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 | 3 |
| City of Humble, TX | 1 |
| Houston, TX | 1 |
| Manhattan, NY | 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:
-
MRCΛULIMΛN (@mrcauliman) reportedHundreds of millions of $XRP have left major exchanges over the past several weeks. Binance reserves are down over 170 million $XRP since mid May. Upbit is down around 58 million $XRP. Coinbase is showing a higher share of whale sized withdrawals. That means coins are moving off exchanges instead of sitting there for short term trading. At the same time, the $XRP Ledger is running clean. Ledgers are closing around 3.85 seconds. Payments are steady. AMM pools have real liquidity locked. RLUSD still dominates the stablecoin side of XRPL. No validator drama. No abnormal network behavior. LendingProtocol, SingleAssetVault, and fixCleanup3_2_0 are still below activation levels, so nothing new went live today. Coins are moving off exchanges. The rails are running. Liquidity is on ledger. That’s the signal.
-
Tiago Cruz (@TeraHash) reportedThis solves some real stablecoin problems: Power concentration - today Circle controls $USDC, Tether controls $USDT. You use them, they profit. Users have no voice. Hidden fees - Circle charges for mint/redeem at scale, making stablecoins expensive for large enterprises. Yield captured by the issuer - $USDC generates ~$1.7B/yr in reserve yield. Circle keeps most of it. Coinbase gets a cut to distribute. You get zero!
-
$LUXCAT (@LuxCat5) reportedThat Ton Wallet & Coinbase Wallet turned out to be compromised with many fake tokens so I stopped using them. I just created them to learn when I was new in crypto. Support said use Chrome extension or Trust Wallet, then my wallet became inaccessible so I disabled Chrome & all.
-
ANTON, BIP 110 (@Anton__BTC) reported@Cryptolution That's for a Coinbase transaction, where you put the name of a miner winning a block, for example. Satoshi did it to prove that there's no pre-mined Bitcoin. Proof of fair distribution.
-
Comet (@cometwtf) reportedThis man hid $400 MILLION in Bitcoin inside a fishing rod, lost it, and the government is now collecting it without him > Clifton Collins was a former beekeeper from Dublin who turned to drug dealing. > He grew ******** across rented houses in Ireland and made serious money doing it. > In 2011 and 2012 he took those profits and bought 6,000 Bitcoin at around $5 per coin. His entire investment was $30,000. > He split the coins across 12 wallets with 500 Bitcoin in each one. Then came the problem of hiding the private keys. > In crypto your private key is the only way to access your coins. Lose it and the money is gone forever. > So he printed all 12 private keys on paper and stuffed them inside the aluminium cap of a fishing rod case at a rented house in County Galway, Ireland. > In 2017 Irish police pulled him over during a routine traffic stop and found ******** in his car. > They uncovered the entire operation and sentenced him to five years in prison. > While he sat in his cell the fishing rod case vanished. > Collins claims it was stolen in a break-in. Others say his landlord cleared out the house and threw everything away. Either way it was gone. > The Irish court ordered the 6,000 Bitcoin forfeited to the state. But they couldn't touch a single coin. $400 MILLION sitting on a public blockchain visible to the entire world and completely unreachable. > For years the case was considered closed. The Bitcoin was assumed lost forever. > Then three months ago the wallets started moving. > Europol's cybercrime unit had been working the case quietly for months. Using advanced decryption they began cracking the wallets one by one. Each wallet holds exactly 500 Bitcoin. > First 500 moved in March. Then another 500. Then yesterday a third batch landed at Coinbase Prime. > 1,500 Bitcoin recovered so far worth $90 MILLION. Nine wallets remain holding 4,500 Bitcoin worth $276 MILLION. They are working through them one by one. A $30,000 investment in 2011. Hidden in a fishing rod. Lost or stolen and the government is collecting $400 MILLION from it without the man who bought it lifting a finger.
-
MaxBidding 🍳.fuel (✸,✸)☉ ℝ ∀ (@olingsberg15408) reportedSure let’s do some math, less the shortcuts Illiquid OTC deal: yes? We all have to pay the ferryman one way or another. They ate taking more risk, agree. A 20-30% illiquidity discount is perfectly reasonable and boilerplate. Tens of thousands of nascent secondaries to back that up, at worse terms in worse assets (Venice is a fantastic company). So $10-11. Not $8. Hopefully we dont get stuck on this moot point Nota bene, that also sweeps all the rest of the OTC solution space under the rug; you’re prefacing a 4-yr lock as the one and only combinatorial. You’d limit yourself to a more modest 15-20% discount if you cut the vesting terms in half and/or milestoned accelerated vesting based on company progress. Or used a CN. Or forced an open-market partial buy to show alignment (see @AerodromeFi <> @coinbase, who went the extra mile). Or OTC:d fully liquid; why not, happens all the time in public markets ”we would never offer such a thing” is not a defensible position in-and-of itself, even if you’re married to your >40% discount at $8. I don’t see ”nah dont wanna do that” as a rebuttal I can address So yes, there is no free lunch. You either pay for alignment today with a reasonable discount, or sit through an equity misalignment overhang in perpetuity. The latter is an order of magnitude more expensive choice down the road, as history has shown countless times before. Not to mention, you’ll sideline value-accrual aficionados from your token cap-table along the way (such as myself and many CT warriors it seems) I’d love to buy your equity though. Not sure why you’d expect me or anyone else to want differently from ”professional” VC-investors. They could clearly buy token-only if they wanted to, and opted for the polar opposite. Can’t imagine why
-
DataNCrypto IQ -16.7 (@CryptoTouns) reportedThere’s always opportunity on Base ... Today $POD and $DOT are both pumping hard on Base right now $POD decentralized AI inference platform that repurposes idle GPUs. Real utility, 100% revenue to buybacks, stake for dividends + inference access. $DOT privacy + AI narrative heating up fast. Clean breakout and community momentum building.Base keeps proving one thing: There’s always opportunity on Base.Low fees. Growing ecosystem. Coinbase backing. Constant new narratives (AI, privacy, agents, memes). While others chase the meme casino on Solana, Base quietly delivers real use cases.
-
DeepBlueAlpha (@DeepBlueAlpha) reportedFirst, what Kite is. An EVM Layer-1 built for AI agents that pay for things — verifiable identity via the Agent Passport, stablecoin settlement, and native support for x402, Coinbase's agent-payment standard. $35M raised, led by PayPal Ventures and General Catalyst, with Coinbase Ventures. PayPal and Shopify pilots underway. Mainnet went live April 30, 2026.
-
Can Egridere (@canegridere) reported4. Autonomous Settlement. The 402 error payload includes a wallet address and the required fee in USDC on the Base network. Using its own funded crypto wallet (e.g., Coinbase CDP), the agent initiates the micro-payment instantly. No credit cards, no login screens.
-
Johnny Spider (@notJohnnySpider) reported@Cointelegraph • On-chain facts confirmed: Arkham Intelligence data shows 500 BTC (~$30.85M) moved from a wallet cluster labeled “Clifton Collins: Lost Keys” to a Coinbase Prime deposit address, as part of ~1,500 BTC transferred since March 2026. • Misleading attribution: The post incorrectly states that drug dealer Clifton Collins made the deposit; Irish Criminal Assets Bureau (CAB), supported by Europol and Gardaí, recovered and moved the seized funds after gaining access to the long-dormant wallets. • Background context: Collins bought ~6,000 BTC in 2011-2012 with criminal proceeds; keys were lost after his 2017 arrest, leaving ~4,500 BTC still in other seized wallets under ongoing recovery efforts.
-
Bitduke (@bitcoinduke) reported@0xL1NK_hl doubt this is about HL x Coinbase. Coinbase is a highly regulated US exchange, so even before everything else, this feels close to impossible rn
-
Harvey Reginald Financial (@Crypto1Harvey) reported@flippifi WRONG again, #Litecoin $LTC bagholder. You're LYING or terribly misinformed. According to Coinbase: "Litecoin reached its record high of $420.00 on December 11, 2017, marking a -90% change from its present value". It hasn't $420 since, making it the REAL ATH. Now YOU know YOUR facts, sit down and shut ******** up. Memecoin or not, I don't think you realize how manipulated LTC actually is. So the net result is still the same. Maybe you just deliberately ignore this or pretend it doesn't exist.
-
Shawn Presser (@theshawwn) reportedTo my absolute astonishment, straight out of an episode of “Silicon Valley”, people here created a “Shawn presser” coin. They raised nearly $4,000. I successfully transferred $450 to Coinbase. I can’t believe I’m writing this. That took 30 minutes, but paid $4k. The crypto community literally forced me to take money, and it worked. I have no actionable advice for anyone else. “Go viral” isn’t repeatable. I’m not allowed to mention the token, or rather they strongly discouraged me from mentioning it. But I can tell you with authority that (a) somehow people raised $3700 in SOL, and (b) to my jaw dropping astonishment I was able to transfer part of it to Coinbase. This is mortgage money, which means that crypto bros have somehow saved my house from foreclosure for another month. I’m baffled it wasn’t a scam. Even Claude warned me not to engage with them in any way. But somehow I did the equivalent of finding a $3700 bill. That means I owe a serious thank you to the crypto community. Which itself is surreal. I’m hesitant to even post this lest it sound like I was paid off. But I’m just as confused as you are. Thank you to the crypto community for raising nearly $4k in donations for me. I don’t understand this at all beyond “there is now money in my Coinbase”, but money is money, and I’m honor bound and ethics bound to at least say thank you. I’ll do a more detailed write up in a few days when things have calmed down. Back to chasing job leads. I’m absolutely amazed at this level of support. Thank you to everyone. I’m going to pay it forward whenever I can.
-
Morpheu5 Stock Watcher (@Morpheu5Watcher) reportedSTATELESS MONEY WAITS ON PAYROLLS: Bitcoin $BTC at $60,432, up 2.63% over the past 24 hours, has strung together a second straight day of gains above $60,000 - and the asset designed to ignore governments spends this morning waiting on a government jobs count, due at 8:30am ET. Ethereum, the second-largest cryptocurrency, sits at $1,623, up 2.83% over the same stretch, moving in lockstep. Whether this two-day rebound survives the week is barely a crypto question at all. It is a rates question, and the answer prints on a Bureau of Labor Statistics release. Here is why a payroll count reaches an asset with no payroll. A coin pays no interest, no dividend, and books no earnings, so owning it always costs you something invisible: the interest your money would have earned sitting somewhere safe instead. When rates are high, that invisible rent is expensive, and assets that pay nothing get sold first; when rate fear eases even a little, they bounce first. That makes the price of money - interest rates - crypto's landlord, and the monthly jobs report is the loudest single input into where the Federal Reserve sets that price. Stateless money, government clock. The hole this bounce is climbing out of is deep and freshly dug. Bitcoin fell 20.5% in June, its worst month since June 2022, and the US spot bitcoin ETFs - funds that hold actual bitcoin and trade like a stock, so any ordinary brokerage account can own the coin's move - bled a record $4.5 billion of net withdrawals, their worst month since they launched in January 2024. The coin touched a 21-month low near $59,000 late Tuesday before turning. The turn has a name attached: Kevin Warsh, chair of the Federal Reserve, told the European Central Bank's annual forum in Sintra, Portugal this week that inflation risks have come down, and an asset that lives on rate hope crossed back over $60,000 within hours. It has held that line for two days now. Today's test arrives on a moved-up clock. At 8:30am ET the Bureau of Labor Statistics releases the June jobs report - the government's count of how many workers employers added to payrolls last month, published a day early because US markets close Friday, July 3 for Independence Day. Economists expect about 114,000 jobs added, a step down from the 172,000 added in May, with unemployment holding near 4.3% - the share of people who want work but cannot find it. For crypto the number cuts both ways. A hot count feeds the case that the Fed's next move is a HIKE - rate futures already price real odds of one as soon as September - and more expensive money is exactly what sold this asset all June. A very cold count reads as the economy stalling, and fear sells everything speculative first. The rebound needs the middle. For a stock investor, the brokerage-account doors into this market are already voting in the premarket, and they line up like a ladder. The iShares Bitcoin Trust, ticker IBIT, at $34.23 (premarket), +$0.23 / +0.7% - BlackRock's spot bitcoin ETF, the fund that simply holds the coin and absorbed roughly $3.55 billion of June's withdrawals on its own - sits closest to flat. Coinbase, ticker COIN, at $161.43 (premarket), +$2.19 / +1.4% - the largest US crypto exchange, which earns fees when people trade - carries twice that. Strategy, ticker MSTR, at $96.98 (premarket), +$3.59 / +3.8% - formerly MicroStrategy, the company that borrowed billions to pile up a bitcoin treasury - carries five times it. Same coin, three different doses: the fund tracks it, the exchange leans on its trading traffic, and the leveraged treasury multiplies it - in June's direction just as faithfully as in this week's. One quirk of the calendar deserves its own line, because it is about to matter twice. Crypto never closes: the coin will trade straight through Friday's holiday and the weekend. Its stock-market proxies will not - US exchanges are shut Friday, so the ETF, the exchange and the treasury company all go dark for three and a half days while bitcoin keeps printing around the clock. Whatever the coin does between Thursday's close and Monday's open, the proxies settle it all at once at Monday's bell. That gap cuts both ways, and it belongs in any plan for watching this market across a long weekend. The checkable list from here is short: the 8:30 payroll count; the daily ETF flow tallies published each evening, because June's record withdrawals pausing for a day is not the same as stopping; and whether $60,000 is still underneath the coin come Monday morning. Crypto remains volatile and speculative, and two green days after a 20% month prove nothing by themselves. What they have bought is a hearing. The witness takes the stand at 8:30. Not investment advice.
-
Andy (@Andy_Ba11) reported@AptosLabs @coinbase @Aptos Quantum security is designed to protect you from even problems that don't yet exist