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Gmail status: access issues and outage reports

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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.

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.

  • 36% Errors (36%)
  • 36% Website Down (36%)
  • 28% Sign in (28%)

Live Outage Map

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

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Donzère Sign in 2 days ago
Bergerac Sign in 2 days ago
Saint-Macaire-en-Mauges Website Down 2 days ago
Paris Errors 3 days ago
Paris Website Down 3 days ago
Marseille Website Down 3 days 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:

  • fredyfx
    Fredy ( フレディ ) (@fredyfx) reported

    hey @gmail I created an account email with my domain, then you forced me to create a gmail account and my domain email works as an alias. Now I can't create an account on @GooglePlay because it recommends me to use a domain account. If I try to login with my email domain...

  • saadbelfqih
    Saad 📱 (@saadbelfqih) reported

    Most people judge Apple Ads way too early.. and I did too! They look at taps, installs, CPI… then pause the wrong keywords.. The real game is: keyword → install → trial → paid → revenue → ROAS. If you're not tracking that, you're guessing.. and with a small budget here's what I would do: 1 - Use Apple Ads Advanced. not basic.. please! Basic is easier, but you lose control over keywords, bids, countries, match types, and search terms. With a small budget, control matters! 2 - Start with Search Results only. that's where intent is. someone literally searched for the thing your app solves.. 3 - Don't start with "I want to scale." Start with: I want to learn what converts. .. which country, keyword, intent, product page or paywall. Scaling comes later. 4 - Don't mix too many countries in one campaign. One country per campaign is cleaner.. If one market works and another doesn't, you want to know that.. 5 - Don't sleep on smaller / cheaper / overlooked markets. I've found good pockets in places like Germany and Switzerland, and some tier-3 spots like Indonesia, Mexico, Philippines have honestly surprised me. Test around, your niche might live somewhere you didn't expect.. 6 - Start with exact match. Not broad. At the beginning, you want to know exactly what keyword triggered the tap. Broad / discovery can come later... I personally avoid it but you can always try at a later stage! 7 - Keyword buckets I'd test: competitor names, common typos, long-tail generic keywords, problem-aware keywords. Examples: transkribe, budget planner for couples, ai keyboard for iphone, Video to text etc.. 8 - Long-tail keywords are underrated. don't only bid on: scanner, keyboard, pdf, identifier. try the searches that sound closer to real intent. Less volume, but usually cleaner.. 9 - Competitor keywords can work (yes) but only if your app is a real alternative.. same niche, clear value & strong screenshots but not a random clone. 10 - Search Match OFF at the start. I know Apple suggests it. When you're learning, you don't want Apple picking random search terms for you. You want to know exactly what you paid for.. and I'm sure you don't want to be paying for Facebook, Gmail keywords at the start.. 11 - Start bids lower than Apple suggests. then increase slowly. also apple ads has lag, so don't change bids every hour.. 12 - Your product page does the selling before your ad ever does. People see: icon, name, subtitle, ratings, first screenshots. so if these (esp the screenshot) don't sell the outcome fast, the right keywords won't help you much 13 - Before spending, check competitors. not to copy of course, but to understand the pattern: what do they lead with? what outcome do they sell? how much text do they use? what pain do they show first? big apps already paid for some of that research 14 - Set up tracking before judging anything. Use RevenueCat, Superwall, an MMP, .. whatever, just track it! you want to monitor: country, campaign, ad group, keyword, spend, installs, trials, paid users, revenue, ROAS 15 - CPI can lie! a $0.40 install can be trash but a $2 install can be profitable.. The only question is: did this keyword bring paying users? 16 - Read the funnel properly: spend + no impressions = bid too low / low relevance taps + no installs = product page problem installs + no trials = wrong intent / weak onboarding trials + no paid = paywall or product issue revenue > spend = increase slowly 17 - When you find a winner, move it out of the messy test campaign. Give proven keywords their own campaign and keep them away from your random experiments 18 - Discovery is fine later.. it can surface search terms you'd never think of. Once a term works, move it into exact match. and keep dumping the irrelevant stuff into your negative keywords list.. helps apple ads point you at better keywords over time.. as confirmed by an apple ads support staff I talked to 19 - A tailored product page is worth testing when the intent is different.. competitor keyword? show why you're the better pick. feature keyword? lead with that feature. Same with the paywall, if they searched something specific, don't drop them on a generic one.. 20 - My small-budget setup: Apple Ads Advanced, Search Results only, 1 country per campaign, exact match first, Search Match off, manual bids, $5-10/day cap, competitor + long-tail keywords, tracking from day 0 21 - Kill rules I'd start with: spend + 0 installs → lower bid or pause installs + 0 trials → fix page / intent trials + 0 paid → fix onboarding / paywall positive ROAS → raise slowly not enough data → don't overreact and keep experimenting ... also worth checking out @adapty report on apple ads for some markets stats and for a detailed apple ads playbook worth checking @ivesparrowai book

  • chercher_ai
    ☯️ SAFE LEAF/TREE BIRD (@chercher_ai) reported

    @Duderichy they're tired of people hounding them to fix Gmail and Google Docs

  • XsinandtonicX
    ATMOSARRISES (@XsinandtonicX) reported

    Never using a Microsoft email ever again lmao.. insane that the only feasible option is Gmail which already has its …. issues

  • n1ghtcore4ever
    𐕣 weeb with a gun 𐕣 (@n1ghtcore4ever) reported

    So yeah, never ******* using Google or Gmail ever again. These ghouls have zero problem handing over all of your private information to anyone. 🖕

  • megsxcx
    megan (@megsxcx) reported

    @run2yeonjun whattt i dont think ive heard of other ppl having this issue. are u on a personal gmail,

  • ArthurVerboon
    Arthur verboon (@ArthurVerboon) reported

    @visegrad24 Is the statement of grok true? It’s passed today, yeah. The European Parliament has extended the temporary regulation (Chat Control 1.0) until April 2028. It was a weird vote — 314 against, 276 for — but because they needed an absolute majority of 361 to block it, it went through. How it works: it remains voluntary and server-side. It only applies to apps where the provider can already read the messages anyway — think Instagram DMs, Messenger, Gmail, Snapchat, Discord. They do hash-matching on known CSAM and some AI for new stuff. Real end-to-end encrypted chats (like Signal, or the default E2EE in WhatsApp) are explicitly excluded. They can’t and aren’t allowed to scan those. The big mandatory version with possible client-side scanning on your phone, that fight is still ongoing.

  • JBroomestix
    Jæy•Ones (@JBroomestix) reported

    Me: Common social media job and employment scams Ai: Common social media job and employment scams prey on job seekers’ hopes for flexible, high-paying, or remote work. Scammers post fake ads on platforms like Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, TikTok, and WhatsApp, or send unsolicited messages. Reports to the FTC have surged, with task-based scams and fake offers driving significant losses. consumer.ftc. gov Most Common Types of Social Media Job Scams 1. Fake Job Offers / “Too Good to Be True” Postings
Scammers advertise high-paying remote roles (e.g., virtual assistant, data entry, social media manager, customer service) requiring little experience or effort. They promise quick money for easy tasks. • These often start with vague posts or DMs on Facebook/Instagram groups, LinkedIn, or WhatsApp. • Red flags: Unrealistic salaries, “work from home, watch your kids,” no interview, or immediate offers. heimdalsecurity. com 2. Upfront Payment / Equipment Purchase Scams
After “hiring” you, they ask you to pay for training, background checks, software, or equipment (e.g., a laptop or MacBook via a fake check). They promise reimbursement that never comes. • Common in “tech recruiter” or remote role scams. The check bounces, leaving you in debt. linkedin. com 3. Task-Based / “Gig” Scams (e.g., Like/Follow/Subscribe or Review Tasks)
You complete small paid tasks (liking videos, subscribing to channels, reviewing products) on social media or apps. Initial small payments build trust, then they require you to pay larger “deposits” or fees to unlock bigger earnings. These often tie into money mule schemes. bbb. org 4. Fake Recruiter / Impersonation Scams
Fraudsters create profiles mimicking real companies (e.g., Meta, major corporations) or use stolen photos/AI-generated images. They contact you unsolicited on LinkedIn, WhatsApp, or Instagram with personalized offers. • They may push conversations to private apps, request personal info, or lead to phishing. blog.defend-id. com 5. Check-Cashing / Money Mule Scams
Often disguised as mystery shopper, nanny, caregiver, or personal assistant roles. You receive a fake check to “test” or buy supplies, cash it, and wire money back—keeping a cut. The check bounces, and you’re liable. forbes. com 6. Phishing / Data Harvesting Scams
They ask for SSN, bank details, or login info during “onboarding” or fake interviews (often via chat apps). Some use deepfakes or lead to malware. heimdalsecurity. com 7. MLM / Pyramid Scheme Jobs
Positions disguised as sales or recruitment roles that require buying inventory or recruiting others. scamwatch. gov. au Other variants include fake “appointment setter” roles starting on social media or AI-generated fake companies/websites. Key Red Flags (From FTC, BBB, and Studies) • Unsolicited contact via DM, text, or social media for a job you didn’t apply to. indeed. com • Pressure/urgency to apply or start immediately. • Requests for payment (never pay to get a job—legitimate employers pay you). • Vague or misleading descriptions, poor grammar, or no company details. • Suspicious contact info (e.g., Gmail instead of company email, new profiles). • Interviews via WhatsApp, Telegram, Google Hangouts, or text only (no video or in-person). edmontonpolice. ca • Too-good-to-be-true pay for minimal work. consumer. gov • New or incomplete social media/company profiles.

  • dabrattoot2
    tootiewitdabootyy (@dabrattoot2) reported

    I’m the type to login in yo Gmail **** that

  • SmallMetalOwl
    Small Metal Owl (@SmallMetalOwl) reported

    @SenseiOfSarcasm We really gave Google too much control over things, given how they won't think twice over shutting down a service no matter how popular it is. I half expect them to kill Gmail sometime in my lifetime just because.

  • MartineDennis
    Martine Dennis (@MartineDennis) reported

    @TeamYouTube My Gmail account which is linked to my YouTube channel has been hacked. All the recovery information has been changed by the hacker. The automated recovery page is locked down. I’d appreciate your attention on this. Thanks

  • TheoIsFriendly
    Theonidas (@TheoIsFriendly) reported

    Gmail been REAL slow these past few days, what’s up with that

  • _SnittyKitty_
    SnittyKitty (@_SnittyKitty_) reported

    @JCandLacie @AppleSupport I have this issue with one of my Gmail accounts. It still has a phone number from 10+ years ago. I called it & someone else now owns the number. I can’t reset my password bc Google will only send the verification code to that old number. Other options of recovery not available.

  • MichLieben
    Michel Lieben (@MichLieben) reported

    You can turn a raw list of names into verified emails without ever logging into a single data provider. Start with the problem. You've built a list of people to reach: names, companies, maybe a LinkedIn link. What you're missing is the one thing you need to contact them, their email. Finding it is enrichment. No single provider has everyone. Each one builds its database its own way, so one covers a big slice of your list and has nothing on the rest. Bet everything on one tool and you leave half your list on the floor. So you don't. You stack providers cheapest to most expensive and run them in order. The cheap one clears most of the list for pennies. Everyone it misses falls to the next provider, then the next. The expensive aggregator only ever touches the few names nobody else could find. That's the waterfall. Each source catches what the one above it dropped, and your cost stays low because the priciest tool barely runs. Verify every email before you send. Skip it and it costs you: a dead address bounces, and enough bounces train Gmail to file you under spam. An unverified guess is worse than an empty cell. Set it up once in Claude Code, the provider order and a spend cap, then point the agent at your list. It runs the whole cascade, verifies every address, stops at your cap, and gives you one clean file. Every row comes back with the email, the source that found it, and whether it cleared verification. The few nobody could place get flagged, so you skip them and move on. Starting it was the only part that needed you.

  • dwepost
    DWE Post (@dwepost) reported

    Google services are not making any effort to solve the problem. They keep saying, “Send us a DM,” but it’s extremely difficult to reach them. @gmail @Google

  • tangdi_kebab
    tangdi kebab (@tangdi_kebab) reported

    If only @Microsoft can fix whatever is wrong with Copilot 365 agentic workflows. Just do what Google is doing with Gemini for Google Workspace - Drive can sort my files, Gmail can make events in Calendar, Docs can pull data from all Google apps, etc

  • ur_habiby
    ABDUL HABIB🌟💎 (@ur_habiby) reported

    @RecruitmentPq Thank u But I've been having problems creating one as all the usernames are taken. The one I'm using is showing a difference in spelling Abdul for my name, and Abdullahi for my gmail

  • vin_kamath
    Vinayak Kamath (@vin_kamath) reported

    ALWAYS follow up on your emails if you don't hear back. Gmail spam filters are extremely aggressive. If you have lower than expected inbox placement despite having a good domain reputation or just an individual, make it a habit to send follow-up emails. Just a single follow-up on a thread can bump you into the inbox. Which is how I discovered the problem in the first place.

  • dwepost
    DWE Post (@dwepost) reported

    @googleaccount @KewinStanluz My devices were stolen, and everything associated with my Gmail account was changed. Unfortunately, the recovery forms are not working. Could you please contact me via DM? I’m kindly asking for your help. @googleaccount

  • Yusufcancakiir
    Yusuf Can Çakır (@Yusufcancakiir) reported

    Active infostealer + crypto clipper campaign run by a Turkish-speaking operator. Live since at least 23 June 2026, still being iterated (last payload push 6 July). The entire toolkit is sitting in an open directory on a DigitalOcean node (46[.]101[.]111[.]120:8080, WsgiDAV, anonymous read-write). Version-stamped backups and installer output strings show the operator moving from an early build to v5 in under two weeks. This is a maintained, actively developed operation, not a commodity dropper. Delivery. Primary vector is a macro-enabled Word doc (Q1 Quarterly Report 2025.docm) that fires on open, XOR-decodes a URL, and pulls a batch script into %TEMP% under an obfuscated filename. That chains to a PowerShell installer. The operator is hedging delivery: a .pdf.lnk, a zipped variant, an .hta, and a .vbs loader all sit in the same directory. Install and evasion. The installer drops a Python payload plus a full bundled runtime into %APPDATA%\Microsoft\Windows\Themes\Cache\, a path chosen to blend with legitimate Windows infra. Before anything runs it carves out Defender exclusions for the drop dir, %TEMP%, and the Python binaries, then applies two in-memory patches: AMSI (AmsiScanBuffer forced to return E_INVALIDARG) and ETW (EtwEventWrite stubbed to a bare return). With ETW silenced, Sysmon, Defender ETW consumers, and any EDR relying on event tracing go blind to what follows. The payload itself is layered (Base64, then XOR against a rolling SHA-256 digest, then marshalled bytecode run in memory). Everything runs at user level, no elevation. What it steals. Chrome saved credentials and cards, decrypted via the standard DPAPI plus AES-GCM path, alongside a file inventory walked across the user profile. Exfil ships to the C2 over HTTPS as a JSON POST, with a Gmail SMTP fallback that sends the same data as an HTML attachment if the primary channel fails. Crypto clipper. Monitors the clipboard and silently swaps copied wallet addresses for the operator's before you paste, across eight coins. If you copy-pasted a crypto address on a suspect host in the last two weeks, verify it before trusting it. Persistence is the difficult part. Five layers running at once: a Run key, a Startup script, two scheduled tasks (one every five minutes, one on a 22-hour cycle), and a WMI event subscription that fires a couple of minutes after each boot. A watchdog checks every five minutes whether the process is alive and holding its outbound connection, and re-downloads and restarts it if not. The maintenance task goes further and rebuilds any missing layer from scratch. Pull three of five and reboot, and you are reinfected. Remediation means isolating the host and taking out all five together. Attribution. Indicators point consistently to a Turkish-speaking operator: the C2 control panel is served in Turkish and the SMTP exfil account follows a recognizable Turkish naming pattern. DuckDNS dynamic DNS, a single DigitalOcean node, and no infrastructure diversification profile a solo or small-team actor. No espionage indicators; this is straightforward credential, card, and crypto theft. IOCs Payload server: 46[.]101[.]111[.]120:8080 (DigitalOcean, WsgiDAV, anon read-write) C2: gogettate[.]duckdns[.]org, ports 443 and 4444 Drop path: %APPDATA%\Microsoft\Windows\Themes\Cache\ Persistence: ThemeSvcHelper (Run key), ThemeSvc.vbs (Startup), ThemeSvcCheck / ThemeSvcMaint (tasks), ThemeEvtFlt / ThemeEvtCns (WMI, root\subscription) YARA string: WinMgmt2024Init

  • Nick_Kramer91
    Nick Kramer (@Nick_Kramer91) reported

    A few years ago I built a small tool because I kept losing work inside Gmail: follow-ups, client notes, tiny tasks, project updates. All the things that sit between email threads, docs, spreadsheets, and memory. At first it was just for me. Then friends tried it, and after sometime a few teams. That was when the small details became harder to ignore. People adopt a tool because it fits the way they already work. Not becasue the demo is clever. I see the same thing with AI tools now. A prototype can look great in a demo, but Monday still starts in Gmail, spreadsheets, Slack, docs, calls, and half-finished notes. If the tool does not fit there, it becomes one more place people have to remember. For me, this started with a small task board inside Gmail. The same lesson applies to AI copilots, CRM updates, document workflows, and internal automation. Adoption usually comes down to something very ordinary: Does the tool understand the real work well enough that people keep using it after the demo?

  • AryaNedaee_
    Arya Nedaee (@AryaNedaee_) reported

    The European Union 🇪🇺 just legalized scanning your private messages. The vote: 314 MEPs voted against it. 276 voted for it. It passed anyway. Rejecting it required an absolute majority of all 720 seats (361 votes). Not a majority of the room. So every empty chair on the last sitting day before summer recess counted as a yes. Classic @vonderleyen. More MEPs showed up to kill Chat Control 1.0 than to keep it. It became law regardless. Live until 2028. Platforms can now scan unencrypted messages again: Gmail, Instagram DMs, Discord, Snapchat, Xbox. WhatsApp and Signal got carved out. For now. This is how rights slowly disappear. Not in one dramatic moment. In procedural fine print, on a slow news day, while everyone is distracted with the World Cup and the USA-Iran war. The mandatory version is still coming. Client-side scanning, the one that breaks encryption itself. Trilogue resumes in September. Chat Control 2.0 is coming. Watch that one.

  • Bhanu_Nalluri_
    The Daily Tech Brief 💡 by Bhanu N (@Bhanu_Nalluri_) reported

    The perfect missed revenue agent every founder should build: Trigger: Every day at 6 PM Data source: Gmail, CRM, Stripe, invoices, support tickets AI step: Find unpaid invoices, stale leads, failed payments, and ignored follow-ups Human approval: Review before sending any message Action: Draft follow-ups, create tasks, update deal status Error alert: Flag missing data or failed syncs Log everything: Track what was checked and what changed Most revenue leaks are not strategy problems. They are follow-up problems.

  • LEIGHT5
    Leights JL (@LEIGHT5) reported

    @athyuttamre @nicdunz Should it be able to use apps like Gmail? As not working for me

  • TheLadyNess
    Ness Cooper (@TheLadyNess) reported

    My main work email address is down and I'm unable to access any emails. If you've emailed me, pop me a DM or email my alternative Gmail address. Thanks

  • ma1vraf
    rafmaiv_ (@ma1vraf) reported

    yeah Twitter: 2 Discord: 2 Instagram: 1 Facebook: 1 but no use Snapchat: 0 (never used) TikTok: 1 Twitch: 1 (i always forget about it) Steam: 3 YouTube: 1 Spotify: 1(yt music clears tho) Pinterest: 0 Reddit: 1 (i agree terrible site) Gmail: 5 ig Telegram: 0

  • emailwabhishek
    Abhishek Soni (@emailwabhishek) reported

    Your open rate isn't real anymore. Apple and Gmail are the ones making the number up, not you. Apple loads your email the second it lands. Before anyone reads it. That's about half of all "opens" you see. Not real people, just Apple's computers. Gmail does something different. It loads the pictures in your email through its own system, so an "open" a few seconds after you hit send is usually just Gmail, not a real person. And once it saves that picture, a real second read often doesn't even show up. Now both companies made it worse. Apple's AI writes a short summary of your email right in the inbox. People read that and never open the real email. Gmail does the same thing now. Its AI sums up the whole email thread, so the "open" never even happens. Your click rate isn't safe either. Bots click your links millions of times a day. The real number can be off by half. And Apple's newest update now removes the tracking info from links people click in Mail, so even that data is getting worse. Three numbers broken. Two big email companies making it worse every year. What's still real are replies, sales and money made per subscriber.

  • SubscribrAI
    Subscribr (@SubscribrAI) reported

    How to actually read your YouTube analytics in 29 seconds: CTR under channel average = broken thumbnail (redesign, do not touch the video) CTR above channel average + AVD under 30% = misleading thumbnail (viewer clicked, script disappointed) AVD above 50% + views flat = the algorithm has not found your audience yet (keep posting the same format) Returning viewer rate under 20% = no channel identity (audience does not remember you) Impressions climbing but views flat = thumbnail is not competing in the sidebar (redesign) Impressions flat = trust score issue (warm up new gmail, restart the channel)

  • chauchau55554
    chauchau 🐉 $MON (@chauchau55554) reported

    @ProjectsPoor @sidrachain same here... login = gmail +pw... now change login gmail = new account!???

  • celinestia
    CELiNE :: topup & piloting services 🪻 (@celinestia) reported

    ⠀⠀ HEARTOPIA — NEW EVENT PACKS 🐳 ⠀⠀ 🪼 CALL OF WHALES 🪼 ⠀⠀ 🪼 gilded acorn pack : IDR. 77.000 🪼 premium gilded acorn pack : IDR. 168.000 🪞 via login gmail/facebook 🪞 invoice apple 100% no sensor 🪞 payment avail QRIS & e-wallet #bealanja hato gamg junior full ⠀⠀