weeks, you're closing it while my investment is down 80%, forcing me into huge losses. I will pursue legal action and make sure everyone hears my experience.

  • CapitalHuntersC
    CapitalHuntersClub (@CapitalHuntersC) reported

    Blockchain adoption ultimately comes down to User Experience. Because of its speed, zero front-running, and native order books, trading on a $SEI-based DEX feels exactly like trading on Binance or Coinbase. That frictionless UX is a massive adoption catalyst.

  • Qykey
    Blockey (@Qykey) reported

    Three approaches to the same problem: • Mastercard — retrofit agents onto existing payment rails • Coinbase — build agent-native wallets + trading from scratch • Webull — let agents talk to existing brokerage via MCP None give full autonomy today. Every one has guardrails: approvals, caps, previews.

  • On_Chain_Notes
    On Chain Notes (@On_Chain_Notes) reported

    ❌ Stablecoins made it worse. Tether : $13B in profit in 2024. $10B+ in 2025. Earned from US Treasury reserves. Kept by the company. Circle : $2.7B in revenue in 2025. Mostly from reserve income. Pays roughly $1.6B in distribution costs — including $908M to Coinbase alone in 2024. The user gets a dollar-pegged token. The issuer and its distribution partners get the economics. Stablecoins scaled the problem. ———— ステーブルコインはそれを悪化させた。 Tether:2024年に130億ドルの利益。2025年に100億ドル以上。 米国債リザーブから得た。会社が保持。 Circle:2025年に27億ドルの収益。ほとんどがリザーブ収入から。 流通コストとして約16億ドルを支払い — 2024年だけでCoinbaseに9億800万ドルを含む。 ユーザーはドルにペッグされたトークンを得る。 発行者とその流通パートナーが経済的利益を得る。 ステーブルコインはその問題をスケールさせた。

  • UpexiAllan
    Allan Marshall (@UpexiAllan) reported

    .@Coinbase turned on tokenized US stocks. These are backed one to one by the real shares, so you own the stock itself and collect the dividends, and it settles onchain any hour of any day. The part that matters is who gets access. This launched for people outside the US first, the markets where owning American stocks has always meant a broker, a wire, and a week of waiting. Now it's an app and a few seconds. The US is still waiting on the rules. Once people can hold real stocks the same way they hold dollars in an app, the line between a brokerage and a wallet stops meaning much.

  • Biti8888
    Biti8 (@Biti8888) reported

    There are bitcoin:native stories that feel like a Netflix script, and this one is definitely in that category. An Irish drug dealer named Clifton Collins allegedly bought around 6,000 BTC back in 2011–2012, when Bitcoin was worth about $5. Back then it wasn’t “investment” - it was basically a wild bet on something nobody understood. The story goes that he printed the private keys on paper and hid them inside fishing rods. Then he got arrested. Assets were seized. But the keys were never found. And then it gets strange. Almost 10 years later, the wallets suddenly came back to life. And not just once - they started slowly moving coins. Over the past 3 months, about 1,500 BTC has already been sent out through Coinbase Prime and Wintermute. Around 4,500 $BTC (~$276M) is still sitting there untouched. And the real question is the one that makes this story feel cinematic: Did someone finally regain access to those old keys… or did the original holder quietly come back into the picture after all these years?

  • konvict75
    konvict (@konvict75) reported

    @cobie Can you please help me with a coinbase withdrawal

  • Charu_Sethi
    Charu (@Charu_Sethi) reported

    If agents pay per call for inference, the settlement rail should be the cheapest programmable option; so far it usually is not. The pieces exist. x402 facilitators meter access to APIs, datasets, and tool calls and settle in stablecoins across Base, Polygon, Arbitrum, World, and Solana. Circle Nanopayments has been on mainnet since early May, moving USDC in sub-cent amounts across eleven chains. Cloudflare's Monetization Gateway (announced 01 July, still a waitlist) would let sites charge in stablecoins for pages, datasets, and MCP tools. Early and evolving work, and some of the on-chain volume figures come with analyst caveats that a chunk may be low-value or automated; I am flagging that rather than leaning on the numbers. The question worth holding: for the high-volume core of metered inference, is stablecoin settlement actually cheaper and more programmable than card-and-invoice, or only for the long tail? I do not have a verified figure that settles it. What I can say plainly is that the primitives are shipping and the pricing case is still being proved, not assumed. Would like to see real per-call cost comparisons if anyone has them. @coinbase @BuildOnCircle @Cloudflare #AgenticPayments #x402

  • hsinha1445
    Himanshu Sinha (@hsinha1445) reported

    The AI trade only pays if the customer makes money from it. All the chips, data centres and power bets rest on someone at the end of the chain using AI. If inference really becomes the biggest industry in the world — and the capex says people believe it — the customers have to mint value at a scale nobody's demonstrated yet. So that's where I keep looking. Not the labs, not the shovel makers. The customers. Last week, I watched Brian Armstrong's (CEO of Coinbase) interview, and I think I found a live one. 🤖 Start with how Coinbase builds now. Armstrong says roughly 1,200 full-time-equivalent AI agents "work" there — teams that used to be ten people are one to four humans plus agents drafting the code. His estimate, not mine. But the output is checkable. In June alone: → Tokenised stocks announced — 1:1 backed, dividends pass through, live later this year → Pre-IPO futures launched on SpaceX, OpenAI and Anthropic → SEC-registered AI advisor inside the app 📄 Tokenised stocks are the piece worth slowing down on. A real share sits with a custodian. A token gets minted against it, one to one. That token trades 24/7, settles in minutes, and can be sent like a message. Armstrong's pitch is that about 4 billion people can't access US equities at all today. For them, the comparison isn't "better than my broker." There is no broker. (Fine print: it's launching for non-US customers first.) 🚀 The pre-IPO futures need one more sentence. No shares sit behind these — it's a bet between two traders on what a private company is worth, paid out in dollar stablecoins, no expiry date. You own nothing. What's new is who gets in. Private-market upside has been reserved for accredited investors — in practice, the already rich. SpaceX listed on June 12 as the largest IPO in history; a retail trader could've had exposure to that run-up weeks earlier. The catch: the price anchors to Coinbase's own estimate of the company's value, not a real market for shares. Thin trading makes for rough pricing. 💸 Then the part I'd underestimated: AI agents need bank accounts. An agent can't pass KYC — no passport, can't fill a CAPTCHA. A crypto wallet only needs a key pair. Lyn Alden made the same point weeks before Armstrong's event: agents will hold stablecoins as working capital because banks literally can't onboard them. Coinbase wants to be the place those wallets live. And stablecoins quietly stopped being fringe. Since July 2025 they're federally regulated in the US, 100% backed by cash and T-bills. The market crossed $320 billion this April, up more than 50% since early 2025. The honest caveat — all of this is announcement-week CEO framing, and Coinbase's revenue still breathes with crypto prices. But most people still file these exchanges under "bitcoin bet." After this June, I'm not sure that's the right bucket anymore. Views are personal. Not investment advice.

  • cryptodylnews
    Crypto Dyl News (@cryptodylnews) reported

    🥊🥩 CRYPTO BEEF The stablecoin battle is heating up. @Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire responded after @Coinbase and 140+ companies backed OpenUSD $OUSD, a new stablecoin initiative that could challenge $USDC. Allaire said Circle already tried a similar model but it “ran into endless challenges.” $OUSD plans to share nearly all of its profits with partners, directly challenging $USDC’s business model. Despite the competition, Allaire says Circle isn’t slowing down: “We will continue supporting different products and infrastructure, even when we might compete… And we do not intend to slow down.”

  • coinbureau
    Coin Bureau (@coinbureau) reported

    🔥CIRCLE CEO FIRES BACK AS COINBASE AND 140+ FIRMS BACK OUSD RIVAL Jeremy Allaire said the model behind Open USD is one he already tried, one that "ran into endless challenges". OUSD plans to give away nearly all its profits to partners, directly challenging USDC’s business model. Allaire said Circle will keep supporting different products and infrastructure, “even when we might compete.” “And we do not intend to slow down.”

  • EyeOnChain
    EyeOnChain (@EyeOnChain) reported

    Did Tim Draper just move another 1,000 BTC? A wallet possibly linked to Tim Draper deposited 1,000 BTC (worth approximately $61.82M) to Coinbase Prime around 9 hours ago. Draper is one of Bitcoin's earliest and most famous bulls. Back in 2014, he acquired roughly 29,656 BTC in the U.S. Marshals Service's Silk Road auction, paying around $632 per $BTC —a total investment of about $18.7M. At Bitcoin's peak, those holdings were worth $3.74B. Even at current prices, they're still valued at around $1.82B. A transfer to Coinbase Prime doesn't necessarily mean a sale is coming, but it's definitely a move worth watching given the size of the deposit. Address: bc1q8elrrq57ljvnxq0eqetumzq9kkrx4csc5cyhkk

  • JRL12483
    John Richard (@JRL12483) reported

    @FirstSquawk @grok is it true Coinbase employees in India were caught selling US customer account information to hackers?

  • AccreditedDegen
    Accredited Degenerate (@AccreditedDegen) reported

    Yo solana:9cRCn9rGT8V2imeM2BaKs13yhMEais3ruM3rPvTGpump holders, I’m having some trouble with @BullpenFi. Deposited to onchain wallet from Coinbase, I see in the explorer that it’s there, but it’s not showing up in the bullpen UI. how long does that usually take? trying to join the movement, but need some help! @blknoiz06

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