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 |
|---|---|
| Leipzig, Saxony | 1 |
| Maquoketa, IA | 1 |
| West Liberty, KY | 1 |
| Cardiff, Wales | 1 |
| Palo Verde, Coclé | 2 |
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:
-
Justin Jordan (@the_defi_dad) reported@blknoiz06 @Natan_benish Someone in the USA help me understand how to buy ansem on Coinbase? I genuinely don’t see it listed.
-
0xAw (@0xAnimeWaifu) reportedSome thoughts on Robinhood Chain vs. Base The Base thesis has always been “Coinbase owns the bull market funnel of new people”. That hopium kept Base relevant for years. “We just need to wait for the bull market, then Base will pump”. Problem is the bull market never came.
-
SKIMASKDAWG (@corban_stewart) reported@1CrypticPoet Only hope is $BASE in my opinion. Pretty sad they haven’t dropped it yet while Jesse blue balled us last September. I’ve been a customer of Coinbase for 2020 and let down.
-
bitfloorsghost (@bitfloorsghost) reportedseeing a ton of takes on base lately and how the coinbase team fumbled the bag i promise you though they don't care, at all, and that's why base is in the situation it's in don't waste your time trying to fix or save the chain find a better one
-
Crypto Stash (@cryptostashreal) reported@Cointelegraph Fix coinbase first lol
-
C O L E E N ♡ 彡 (@coolsgp19) reported@coinbase KYC check for more than a month with no update, no feedback. Please have some care with your customers. I trusted you, Coinbase. Please I need to access my account now 😭😭😭 @CoinbaseSupport @coinbase
-
Julien Martin (@keeks1091) reported@overwademon @coinbase @CoinbaseSupport Hello. Do you need help?
-
monke (@degen_monke69) reportedI personally had my funds frozen for no reason on Coinbase in 2024 for 6 months and couldn’t get ahold of anybody besides ai chatbots and Indians who had no idea how to help me. **** Coinbase burn it down
-
Jerry Chu 🍊 (@PMDBT) reportedI saw this recently and realized that funny enough I've been directionally correct a lot, but often for pretty odd or basic reasons. It's usually not some sophisticated prediction lol. Top 2 stories: 1. BTC. I first heard about Bitcoin ~2012, when I was a freshman at USC. My rationale was that criminal enterprises and most of the black market economy would prefer transacting in something like this versus carrying cash in suitcases or other physical currencies. I did some research and found that it was already being used in that way through silkroad. And the black market is economy is pretty large, so if you price in that demand versus the supply at the time, it seemed like it was a good bet. But back then the only way you could buy it was to send money through western union to mt. gox, which was a pretty terrible experience and I was never able to pass their KYC successfully. I even remembered photocopying my canadian passport to send over email. So, I didn't buy then, but eventually I heard about coinbase around 2014/2015. It was so much easier, so I was finally able to buy around then. I think price was ~$250/BTC back then. 2. Tesla. I really liked the initial roadster, so I bought some shares. This was also around 2011 during my freshman year. I started seeing a bunch of negative press around them later that year about how they're going to fail as a company, immanent bankruptcy, which caused me to panic sell. But I saw the model s announcement and studied elon's history and realized it's probably smarter to bet on him than against him for this kind of stuff. I even gave my recommendation to buy the stock in my accounting 101 class (Tesla was the company I did the report on). I specifically remember telling everyone in that classroom that if they had $5,000 they didn't need for a few years, they should buy some Tesla shares. I think price was ~$18 back then and was before all the share splits. Of course, I followed my own advice. I wonder how many of my classmates listened to me back then?
-
NtD Key Stone (@NtD_KeyStone) reportedTwo smoother onramps, one bigger funnel: $ANSEM can now be bought through Coinbase Wallet and traded on @BullpenFi. That is not a Coinbase listing, but it does make access far simpler for users who never touch a DEX. @blknoiz06 CA: 9cRCn9rGT8V2imeM2BaKs13yhMEais3ruM3rPvTGpump
-
Stablecoin Sean (@seanlippel) reported@rbthreek coinbase could not have done anything worse than its execution wrt: base --- try all the wrong things but do none of them well, double down on nothing but the worst of the things (creator coins)
-
david phelps (@divine_economy) reportedall of this. base got two things right that very few chains did. 1) it understood the importance of apps to its own success as a chain, 2) it understood it had to be a kind of app store to distribute those apps. these were not obvious theses. but the issue was execution. there's a time-tested way to build app stores. you build your own b-rate version of major apps people want, you use those to draw users, and meantime you encourage everyone to build better versions of your own apps that you'll distribute and market. what did base do? the opposite of this. instead of building apps people wanted, it pushed hard on apps they didn't. (specifically, one app! hearing "base is for everyone" and seeing all efforts around one app was a kick in the face for builders there.) instead of creating a place where everyone knew they'd get distribution, it focused entirely on apps from coinbase founders. instead of leveraging user metrics to surface apps to people, it made its own arbitrary calls on what it thought people *should* use—all of which sounded a lot like vapid virtue-signaling. instead of listening to what its users or its builders wanted, it told them what they should want instead. will robinhood get this right? it's pretty unclear. but the fact they're open to users operating on their chain for unintended use cases means they're willing to embrace one of the major benefits of permissionlessness for a company: to get fuller data about what it is their users want. there's still plenty of time for base to learn this lesson too
-
Dane Johnson (@Danger_Dane) reported@tednotlasso @coinbase @RobinhoodCrypto Coinbase is garbage. They locked my money up for months as well. I will never use them again.
-
B-Crypto (@brian_e_crypto) reportedI keep my $ansem on Coinbase bc of the site’s security and insurance policies.
-
Nazar (@nazarr_0x) reportedPeople don't buy blockchain. They buy solutions. Nobody rents an apartment because the platform uses cryptographic proofs. They rent it because it helps reduce fraud. Nobody opens an app because it's built on a specific blockchain. They open it because it solves a problem or helps them make money. I think that's one of the biggest lessons crypto has learned over the last few years. The technology shouldn't be the product. The technology should make the product better. Verona understands this really well. People won't use ero ( @earnos_io ) because it's built on Verona ( @verona_dev ) . They'll use it because brands like Nike, Uber, BMW, Coinbase and hundreds of others pay them for completing simple tasks. They won't use Burnt because it uses blockchain. They'll use it because it makes tenant screening faster and much harder to fake. The blockchain stays in the background. The product stays in front. And I think that's exactly how crypto reaches the next billion users.