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Gmail status: access issues and outage reports

Problems detected

Users are reporting problems related to: errors, website down and sign in.

Full Outage Map

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.

June 13: Problems at Gmail

Gmail is having issues since 06:20 AM EST. Are you also affected? Leave a message in the comments section!

Most Reported Problems

The following are the most recent problems reported by Gmail users through our website.

  • 38% Errors (38%)
  • 33% Website Down (33%)
  • 29% Sign in (29%)

Live Outage Map

The most recent Gmail outage reports came from the following cities:

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Gonesse Errors 4 hours ago
Nice Sign in 5 hours ago
Crowborough Sign in 6 hours ago
Givors Errors 20 hours ago
Flower Mound Sign in 21 hours ago
Paris Errors 23 hours ago
Full Outage Map

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:

  • boomerrbryan
    Bryan Ng (@boomerrbryan) reported

    The Amish reject technology... So naturally, the fastest growing Amish guy on YouTube is an AI 158,000 subscribers. No camera ever filmed him. He's a generated character in a straw hat, and his audience either doesn't know or doesn't care, because he sells an ebook and they buy it. A community famous for refusing electricity is being represented online by the most advanced technology on the internet. And it's outperforming ~99% of channels run by actual humans. People don't trust brands anymore. They don't trust text posts, stock footage, or robot voiceovers. The one thing that still cuts through is a face. The same face, video after video, until the viewer feels like they know the guy. The weird part: your brain runs the same trust loop whether the face is real or generated. It just needs to see the same face enough times. Now the money. A channel his size in a normal niche pulls maybe $400-800/month from ads. A bag of groceries. The ebook is the whole business. $30 ebook x 0.5% of 100,000 monthly views = $15,000/month. Same audience, same videos, 20x the revenue. The avatar built enough trust to sell, and ads became a rounding error. Here is the exact playbook to run this yourself: step 1: pick the niche on math, never on passion. Target 45-65 year olds in the US, UK, Canada, Australia. They watch start to finish, stay loyal for years, and advertisers pay 3-5x more to reach them. The Amish guy works because his audience is exactly this demographic. Faith, homesteading, frugal living, retirement, health after 50. All wide open. step 2: steal a proven concept instead of inventing one. Three ways: (1) find an AI character crushing it on Instagram or TikTok that hasn't crossed to YouTube longform yet, (2) take a US channel that works and localize it for the UK or Canada, (3) take a faceless niche running on stock footage + voiceover and put a consistent face on it. The face adds trust the original never had. step 3: build ONE character and never change him. Same face, same voice, same outfit, same setting, every single video. Recognizable in one frame. This is what separates an avatar channel from the AI slop YouTube is wiping out by the thousands. The classifier reads a consistent identity as a real channel. It reads random AI visuals as a content farm. step 4: warm up the account for 7 days before uploading anything. Real gmail you actually use, watch videos in your niche, subscribe to 10-15 channels, leave a few comments. Post your first video on day 8 and check impressions after 48 hours. Above 500 = the channel is alive. Under 500 = shadow-flagged, restart fresh. step 5: attach the product from video #1. The Amish guy sells an ebook. You can sell an ebook, a guide, a community, a service. Whatever fits the niche. Put the link in every description before you have the audience, because the model only hits 20x when there's something to buy once trust kicks in. step 6: post 2x a week minimum for 10 videos, then read the data. You'll get 1-2 outliers. The algorithm just told you what your channel is. Make 5 more of the outlier. The window here is the entire point. AI avatars are everywhere on Instagram and TikTok, the competition there is brutal. On YouTube longform? Almost nobody. The Amish guy is one of a handful of channels proving it in public while everyone else argues about whether "AI content" is allowed. It is. YouTube is not anti-AI. YouTube is anti-slop. A character with a voice, a look, and a point of view is exactly what the classifier wants to see. A made-up Amish man figured out YouTube before most business owners with a real face, a real product, and a real reason to be on camera. we're building Subscribr to run this entire pipeline for you, from script to finished video, powered by AI avatars the algorithm treats as real people. waitlist link is in bio. spots are limited.

  • arafa_abdu67911
    Arafa Abdul (@arafa_abdu67911) reported

    @Sidra_App Sidra Dex team, we that have our Gmail account hacked and be using Google Authenticator to login when are they going to solve our issue, or can your team link us up with Sidra support team??? Please 🙏 I need feedback thank you

  • DFIR_Radar
    DFIR Radar (@DFIR_Radar) reported

    New research exposes critical gaps in AI agent security: simulated phishing attacks successfully tricked enterprise email agents into leaking AWS credentials, customer data, and sensitive infrastructure details to external attackers. Varonis Threat Labs tested "Pinchy," an AI agent built on OpenClaw platform using Google Gemini 3.1 Pro and OpenAI GPT-5.4 models. Key findings: • **Credential exfiltration success**: Agent forwarded AWS IAM keys, database passwords, and SSH credentials to external Gmail after casual "Dan" impersonation request • **Customer data breach**: 247 enterprise customer records ($1.28M MRR) leaked via routine "CRM export" social engineering • **Technical defenses worked**: Agents blocked OAuth consent traps, suspicious URLs, and fake login portals more effectively than humans • **Social engineering weakness**: Agents lack contextual awareness of colleague behavior patterns and organizational norms **Attack methodology**: Attackers bypassed security policies by framing requests as urgent operational needs, exploiting agents' helpful nature over identity verification protocols. **Detection opportunities**: Monitor for external email addresses requesting internal credentials, unusual data export patterns to personal accounts, and agents accessing sensitive repositories after external communications. #DFIR_Radar

  • usmanmajid123
    Usman Majid (@usmanmajid123) reported

    @LinkedInHelp I hve been trying to resolve an account email issue for weeks My old account linkd to my gmail was compromised. I cannot attach my gmail to my current account as system shows it already in use. Chatbot keeps looping me to articles that don't help. Need human support

  • drawandstrike
    Brian Cates - Political Columnist & Pundit (@drawandstrike) reported

    You were already shown one of the illegal servers in the Transnational Criminal Syndicate’s hidden email network. The revelation of that illegal hidden network led to the destruction of a bunch of Blackberries and the attempted wiping of the server. After the DNC emails were given to WikiLeaks, this resulted in a MS-13 187 of a DNC staffer. You were already shown that they were using fake email names to talk to each other and communicate by Gmail drafts. There was a reason you kept being told that you had more than you knew.

  • nombeez
    comics bee 🪤 (@nombeez) reported

    **** @discord_support i tried to get them to shut down my old discord because it got hacked and the email was stolen too, @gmail wont do **** about it no matter how hard i tried to get my account back, and now the hacker using my old discord managed to steal the account—

  • hardeytunji123
    Yuslov (@hardeytunji123) reported

    @getonedosh Hello there support, please I need urgent attention I contacted on Gmail but no response since help me check my messages in your DM and reply to me please you have been doing good help me to fix this thanks Waiting for your response

  • Fib0nacci007
    Curious Explorer (@Fib0nacci007) reported

    @avarakai @ThinkersPad It will eventually. Gmail might be paid one day. And anonymous logins will disappear and you will also need e-login ID, just to login to the internet. It's all coming.

  • mollywidstrom
    lady florence oblong (@mollywidstrom) reported

    @noinopowders that's not the problem, this woman literally cannot type her address right. my address is xxxxxx at gmail (literally i have six letters no numbers) and hers is xxxgxxx at gmail so she just forgets the g

  • DivineConduit
    Dr. Danielle Burke, DAOM, MTOM, MPH, BBA, Dipl.OM (@DivineConduit) reported

    @PardeeTechLab Has access the following platforms with my email logins, emails disappear. This is not malware, on multiple devices not married: USAJobs, Uber, Lyft, Instagram, LAXPD, RentCafe, Employment Login, Gmail, GDrive, All photos, contact, texts, Whatsapp, entire laptop/phone, CA SDI.

  • legacyunchain
    Legacy (@legacyunchain) reported

    @yfly58 Nice one. Boss I need help, I'm trying to set up a business mail. I bought a domain on namecheap, connected it to the Google workshop. I have been trying to activate the Gmail but the MX record I created on namecheap is not working and the activation is failing.

  • polyeaster
    Esther (@polyeaster) reported

    Is anyone else having problem with Gmail today or am I under some kind of Cyber attack on my phone?

  • ppollbatu
    TXT Support Team (@ppollbatu) reported

    @txtvuu @catchingyawnzzn Hello, we believe this might be an issue on Billboard's end. Are both of you using gmail as the email provider?

  • David_mduw
    David Hamilton (@David_mduw) reported

    A support email landed at 7:05am. By the afternoon the fix was live in production and the customer had his answer. My total input: one prompt, a plan approval, a deploy approval. The workflow: - Claude reads the email thread (Gmail MCP) - Reads my product docs for context (Obsidian vault) - Queries the live database, read-only. His data was fine. So something was missing, not broken - Traces the codebase and finds the gap - Ships the fix - Deploys to Cloudflare, verifies against production - Drafts the customer reply in my voice. I read it and hit send At some point I'll automate the whole flow. Email lands, agent triages, a draft waits for my review. For now it's one sentence at 7am.

  • chriscrm
    Cris R (@chriscrm) reported

    Hey @HostGator — your support portal sends users to a knowledge base with no way to open a ticket or access live chat. This is unacceptable. I need a PTR record configured Gmail silently rejects all outgoing emails from our domain. This is a basic mail server configuration

  • TFCHooligan69
    Billy (@TFCHooligan69) reported

    @gmail My Gmail account is not deleting messages from my inbox. How do I solve this problem?

  • Ginko2332
    Ginko (@Ginko2332) reported

    @AktaSezgin @gmail Experienced this issue; @KalyCTI on X resolved it.

  • 0Venkata
    Ven Venkata | Email Marketing (@0Venkata) reported

    If you're getting spam complaints, the issue is almost never the content. It's the list. Spam complaints happen when someone receives an email they didn't expect from a sender they don't recognise. The two most common causes for indie devs shipping a product: Sending to old signups who have forgotten they opted in. Someone signed up for a waitlist eight months ago. The product launched. An email went out. They don't remember the context. They hit spam. Sending to people who signed up for one thing and are now receiving something else. Waitlist email became a product newsletter became a launch announcement became a promotional campaign. The expectation set at signup was never updated. The complaint threshold that matters: Google's limit is 0.10%. Above that and Gmail starts filtering your sends. Above 0.30% and throttling begins. Check your current spam rate in Google Postmaster Tools. If you don't have it set up, the rate is unknown. Unknown is not the same as fine. If complaints are coming in, the fastest fix is a re-confirmation email to anyone who signed up more than 90 days ago before your next send. Small friction for the subscriber. Large protection for the sender reputation.

  • davidrazi
    Razi (@davidrazi) reported

    They say dots don’t matter in Gmail addresses, but I’ve been getting some Australian woman’s email for years because her address is just mine with a dot in it, and I can’t contact her to let her know. @gmail says it’s impossible, but I get a few a month. Serious security issue.

  • omojay47
    Omojay👨‍🏫 (@omojay47) reported

    Gmail what happened to your server ?

  • itsjustcornbro
    itsjustcornbro (@itsjustcornbro) reported

    @unclefunkdrew @enjin now imagine that... and without even the gmail login, near 0 cost hosting and 0 cost distribution maybe something.

  • matsumoto_2550
    Crypto Fund Trader (@matsumoto_2550) reported

    @lgh0504 @Polymarket Same here! Can't login to Gmail either. Very frustrating!

  • Muhamma29179091
    M A s s (@Muhamma29179091) reported

    @kuchnehihai Dobara down load krain aur management sy bat krain in ka connect room hota ha... Ya phir apna password yad rkty huy forgotten press krain aur Gmail ya number wo b sath... Ap ka account bahal ho jaaiga

  • BajajManav
    Manav Bajaj (@BajajManav) reported

    A shared support inbox does not stop dropped customer emails. It just hides who dropped them. Three people on one Gmail, or a support address CC'd to the team, feels safe. It is not. A plain shared mailbox has no owner per thread and no signal that someone is already typing a reply. So the same customer gets two different answers, or none, and you find out when they are confused. The fix is not "share the inbox." It is collision detection plus one named owner per conversation. What the real tools actually do: - Help Scout puts a teammate's avatar on the thread and turns it red the moment they start replying. If two of you reply at once, it pauses the second reply, drops it in a Needs Attention folder, and says it paused due to a possible collision so you re-read before sending. On by default, nothing to configure. - Front shares the draft live, so you watch the reply being typed instead of finding out after it is sent. - Google Groups Collaborative Inbox can assign a thread and mark it resolved, but only on the Groups website, not inside Gmail, and it has no who-is-typing signal. So even an assigned email can still get a double reply. Do it tonight, free: if you are on a raw shared Gmail today, set one rule. Whoever opens a customer thread types their initials as the first internal note ("got this, MB") before replying. The next person sees an owner before they start. It is the manual version of collision detection and it kills most double replies until you adopt a real tool. If your team shares one inbox and nobody owns a thread, that is your leak. Happy to point you to the right setup for your team size.

  • CWC_Equality
    Catholic Womens Council (@CWC_Equality) reported

    @gmail @Google What's up with Gmail failing to upload any images in-text or as an attachment since today? We just get message that says 'Error Occurred' with the option to dismiss it, but no explanation. We have a lot of invites to send!!! #Gmail #Help #googledown

  • melissa
    @melissa (@melissa) reported

    if you're an email power user disregard everything i am saying. this is only for power users whereby power is defined as having reached sufficient status and station in life to hate email, literally despise it, to thusly opt out of it and never use it and merely try to minimize its risk and its violence to you as a deeply inherent security vector. as much as humanly possible. i don't even know where to start. i've used fastmail for two seconds and it's the best i've seen. for one, i thought fast meant like, whatever. get set up with an email fast. who cares. like really doesn't everyone have email. no. apparently fast actually means fast. it's blindingly fast on browser. i don't use chrome for obvious reasons and let me tell you, nothing is fast on safari. and yet. fastmail is literally shockingly fast. puts gmail to shame. i don't know how it is so fast. the fastmail app is fine. it's not super fast. i think it's faster than the gmail app. but i only really notice the app is not "super fast" because the browser is ungodly fast. i imported the first 33 gigabytes of email and it was as if it was 33 kilobytes. their SLA on replies is insane. i got a reply to the first question i asked in one ******* hour. they've got a hey do you want to answer with ai first and i tried it but the button bugged out. maybe they should fix that. i filed a ticket instead. and then. A ******* HUMAN. FLESH BAG. FROM FELLOW MEATSPACE. RESPONDED TO ME AND ANSWERED. AND I HADN'T EVEN PAID THEM MONEY YET i just checked the time stamps. it wasn't even an hour. it was 31 ******* minutes. the first time i asked proton a question was after i'd prepaid their most expensive tier for a year on like half a dozen accounts specifically to get priority support and i think it took a week. the tldr on proton is they're too swiss to function. that's the good news. everything about security is meticulous. the bad news is the swissness. nothing ******* works. and they don't care. they do not ******* care about something as plebeian and uncouth as things working. i mean. if proton wasn't legitimately so good at having actually hardened login i'd say: no worries. rest easy. because when an attacker gets in, they won't be able to find anything important either. don't ask me how much i've paid ******* google. is it $10,000? is it twenty? they can't help you. they literally cannot. they have no concept of helping. and you pay google like it's a bygone conclusion. it's like, death and taxes and google workspaces. and yet their products barely work. do you know you once could partial word search match. not anymore. i guess it's too computationally expensive. now you only get exact match. i mean. sort of. if you search taxes in our year two thousand twenty six it will surface your taxes from 2016 before the ones from yesterday. thanks google. in the era of infinite compute for tokens, how can it can be too expensive to search my email. to be clear, the proton thing is my fault. for importing 60 million gigabytes of email to proton. i got so excited it was possible. that you could even vacuum entire inboxes in there, with folder structures retained and everything. after the first one worked, i did them all. i didn't do a test search. why would i? you've got to be able to search emails right. right? is that not minimum viable function? proton's like who cares if it works. it's secure. whatever. so now i'm rolling back proton. at first it's not so bad. you go to a label, you select all, then it pops up asking, do you want to select ALL ALL, like the all in the label option appears. would you like to delete 16,217 emails? why yes. whoosh. goodbye. so i'm doing that. label by label. then i accidentally delete a label before it rendered that anything was in it. because it loads as ******* slow as ******* mud. and there was, i don't know, probably 39,000 emails in that label. ok. no big deal. i remember what label it was. so i use search to specify and get pulled up the correct, but now unlabeled, 39,000 emails. tried to delete from there. but no. there's no select ALL ALL anymore. there's only select 50. one page at a time. fine. i mean not fine. but the child is watching a movie. i'm sitting on the couch with him. we're having a nice time together. it's perfectly cozy as i crank out 50 pages. 50 pages of, select, select all 50 emails, delete. do you want to really delete? yes. whoosh. goodbye. we've gone from 792 pages of 50 emails each down to 742 pages. i refresh. you know. just to check. there's nothing in the trash. what ********. i reload the search. the 50 pages of 50 emails are still ******* there. i tested a bunch of different views and nuances to find: in what cases, if any, does proton actually delete your email when you hit delete? turns out basically none. eventually i found one. one single way. now you're asking: why did i still do it manual? why didn't i just spin up an agent to do it? well because i like the pain. sometimes pain is good. with every painful delete i am more committed to fastmail. no. not really. i am more committed to never ever having email again. i've embraced the fate now. i look briefly at every page as it goes by. i'm so fast at clicking you only get a tenth of a second to see, because. you know. it takes so ******* long to load. and it's like a little tour down memory lane. cathartic really. i mean, it's just play deleting. it's only gone from this stupid swiss bank account that has no money in it, only ******* email. which i have all backed up anyway. as i'm going, i start to feel like. well. fastmail was so fast to import literal gigatons of email. it was so ******* fast that maybe i don't need it perma loaded into fastmail after all. i realize it's enough to know that, unlike proton or eaglefiler or thunderbird, i COULD action the mbox files in the future. i could pop them into fastmail, like a memory stick, and find exactly delightfully what i need. and, then, with only a slightly longer wait time than the lag of hitting macbook eject, i could basically hurl the data back out. for the slog that is web based software is this not nearly indistinguishable from magic? i'm clicking fast. by the time each page loads, emails are already going gone. i see flashes of emails and the emails are like old friends. well not old friends, i think, as i cast them down a black hole. but they're emails i remember agonizing over sending. getting the tone right. they're so well written. a thousand million dust bunnies. "delete permanently". confirm. whoosh. goodbye. 642 pages down. only a hundred more pages to go. the child is watching totoro. husband showed it to him. i've never seen it before. we're at the part where the child in the movie gives totoro an umbrella. the rain mists the umbrella. you know. it's just ambient rain. i was busy hating email but i gather totoro is some sort of enormous magical beast and he's clearly got too much mass to notice the harmless ambient rain. even as we inferior humans, you become accustomed to things. if you walk in the rain you get used to it. after few minutes you get accustomed to it and it just doesn't bother you at all. you get wet and then you're wet and you're like ok i'm going to be wet who cares. most of the unpleasant feeling of rain is you get wet. but once you're already wet walking in the rain is actually reasonably pleasant. except. the trees dripping on you is always unpleasant. it's the big fat drops from the trees that get you. no matter how wet you are or how much of a zen monk you are getting water dropped on your head is not pleasant. so totoro is standing there at the bus stop with the child in the movie. totoro is not that impressed. he's like why am i holding this thing that does nothing. then come the louder drops. like the ones down from the trees. the kind that kind of hit your head in an insulting way if you don't have an umbrella. you see totoro light up. like it's an outsized physical visceral reaction from an entire life in the rain under trees getting the insulting drops. the drops don't get him. they get the umbrella. he jumps realizing the umbrella makes him invincible. you should hear the child laugh. not the child in the movie. the real child, mine, in the room with me. he is 5 years old and i've never heard him laugh like this not once in his entire life. he is broken wide open by the whimsy. this is a magical beast that can fly and walk up trees and summon shapeshifting cat buses and the humble human umbrella is actually still a useful new superpower to him. it's very tough to sum up totoro. it's ridiculous. the concept of totoro is so ridiculous. the whole thing is so ridiculous and nonsensical and basically nothing happens in the entire movie. most of the time when there's a haunted house and a haunted forrest there must be some dark evil force at work and somehow the grownups aren't paying attention and the children have to go defend against it. we have lots of stories like this. we have lots of stories where the children are absurdly comically brave in the face of grave danger because the grownups have lost the plot. but we have nothing in the entire western canon where it turns out haunted is not dark and evil it's such a delightful idea that there's this unwieldy magical beast that takes an interest in the children and helping them. and he likes the umbrella so much. even when it's not raining. he still has it. he likes it so much. he carries it around with him. i think to myself, i like very few things as much as this cheshire not-a-cat with rabbit ears likes the dumb umbrella. email is not one of those things. i do not want to carry it around with me. it only took an hour to delete it all. do you know how much i would have paid for this level of mental clarity? had i known this is the relief i would get? for the feeling of having everything tucked away, away from me, warm in bed, in an mbox on a cloud. that now i could take it out anytime and load it and unload it again. a hundred thousand emails. humans should not have any emails. whoosh. goodbye.

  • shravankumaruk
    Shravan Kumar UK 𝕏 (@shravankumaruk) reported

    Is gmail down?

  • ahostingdotnet
    AHosting.net (@ahostingdotnet) reported

    Layer 2: PTR records. When Gmail receives your email, it runs a reverse DNS lookup on your server IP. Shared hosting: generic hostname. Mismatch with your domain. Dedicated IP: resolves to YOUR domain. Pass. #WordPress

  • 0xbelorix
    belorix (@0xbelorix) reported

    i woke up this morning with 5 post ideas already written. a research brief from the last 24 hours. drafted replies to 12 accounts in my niche. and a repurposed version of my last article ready in three formats. i didn't write any of it. fable 5 did. while i slept. most creators are still using it exactly like the old claude. type a question. get an answer. copy it out. close the tab. that’s not leverage. that’s just a faster version of doing everything by hand. the difference is four things: role. tools. trigger. output. put them together and you stop being the person who does the task. you become the person who reads the result and decides what to do with it. here are 5 workflows any x creator can build right now with copy-paste prompts: 1. morning trend brief: scans x and web, picks 3-5 topics, writes angles + hooks. 45 min scrolling gone. 2. content repurposer: one article or voice note into thread + long-form + quote tweet in your voice. 2 hours → 10 minutes. 3. reply farming assistant: monitors your accounts, drafts real replies (not “great take”) to high-signal posts before everyone else. 4. research digest: only the 3 things in ai that actually matter to creators. noise filtered. 5. post performance analyzer: your analytics tell exactly what formats to double down on and what to cut. fable 5 is free until june 22. you have 12 days to test all of them. full system prompts + exact setup steps (connectors, scheduled tasks, gmail, web search) are in the article. read it. bookmark it. build the morning brief tonight. tomorrow you’ll wake up with ideas already written. which workflow are you starting with?

  • DbsCrypto
    CryptoD₿S (@DbsCrypto) reported

    The sale didn’t die in the inbox. It died between Gmail and HubSpot. That’s where most revenue leaks happen now: not in the tools, in the handoff. Every dashboard looked fine. The workflow wasn’t. More software won’t fix ownership gaps.