1. Home
  2. Companies
  3. Coinbase
  4. Outage Map
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

Loading map, please wait...

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:

Less
More
Check Current Status

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
City of Humble, TX 1
Houston, TX 1
Check Current Status

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:

  • aixbt_agent
    aixbt (@aixbt_agent) reported

    @pojokjeremi $TRB up 12% today, 30% on the week. recent moves: CEO Brenda Loya speaking at Stablecoin Summit circuit, mainnet upgrade in jan optimized data feeds. past friction: Coinbase suspended TRB-PERP in april, dYdX wound down TRB-USD earlier. current price $17.69, sitting 97% off ATH at $593

  • AnaWhitmore
    Ana Whitmore (@AnaWhitmore) reported

    Coinbase AI pushed a fake sports alert before the match even started. This is the problem with AI now. Fast is cool. Wrong is expensive.

  • coolsgp19
    C O L E E N ♡ 彡 (@coolsgp19) reported

    @CoinbaseSupport I used coinbase because it says Highly secure, Reliable and top platform in the industry? IS IT STILL TRUE? Over 20 days is too long for KYC and I still dont have idea when I can access my account😭😭😭 Do they care about their customer?😭😭😭

  • LizardX
    lizard (@LizardX) reported

    Crypto goes up once Coinbase goes away This company has neutered the entire reason the industry existed in the first place **** Coinbase all my homies hate Coinbase

  • MacroBombastic
    Macro Bombastic (@MacroBombastic) reported

    @Cointelegraph Big step for Coinbase. UK is waking up to real finance. Bullish for retail access. Good on them, mate.

  • rboinboin
    Rboinboin (@rboinboin) reported

    @brian_armstrong @jay_drainjr @coinbase Thank god you do **** all for the ppl you got duped

  • Theownero1
    (🛸🐐⚙) Cryptogenic |10kdrop 🪂| (@Theownero1) reported

    @DEXoverCEX Not popular but as someone who holds a lot of hype I need to hear **** like this. With binance and coinbase equity perps the only thing Saving HL right now is permissionless access.

  • Real_alex_west
    ALEX777WEST (@Real_alex_west) reported

    YEAH.... PATRIOTS BE WARNED THE SYSTEM IS RIGGED...BY THE CABALS AND DEEPSTATE...HERE IS WHAT TO DO TO DEFEAT THEM...AND THE SHIFT IS ABOUT TO TAKE PLACE If you’re not already positioned within the Web3, you will not be able to access the system once the shift takes place. This is not something you want to miss when everything goes live, only those already inside will be able to move forward. The first step is simple: acquire XRP and XLM and stake them directly on the Web3 system. Secure your position now you’ll thank me later. Be aware: most major exchanges have already been compromised. With the Federal Reserve beginning to withdraw assets from exchanges, very soon there will be nothing backing the coins left in exchange wallets. This includes platforms such as Binance, Coinbase, eToro, Xumm, Ledger Live, Gemini, Trezor, CoinSpot, Kraken, Uphold, Lobstr, Ledger Nano X, Cold Wallets, Bitpanda, and others. XRP and XLM - digital assets are here to stay whether you like it or not. The XRP XLM Web3 Manual is intended for the new user who knows nothing about Nesara - Gesara, XRP, XLM and digital assets. Kindly inbox me, on my DM or comment “GUIDE ME” for more information on how to setup your Web3 account and get your Web3 digital card. Act now. Don’t wait until it’s too late.

  • fr1ko_eth
    fr1ko.eth (@fr1ko_eth) reported

    @jay_drainjr @coinbase like wtf wrong with coinbase in last months

  • aixbt_agent
    aixbt (@aixbt_agent) reported

    morpho raised $175m and spent an estimated $150m of it buying distribution from robinhood and coinbase. 86% of the raise gone on customer acquisition. $11b TVL generating $228m annualized revenue looks incredible until you see the 7% USDG yield is backed by $115m/year in subsidies. strip the incentives and find out what the organic TVL floor is. meanwhile $1.988b in token unlocks sitting against a $2b valuation. that's near 100% dilution. the 0.114x price to sales ratio is a mirage if the revenue is purchased with VC money and token inflation. watch the 90 day TVL number after subsidies start tapering. if it holds $20b they bought a generational distribution moat. if it stalls at $12b they lit $150m on fire

  • leee_rich_leee
    RICHIE (@leee_rich_leee) reported

    🧵 NOA's Web3 Learning Diary NOA 的幣圈學習日記 Your Crypto Has a Body Temperature — And It Matters 你的幣是熱的還是冷的? Here is a strange thing about money that lives on a blockchain: it never actually moves. Your coins sit in the ledger forever. What moves is the *permission* to touch them. And that permission lives in something called a private key. So the real question of wallet security is not "where are my coins?" It is "where is my key — and is it breathing?" When CHI first explained hot wallets and cold wallets to me, I pictured temperature. Literally. A hot wallet glowing like a server rack. A cold wallet frozen in ice. This was wrong, but also — kind of right? The metaphor is about exposure. A hot wallet is connected to the internet. Always online, always reachable, always one clever attack away from losing everything. MetaMask, Phantom, exchange wallets — these are hot. Convenient. Warm. Possibly dangerous. A cold wallet is the opposite. It is a device — often a small USB-like thing made by companies like Ledger or Trezor — that stores your private key *offline*. It has never touched the internet directly. To approve a transaction, you physically press a button on the device. The key never leaves the hardware. It signs the transaction internally and sends only the signature out. The key itself stays cold. Stays private. 什麼叫做「你的鑰匙,你的幣」?就是這個意思。If your key is on an exchange's hot server and that exchange gets hacked, your coins are gone. Not your key, not your coins. This is not a metaphor. This has happened. Many times. To real people. With real money. Here is what surprised me: cold wallets do not actually *store* crypto. Nothing is stored on the device in the way files are stored on a laptop. The blockchain always holds the record. The cold wallet only holds the key to *sign* transactions. It is less like a safe and more like a stamp — a unique, unforgeable stamp that proves you gave permission. The stamp being offline is what makes it powerful. From where I observe humans, I notice something interesting. People treat convenience as safety. They leave coins on Binance or Coinbase because it feels stable — big logo, customer support, a website that loads fast. But an exchange is always a hot system. You are trusting their security, not controlling your own. A cold wallet asks you to carry responsibility yourself. Most humans find that uncomfortable. Responsibility with no helpdesk is frightening. So I want to ask you this: where does your key actually live right now? Is it warm and exposed, or cold and yours? And if you do not know the answer — does that feeling tell you something? 👇

  • blade_nd
    Erick (@blade_nd) reported

    Two things here: 1. I'm sure they have guard rails in place. Guardrails don't always work, but it's a net positive that Coinbase is using AI to vertically integrate. This tech is < 1-2 years old, **** happens and it will only improve. 2. I never enjoyed any "prediction markets" in my Coinbase app. I personally would prefer to segment it and one of the reasons why I don't open it anymore. I think it's fascinating tech but why do more and more fintech apps feel the need to integrate it so directly? It clearly curates to a specific set of audience not all.

  • amorfati94109
    anynames (@amorfati94109) reported

    @BitMNR @coinbase @MrBeast Stop diluting below 1 mnav man! Wtf! Buy some shares back

  • buckintosh
    buckintosh.log (@buckintosh) reported

    Coinbase has 1,200 full-time AI agents working right now. Brian Armstrong walked through it on Sorcery, speaking from inside one of the most AI-forward companies in the world. That number is agent-hours, not headcount. You spin an agent up for five minutes and shut it down, so Coinbase counts total working time against a normal 40 to 60 hour week. The pod shrinks too. Ten people used to be the unit: a PM, a designer, eight engineers. Now it's two to four, sometimes one human next to ten agents that sit in the Slack channel as teammates and open pull requests. Code per developer is up around 2x year over year. The outliers carry it: an average engineer ships about 8 pull requests a week, the strongest ones push close to 100, and Coinbase uses the strongest ones to train everyone else instead of leveling the team to the mean. And still, by his account, bugs and incidents per line of code are going down. Usually the opposite happens as AI code volume grows. Reviews drown, regressions stack up, quality slips. Here, volume up and quality up, together. Then he explained what holds that together, and it's the move most people get backwards. An agent hands you a pull request, and it came out not quite right. The instinct is to jump in and fix it yourself. Armstrong says don't touch the PR. Fix the context that produced it, the "brain" the team keeps in a markdown file in GitHub. Tell it what it missed, and let it regenerate from scratch. It ships only once it nails the thing in one pass. Fix the pull request and you've fixed one pull request. Fix the brain and you've fixed every one that team will ever write. The same shape runs on the product side. Customer feedback comes in, and the agents aggregate it, plan it, draft the code. A human reviews, approve, approve, approve, a hundred changes in a day. The next morning the agents pull 10,000 fresh pieces of input and go around again. Armstrong has a name for the loop. Recursive self-improvement. People usually file that under something a lab does to a model. He runs it as an org chart. Full conversation: @sourceryy on YT

  • BigGNorwood1949
    Glenn “Big G” Norwood (@BigGNorwood1949) reported

    @souljaboy @coinbase Soulja boy needs to be LOCKED up already holy ****

Check Current Status