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.
- Errors (37%)
- Website Down (34%)
- 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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Sign in | 8 hours ago |
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Errors | 9 hours ago |
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Errors | 1 day ago |
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Errors | 1 day ago |
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Website Down | 1 day ago |
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Sign in | 2 days 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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Junaidu Sadiq (@junaidu_sa580) reported@wali12342325579 @SidraBankNews Try login in with Gmail, it will login
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Brat🐾 (@bratings_) reported@TeamYouTube @takarabako_j hi I created a YouTube account and I’ve forgotten the gmail I used to create it with. But I remember the passwords and possibly the numbers connected on it but don’t have access to the number if there’s one on there because my old phone is broken. Please help me.
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Aayush (@NotSakariya) reported@md_kasif_uddin If theres something made directly for Andoird or iOS that must be used. Native just slows your app, I have experience, I used GMAIL APIs and tried maximum optimization, but things are already slow at the base. You can't change that
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Dalton Ponder (@DivineLemur) reported@antigravity I used your feature to change my gmail address to a new address and I think it broke my Antigravity. All prompts result in an "Agent terminated due to error" response since making the change. Please help.
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Rabbil H (@heyrhassan) reported"My emails are landing in promotions tab." That's not the inbox. That's Gmail saying "this is marketing." Lower engagement. Lower priority. Eventually leads to spam. Fix sender reputation now. Before it's too late.
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Sam (@sam__works) reportedI have 39 pieces of finished ad creative sitting in a folder waiting for me to send them to the brands they were built for. My AI pipeline completed all this work in one night. The slow part is still a human opening Gmail.
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06 (@opun_06) reportedcan’t login to new gmail bc i’m making too many and google thinks im being a bot gosh man
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REBEL (@kasu_saiashwith) reported@zomato @DavidMillerSA12 @zomato please address my issue i have got spilaged order and there no sought of customer service and I reported issue through Gmail to zomato no response from them also .. hope you reply me
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Justice (@Justicetcbs) reported@TeamYouTube my channel has just been compromised, and I've been signed out of my Gmail account. I tried recovering but it’s not working. Please assist quickly.
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Michael Rouveure (@MichaelRouveure) reportedI just compressed 3 weeks of quarterly fund reporting into 5 minutes with @AnthropicAI's new Claude Managed Agents and a @zapier MCP server. I recorded the whole thing. One instruction: "Build our Q4 LP report." The agent: → Found board meetings across 8 companies in Gmail and Drive → Ingested PowerPoints, PDFs, Google Docs, emails → Standardized everything with health ratings in Airtable → Drafted a full LP newsletter → Sent it I didn't touch a thing. If you want something like this at your fund — DM me.
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arx__ashiq____x10 (@ARxAashiq) reported@dancyber0913890 @GoogleIndia @TeamYouTube My gmail id is good password is also fine but this is the problem sir 2 step verification please help me
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LeaderOfTomorrow (@Okpeaboje) reported@Horluwa26133032 @nysc360 Try to login using the Gmail and password you submitted and see what happens, you should also proceed to a cafe too.
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Kelb Art (@ArtKelb) reported@mSperoni I'm gonna make a guess here; you set up all of the accounts on that laptop except gmail and bluesky on the same day when you got it? If so, all the login tokens expired at the same time too. Long-term tokens tend to run about 6 months to a year, I think. Best guess, anyway.
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Devon Canup | YouTube Expert (@youtubedevon) reportedI do 1 gmail and 30 channels and never had any issues. At the same time I typically build branded youtube channels that are compliant with community guidelines. Good strategy if you're trying to do ai slop or more sketchy channels!
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Tunnnnn🥷🏽🐺🎒 (@darmich19) reportedZVOICE, This Starkzap Powered App Just Made Business Expense Reimbursement Onchain. And It’s Quietly Wild. Let me paint you a picture you’ve probably lived before. End of the month. your company needs expense receipts. you open Gmail and start digging. there’s the AWS bill buried under 47 unread emails. the Stripe charge from three weeks ago. the Notion invoice you forwarded to yourself and forgot about. you screenshot everything, paste it into a spreadsheet, attach PDFs, submit the form, and then wait. two weeks later, accounting emails back. “we’re missing your October receipts.” you do it all over again. This is the expense reimbursement experience in 2026. for most companies startups, agencies, remote teams, freelancers. it hasn’t changed in a decade. it’s still manual, still slow, still dependent on someone chasing someone else. ZVoice just built something that makes that entire ritual disappear. WHAT ZVOICE ACTUALLY IS. ZVoice is a privacy preserving invoice reimbursement platform powered by StarkZap. The tagline on the site is simple: “email arrives. money lands.” But what’s happening under the hood is genuinely interesting. your inbox already contains proof of every expense you’ve ever made. every vendor email,whether it’s a Stripe receipt, an AWS bill, a SaaS invoice is cryptographically signed by the vendor’s own mail server using something called a DKIM signature. DKIM stands for DomainKeys Identified Mail. it’s an email authentication standard that essentially means every legitimate vendor email carries a cryptographic stamp that proves it came from where it says it came from. Most people have never thought about this. but ZVoice did. ZVoice reads the DKIM signature on your vendor emails, generates a zero knowledge proof from it, submits that proof onchain, and the smart contract auto approves the reimbursement. payment hits your wallet. no PDFs. no spreadsheets. no “please resubmit.” that’s the whole product. and it’s deceptively powerful.
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CryptoKenya (@CryptoKenya_) reported@Google @gmail @blakebarnes i cannot sign in to my Gmail that I made 3 days ago. I got signed out of the mail 2 times that they suspect it's a bot. I mean this update - just take us back to the previous version
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eCom Email Marketer (@eComEmailMktr) reportedThat 200k email list you're bragging about? Half of it is dead weight. Unengaged subscribers don't just sit there quietly. They're actively hurting your program every single day. They tank your deliverability. They skew your open rate data. They signal to Gmail that you're spam. And you're paying your ESP every month to store people who will never buy from you. Think about that. You're literally paying Klaviyo to hold onto contacts that are making your emails harder to deliver to the people who actually want them. The fix is simple. Set a sunset policy. 90 days of no engagement means they get a re-engagement sequence, and if they still don't bite, you suppress or remove them. A 50k list of buyers and engaged subscribers will outperform a 200k list of ghosts every single time. It's not even close. Stop hoarding contacts. Start cleaning your list.
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$ultan (@this22wealth) reported@ambaposh The funniest thing you get a gmail saying something about not withdrawing from deposit acct smh ppl don’t read and calm down, they just want to come online and criticize
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Mohammed Habeeb (@halme21) reportedMy google account has been hacked. I am not able to login as hacker changed all details. I have tried steps provided to recover account but not able to do so as hacker changed all details Can someone help recover my account? @gmail @Google @GoogleIndia
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Techjunkie Aman (@Techjunkie_Aman) reported@CyberTechWolff But you do have to login with your gmail to login to playstore
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luca .ᐟ (@Tzvsio) reported@donghyutc akuuu domain gmail kaak, legal bill sini minim problem yaahh PROMO 1p1u —— .✦ 1 day — 5.000 3 day — 10.000 7 day — 17.000 1 month — 30.000 (2u) 1 month — 40.000 sempriv —— .✦ 1 month — 50.000
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MJ😈✨🌙 ʷᶦᵗʰ ᵇᵗˢ (@LindaBurgers7) reportedHey @Google I need you to fix your Gmail issue. Constantly getting the notification that my storage is almost full. cool. great. awesome. I go to clean it out, why am I only able to select 251 emails at a time? Why can't I just click delete all & it will delete all??
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AnimeKing18 (@King18Anime) reported@nixorokish @gnukeith I have been moving away from Google Services like with gmail and cloud I've been using proton I use almost all proton services (not their AI), I switched my Pixel phone back to stock android after problems arouse so far all the issues I had was fixed and I do plan on doing a reinstall of grapheneos but I won't be using my Pixel as my main phone (I have a Pixel 10 Pro). This isn't about taking the easy route its about what works. I'm a Linux user on PC moving away from Microsoft was a good move but there isn't many options for mobile (mainly talking about device compatibility with other OSes).
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Armaan Sidhu (@realarmaansidhu) reportedAirplane WiFi has been terrible for 15 years. The same $8 you pay for a connection that drops every 4 minutes, loads Gmail like it's 2003, and makes a video call physically impossible at 35,000 feet. Amazon just built an antenna that delivers 1 Gbps download and 400 Mbps upload. On a plane. That's faster than most home internet connections on the ground. 58 inches long. 30 inches wide. 2.6 inches high. No moving parts. Installs in one day. Sits flat on the fuselage like a tablet strapped to the roof. Maintenance requirements: almost none, because there's nothing inside that rotates, tilts, or breaks. Current airplane WiFi uses either air-to-ground towers (slow, limited, doesn't work over oceans) or satellite dishes with mechanical gimbals that track satellites as the plane moves (expensive, heavy, breaks constantly, maintenance nightmare). The dish alone weighs hundreds of pounds. Installation takes days. Maintenance grounds planes. Amazon's antenna is a flat phased array. No dish. No gimbal. No moving parts. Electronically steers the beam to track satellites. Same technology the military uses for radar and missile guidance, shrunk to the size of a suitcase lid and bolted to the top of a 737. The connection goes to Amazon's Project Kuiper — its low-Earth orbit satellite constellation. Over 3,200 satellites planned. Direct competitor to Starlink. The antenna is the ground (or air) terminal that links passengers to the constellation. This is Amazon's actual play. Not selling antennas. Selling connectivity-as-a-service to every airline on earth. The antenna is the hardware. Kuiper is the network. AWS is the backend. The airline pays Amazon monthly. Passengers get 1 Gbps. Amazon gets recurring revenue from every commercial flight that installs the system. "Installs in one day." That's the line airlines care about most. Every day a plane sits in a hangar for WiFi installation is a day it's not generating revenue. Current systems take 3-5 days. One day means the upgrade happens during a scheduled maintenance window. No lost flights. No downtime. No revenue impact. Starlink already has aviation terminals. SpaceX is ahead on satellite count. But Amazon has something SpaceX doesn't: relationships with every airline that already uses AWS for booking systems, operational data, crew scheduling, and logistics. The antenna isn't a cold call. It's an upsell to existing customers. Every business class passenger who's ever paid $30 for WiFi that couldn't load a PDF is Amazon's target market. Every airline that's ever grounded a plane for a gimbal repair is Amazon's buyer. 1 Gbps at 35,000 feet. The last place on earth where you could genuinely disconnect is about to get a fiber-speed connection. Whether that's progress or a tragedy depends on how much you valued the excuse.
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DuelistDeCoolest (@Duelist360) reported@gol_mia Oh it's remarkable. In my job, I'll interact with people who don't know how to attach a file to an email. I'll help and ask them to pull up their gmail. They'll say, "My email is on my phone." I'll ask if they know their gmail login info and they'll have no idea what I'm saying.
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Andy Scott (@AndyJScott) reported@dkundel @Dimillian I had so much trouble with the Gmail one. I gave up
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Brat🐾 (@bratings_) reported@TeamYouTube @wind21moon3 hi I created a YouTube account and I’ve forgotten the gmail I used to create it with. But I remember the passwords and possibly the numbers connected on it but don’t have access to the number if there’s one on there because my old phone is broken. Please help me.
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Armaan Sidhu (@realarmaansidhu) reported@SawyerMerritt Airplane WiFi has been terrible for 15 years. The same $8 you pay for a connection that drops every 4 minutes, loads Gmail like it's 2003, and makes a video call physically impossible at 35,000 feet. Amazon just built an antenna that delivers 1 Gbps download and 400 Mbps upload. On a plane. That's faster than most home internet connections on the ground. 58 inches long. 30 inches wide. 2.6 inches high. No moving parts. Installs in one day. Sits flat on the fuselage like a tablet strapped to the roof. Maintenance requirements: almost none, because there's nothing inside that rotates, tilts, or breaks. Current airplane WiFi uses either air-to-ground towers (slow, limited, doesn't work over oceans) or satellite dishes with mechanical gimbals that track satellites as the plane moves (expensive, heavy, breaks constantly, maintenance nightmare). The dish alone weighs hundreds of pounds. Installation takes days. Maintenance grounds planes. Amazon's antenna is a flat phased array. No dish. No gimbal. No moving parts. Electronically steers the beam to track satellites. Same technology the military uses for radar and missile guidance, shrunk to the size of a suitcase lid and bolted to the top of a 737. The connection goes to Amazon's Project Kuiper — its low-Earth orbit satellite constellation. Over 3,200 satellites planned. Direct competitor to Starlink. The antenna is the ground (or air) terminal that links passengers to the constellation. This is Amazon's actual play. Not selling antennas. Selling connectivity-as-a-service to every airline on earth. The antenna is the hardware. Kuiper is the network. AWS is the backend. The airline pays Amazon monthly. Passengers get 1 Gbps. Amazon gets recurring revenue from every commercial flight that installs the system. "Installs in one day." That's the line airlines care about most. Every day a plane sits in a hangar for WiFi installation is a day it's not generating revenue. Current systems take 3-5 days. One day means the upgrade happens during a scheduled maintenance window. No lost flights. No downtime. No revenue impact. Starlink already has aviation terminals. SpaceX is ahead on satellite count. But Amazon has something SpaceX doesn't: relationships with every airline that already uses AWS for booking systems, operational data, crew scheduling, and logistics. The antenna isn't a cold call. It's an upsell to existing customers. Every business class passenger who's ever paid $30 for WiFi that couldn't load a PDF is Amazon's target market. Every airline that's ever grounded a plane for a gimbal repair is Amazon's buyer. 1 Gbps at 35,000 feet. The last place on earth where you could genuinely disconnect is about to get a fiber-speed connection. Whether that's progress or a tragedy depends on how much you valued the excuse.
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Robert Nedelkoff (@robtned) reported@dante_lariccia Arrabal expressly identified what he saw as Minstrel island in an interview in issue 499/500 of Spanish lit mag Quimera. He’s at Arrabal at Gmail but be advised he knows English not too fluently - and is 93.
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JusticeForAll (@alor_ikechukwu) reported@ozzioma I dont.bekuwv her account was hacked Probably she was deliberate creating a false alarm not to be engaged to her responsibilities. She doesn't want to attend to the citizens'concerns and issues. I have used both Yahoo and Gmail accounts for the past 23 years. Both weren't hacked