Gmail status: access issues and outage reports
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Gmail is a free, advertising-supported email service developed by Google. Users can access Gmail on the web and through the mobile apps for Android and iOS, as well as through third-party programs that synchronize email content through POP or IMAP protocols.
Problems in the last 24 hours
The graph below depicts the number of Gmail reports received over the last 24 hours by time of day. When the number of reports exceeds the baseline, represented by the red line, an outage is determined.
At the moment, we haven't detected any problems at Gmail. Are you experiencing issues or an outage? Leave a message in the comments section!
Most Reported Problems
The following are the most recent problems reported by Gmail users through our website.
- Website Down (36%)
- Errors (35%)
- Sign in (29%)
Live Outage Map
The most recent Gmail outage reports came from the following cities:
| City | Problem Type | Report Time |
|---|---|---|
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Errors | 37 minutes ago |
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Website Down | 3 hours ago |
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Errors | 7 hours ago |
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Sign in | 11 hours ago |
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Errors | 1 day ago |
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Errors | 1 day ago |
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.
Gmail Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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James (@jamescoder12) reportedThe full transformation 20 minutes, one afternoon. Before: 1. 12,847 unread emails in one flat inbox 2. 85 new emails per day, all mixed together 3. 2 hours/day spent on email 4. Important messages missed weekly 5. No labels. No filters. No system. After: 6. Categories split incoming emails into 5 automatic tabs 7. 7 filters auto-sort, auto-label, and auto-archive 8. 5 color-coded labels for visual priority 9. Multiple Inboxes dashboard showing 5 organized sections 10. Keyboard shortcuts cutting processing time in half 11. Auto-Advance eliminating inbox round-trips 12. Nudges catching forgotten replies 13. 30-second Undo Send as a permanent safety net 14. "Waiting" label tracking every pending response Emails requiring attention per day: 15-20 (down from 85). Time spent on email per day: 35-45 minutes (down from 2 hours). Important emails missed per week: 0 (down from 3-5). Same Gmail. Same account. Same $0/month. 9 settings. 20 minutes. Once.
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Nata (@IniNaataa) reported@TeamYouTube hello my gmail account just got hijacked all thing from password to recovery has been change and i can't login into the account, i can show proof and there's other creator that can vouch for me too, is it possible to recover my gmail account?
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lulu 🐉💞🐇 (kuro vc) ore no nito (@hoppinhype) reported@gottis_chan hiii ive seen ur previous tweets abt problems connecting to jp enst. iirc u need a vpn connected to japan and make a new gmail account in the same device u connected the vpn to! then u login that email onto play store in your phone which should have access now to jp play store!!
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yoon. (@ItsSugaGirl) reported@suitetvapp Any chance we can get a "download data" feature? Also, how can I switch my login from Apple to Gmail without losing my account/progress? Thanks!
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J.D. Salbego (@JDSalbego) reportedHow to scope MCP permissions per agent, not globally. The isolation pattern most AI agent builders skip. Most setups: one set of MCP credentials shared across every agent in the workspace. Your research agent, your writing agent, and your deploy agent all have the same access to Gmail, GitHub, Slack, and your filesystem. If any one agent is compromised, the attacker inherits everything. The fix: per-agent credential isolation. 🔵 Each agent gets only the MCP servers it actually needs 🔵 Each MCP server connection uses credentials scoped to that agent's role 🔵 Your research agent gets read-only access. Your deploy agent gets write access. Neither sees the other's credentials. How to implement: 🔵 Create separate credential files per agent role 🔵 Mount only the relevant credentials into each agent's environment 🔵 Use different API keys per MCP server per agent where the server supports it The pattern: principle of least privilege, applied to AI agent MCP connections. One compromised agent should never cascade to everything.
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King (@whyKingdavid) reportedI believe fintechs should start adopting signing in with Google authentication because the era of passwords is gradually ending. It doesn't make sense that I enter my password, and then they send an OTP to my email to verify me. Signing in with Google does the same thing. Passkeys are now becoming the new passwords, and they're ten times safer. Even Google, Apple, and Microsoft had to collaborate for passkeys. Signing in with Google makes much more sense because, for someone to hack into your account, they first need to hack your entire Google account, which Google secures heavily. It becomes very difficult to access someone else's account without permission. I love what @privy_io is doing: how they easily use Gmail to create crypto wallets for users. Building a company is about solving problems, not about making solutions longer
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Naman Rohandiya (@NamanRohandiya) reportedEvery company has a second brain. The problem is it's scattered across Slack, Gmail, Notion, Google Drive, docs, and hundreds of conversations. We're building Octopus to unify it. Connect your tools, ask anything, and get answers backed by citations.
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Prajwal Tomar (@PrajwalTomar_) reportedI just replaced $200/month in SaaS with one internal tool. New lead hits Gmail. It auto-tags, updates our pipeline in Sheets, drafts the proposal with AI, and fires an SMS follow-up via Twilio. Built the whole thing in one afternoon in Lovable. People still think Lovable is just for pretty UI. It's not. You can wire up Gmail, Sheets, Twilio, anything. Build tools that actually replace your stack. I use connectors almost daily now. On client work, agency automation, side projects. I finally wrote down the entire system. Every shortcut, every mistake I made, the stuff I wish I knew on day one.
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Folia (@FoliaMadleaf) reported@IrvinZhan That's not gonna happen. I sign in these two with my gmail. Google should be the last winner.
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Subscribr (@SubscribrAI) reportedA YouTube channel with 14 videos just pulled 104,000 views on one upload using a Native American AI character. Frank Redhawk is 14 videos deep. 3,800 subscribers. 141,335 total views. Started uploading on a dormant January 2021 Gmail with 5 years of trust score baked in before the first video. The top video pulled 104,000 views in 30 days. "The Native Way to Cool Any Room for Pennies — No AC, No Electricity, No Fan." 18 minute video. 10.3x the channel average. The second pulled 35,000 views. "The Native Way to Purify Any Water in Minutes." 19 minute video. 3.5x outlier. The whole channel runs on one authority frame. "The Native Way." Every title. Every video. The AI character wears the cultural authority. The audience trusts the wisdom before Frank says a word. Monetization is already stacked. sells an ebook. Every viewer worried about the grid going down is a $47 buyer. Why this play works. Cultural authority frames are the highest converting hook on YouTube in 2026. Amish. Native American. Nordic. Ancient Roman. Every one of them implies wisdom the audience has never heard before. The costume does half the trust work. Meanwhile the content underneath is public. Traditional cooling techniques exist in old ethnobotany textbooks. Charcoal water purification is on Wikipedia. Free public domain knowledge wrapped in an authority frame. The playbook. Step 1. Pick a cultural authority frame nobody in your niche is running. Native American. Amish. Aboriginal. Bedouin. Cossack. Any culture with survival wisdom the audience recognizes as trustworthy. Step 2. Build an AI character that carries the cultural signal. Native American elder. Amish craftsman. Aboriginal grandmother. The character does not need to speak the language. It needs to look the part. Step 3. Same title formula every video. "The Native Way to X." "The Amish Secret to Y." "The Japanese Method for Z." Step 4. Attach a $47 ebook from video 3. Package the wisdom the character represents. Step 5. Same 18 to 20 minute video length. Older Tier 1 audience watches start to finish. Step 6. Ship 3 videos a week. Ride the first 5x outlier the moment it hits. The window is closing on Amish. Native American is wide open. Aboriginal is wide open. Nordic is barely started. Pick a cultural frame. Build the character. Ship 15 videos in 30 days.
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Poyoyo (@notpoyoyo) reported2/3 The task was simple: Read the emails, identify the biggest recurring problem, decide what should be built, and start implementing it. GPT-5.6 asked me to connect Gmail, read all 15 emails almost instantly, and got straight to work.
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Harsh (@Harsh3709931261) reported@Harsh3709931262 @reliancejio @reliancejio :- Provide Resolution permanent because i have very tired form such issues i already described This concern via Gmail Contact:- 8826294489
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Neo (@Neo_tech_AI) reportedIf this saved you money or made you realize the one paid tool that's genuinely worth keeping one ask: Repost the first post so the next person paying $97/month for AI tools sees the $0 version before their next billing cycle. Follow [ @jackcoder0 ] I break down the hidden tools, free alternatives, and overpriced subscriptions that companies bank on you not questioning. Next thread: the 11 Gmail features that replace $840/year of paid apps Superhuman, Boomerang, Calendly, Grammarly, and SaneBox. All free. All built in. All hidden in the Settings tab you never open.
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peter_ishere (@peter_ishere) reportedI'm 15. My startup has 23 paying users and $460 MRR after 1 month, but I'm gonna kill everything and start from zero. Problem is: 99% of people who see it and try it, don't use it. A lot of eyeballs have been landing on Dirac from organic content, but those people who do try it out, churn way too fast. Not because landing page is bad. Not because product is poorly made. But because of 2 reasons: 1. There's no need for another email agent. The bottleneck has never been the tool. It's the founder who's using it. So there's no way to make a tool to beat that. 2. Emotional cost of switching from Gmail is TOO high.
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.˚𓏲♱ Em .˚𓏲♱ (@LunarGreyy) reported@ProtonMail I did this, but it keeps disconnecting my gmail address. Is there a way to fix that?
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Maharaj (@Gnostos333) reported@WatcherJanus @sentosumosaba We have a few pilots in limited capacity. That’s like saying the government is testing out email on a specific server and using that as a predictive marker about the future success of Gmail. I say this not just about XRPL or XRP, but with crypto in general
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Paweł Huryn (@PawelHuryn) reportedI gave a Claude artifact write access to my Gmail. The permission box said one word: Gmail. This launch says the apps "take actions for each viewer." I built one to see what that means. It declared two Gmail tools: one that reads your threads, one that creates drafts in your account. The approval screen doesn't tell you which is which. It names the connector, never the actions. Reading your mail and writing to it show the same checkbox and the same line: "only continue if you trust this app." The rest is genuinely locked down. The page never sees your login, it can only call the tools it declared, and it can't be shared publicly. That leaves one real control: "trust this app." The screen gives you no way to judge whether you should. You're not approving Gmail. You're approving whatever the app can do with it.
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Hamès (@Hames_CFC) reported@zillionokoye I’m interested Having issues with working Gmail
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Idowu Olumini (@Kolexeneration) reported@SmileComsNGCare I have sent an email to customer service to update my email from Yahoo to gmail due to network glitch & unable to send activation code to yahoo email. I have been following up with different reminder email from last week & there was no reply. So disheartening.
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Declan Conner (@DeclanConner) reported@SurtseyAna Surtsey. I had this problem. It's easy to resolve. At the end of the email should be a link to unsubscribe or to stop further emails. Unfortunately you have to do each company one at a time. In Gmail I think there's a setting g to stop unsolicited marketing. YouTube for how to
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Cameron G | DevSecOps & Appsec (@camgrimsec) reportedIf one prompt can: • issue refunds • send invoices • access Gmail • edit databases • deploy code then that prompt deserves a security review
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Paul Jump (@paulljump) reported@Bhavyaztwt How is this not a bigger deal. Now do Gmail search (also terrible)
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James (@jamescoder12) reportedThe uncomfortable truth: Gmail has 2 billion users. It's the most-used email platform on earth. Free. Powerful. Updated continuously by Google. And 95% of those 2 billion users have never opened Settings past the first page. They receive 85 emails a day in one flat list. They scroll. They miss things. They feel overwhelmed. They blame email itself "I hate email" when the problem was never email. It was configuration. Gmail ships unconfigured on purpose. A configured Gmail reduces time-on-platform. An unconfigured Gmail keeps you scrolling, clicking, searching, and spending 2 hours doing what 35 minutes could handle. Google measures engagement. Efficiency works against engagement. The productivity coach's last line: "I've organized 400+ inboxes. The pattern is always the same. The person is smart, successful, and drowning in email. They blame themselves 'I'm bad at email.' They're not. Gmail shipped them a race car with every setting on neutral. Nobody told them to shift gears. 9 settings. 20 minutes. The email problem you've had for 6 years solved in one afternoon. The inbox was never the problem. The defaults were." 12,847 unread emails. 20 minutes in Settings. 23 that needed attention. The Settings page has been there for 20 years. The features have been free since day one. The inbox you've been fighting was always one afternoon away from peace. Open Settings tonight. Change 9 things. The inbox finally works for you instead of against you.
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blake ᳂ (@miyuswaa) reported@Thatperson535 i mean sure that can happen but its not on the writers’ end or ao3’s end to fix it. it mostly is a gmail error
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KING OBI (@kvnqobi) reported@taliseio I Can’t seem to sign in with my gmail
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BanKīng (@Dionnyisus) reportedIs gmail down?
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Big Kenzo (@Realkenzo001) reportedIf you like be Gmail na ur problem bdat
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Kimmy failure (@lundinkim5) reported@namipop650 Lowkey its my gmail. I do what i want with that. If they want a twitter account they can fix it on their own. Im done babysitting a grown *** indidivual. I have done a lot for them yet i got nothing in return. Might give it back to them if i l feel like it. I feel kinda bad abtit
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Nilesh AI (@nileshgiri34) reportedlast 3 hours! I downloaded 4gb gtav update on Epic Games then Rockstar games launcher gave account error then I tried my 3 Gmail accounts it did not match then password resets and then created new accounts on rockstar also! I give up! its not working at all!
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Justin Hays (@justinmhays) reported@guessworkinvest Build a routine in Claude code that checks your Gmail on this cadence. Let it draft responses to the emails or flag where you need to respond. Evolve the routine/skill with each pass. You’ll resolve your correspondence issues and overtime automate a great deal of it!