1. Home
  2. Companies
  3. Reddit
Reddit

Reddit status: access issues and outage reports

Some problems detected

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

Full Outage Map

Reddit is a social news aggregation, web content rating, and discussion website. Reddit's registered community members can submit content, such as text posts or direct links.

Problems in the last 24 hours

The graph below depicts the number of Reddit 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.

July 17: Problems at Reddit

Reddit is having issues since 05:00 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 Reddit users through our website.

  • 57% Website Down (57%)
  • 22% Errors (22%)
  • 20% Sign in (20%)

Live Outage Map

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

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Douai Sign in 5 days ago
Olathe Website Down 6 days ago
Da Nang Sign in 8 days ago
Chhindwāra Sign in 9 days ago
Puteaux Website Down 14 days ago
New Delhi Website Down 14 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.

Reddit Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • AGGTORNADO
    Tarek (@AGGTORNADO) reported

    @0xbigm7 TBH i you have any kind of problem, reddit can fix it easily And if you want to research about something reading the comments there is the alpha

  • ArtoriusNZ
    Dreadnought older than the Tau (@ArtoriusNZ) reported

    @cheatley_justin @MadKamikazius I mean yeah those are genuine criticisms not born from a 34 IQ misunderstanding of Martin's writing. I do think "the geography isnt realistic enough" is pretty reddit but other than that all valid issues i would agree with.

  • jorilallo
    Jori Lallo (@jorilallo) reported

    @tommoor This and the Google login popup. Hate them both but Reddit takes the cake

  • RelaxedPop
    Charles Waters (@RelaxedPop) reported

    Slashdot, YCombinator, various non-toxic Reddit subs, various Github and Hugging Face groups. Many of them are better than X. X's message feels like a staccato, somewhat random collection of posts while the others are better curated. Please note: I'm terrible at curating my X feed. It's all garbage and I'm fairly certain that there are things I can do to fix that.

  • dite_online
    Dite Dea (@dite_online) reported

    (Inspired by the guy on Reddit who kept complaining the Skyrim subreddit hates straight men because the ****** content he'd post would be way down-voted)

  • animeheadsretro
    animeheadsretroworld (@animeheadsretro) reported

    @saintseiyagod Yeah, it's especially tough for people like you and I... as we both have a lot of interests outside of Anime that we're just as passionate about. I buy more US releases than domestic UK ones so I always try to get a big order during any sales that companies do to try and save a bit. God I really miss the Rightstuf sales. Sometimes you could make out like a bandit, there were times I saved something nuts like a couple of hundred pounds on Blu Rays. As for the quality issues, yeah it can be really disappointing when it comes to a release you're looking forward to. Here in the UK we got the same Attack On Titan steelbooks the US got except the final season Blu ray collection had a major flaw. It had episodes in the wrong order and mislabelled & on the wrong disc. Embarrassingly the discs had already been released without these errors in the standard sets and boxsets. No idea why new discs were made with errors on them. Kinda boggles the mind as to how some of these things happen! Anyway good job i saw people complaining about it on Amazon and reddit before buying them myself. I guess I'll get the US ones since they didn't have an issue.

  • develop_an_app
    Zuck Glooterberg (@develop_an_app) reported

    @Samaytwt buy a Mac, install vm ware, run redhat vm, start a nodejs server, connect to a ngrok tunnel, create a public key pair, send private key to a friend on Reddit, ask them to come over with an aol install disk and hp 386 from 1992. you're welcome

  • BlackLodgeAgent
    Agent Cooper (@BlackLodgeAgent) reported

    @unirespecter BCS’s only real issue is that it absolutely faceplants the last 6 episodes or so. really Reddit ending.

  • asaddevv
    Asad Ali (@asaddevv) reported

    @kelvinbuildss for right now i am focusing on long term content marketing and SEO, results might be slow and gradual but will compound overtime. for short term i will give try to reddit. what's your opinion?

  • hello_code_
    John Rice (@hello_code_) reported

    @danielkleach Reddit actually breaks this pattern a bit, real users recommending tools in niche subs carries more weight than review sites because there's no obvious pay to play. The problem is most founders never show up there until they're desperate.

  • bazmd
    Faux Mulder (@bazmd) reported

    I was just reading comments on Reddit, you're not imagining things apparently if you think X is broken, lots say twitter was never fixed, but the overall theme is not great.

  • XanderGalbraith
    rhinestone plowboy (@XanderGalbraith) reported

    Every made-with-AI ad is always just like a first draft pulled entirely from clever Reddit comments. This ad is four words long and has a major problem. (Baseball didn't end segregation. Baseball desegregated.) And that's before you get to the tastelessness of it all

  • claytonlz
    Clayton (@claytonlz) reported

    @nestersk I gave up after a lot of false starts and getting my account banned multiple times... will try again eventually but my periodic reddit research shows people talking about the problem there so trying that as a "back to school" campaign while it's top of mind for parents

  • amir3_9
    Amir Khoshbakht (@amir3_9) reported

    Your competitors are sitting on a goldmine they never use. Their customers are telling them exactly why they’d leave. Go collect it. Read their Instagram comments. Read their website reviews. Read Reddit threads. Read Trustpilot. Read app store reviews. Anywhere customers are talking. Paste everything into an AI model and ask: “What are the most common complaints?” Every repeated complaint is a group of customers looking for a reason to switch. If everyone complains about slow support, make fast support your positioning. If they complain about confusing pricing, make simple pricing your positioning. If they complain about poor onboarding, own onboarding. You don’t need to beat your competitors at everything. You only need to be the best where they’re failing.

  • Rishav14105691
    Rishav Barua (@Rishav14105691) reported

    @Sol_Hohojiro I do want people to be talking more about the issues going on, and I am not defending silence. I just think part of the issue is community sequestration (Reddit, X/Twitter, Discord, YouTube, Bluesky, Tiktok, Instagram, casual players competitive, art, etc.), which is fixable.

  • dee_of_e
    Diabetic of Enlightenment (@dee_of_e) reported

    the problem with the “Sally Rooney is romantasy” substack thing is not its anachronicity but its WRITING. WHYYY is so much prose like this now??? (don’t answer this). smug, smol bean, reddit-style with zero close readings or attention to formal specificity. Really bleak!

  • elgermerlo
    Germán Merlo 💻 🇦🇷 (@elgermerlo) reported

    How I get early users without spending on ads: — Post the problem before the product — Find where your users already complain (Reddit, X, Discord) — Comment genuinely, link only when it's relevant — Build in public so discovery is passive — DM people who engage with your posts, not strangers Distribution is just showing up where the problem lives

  • DegenRisk
    Cody (@DegenRisk) reported

    We are not reddit the country, we do not get along like that. Chop it down build sky scrapers, wood prices will probly go higher still tho so wait on it.

  • Clocked0
    Clocked (@Clocked0) reported

    @JustmeRclol It does steal, but it doesn't matter because people pay for the complete software package, not for the snippets of code on reddit and stackoverflow that people already copypasted to solve their specific problems anyway.

  • Arslan3023
    Arslan Ashiq (@Arslan3023) reported

    I recently came across a Reddit thread from a biotech founder who had been posting several times each week for 3 years. In some months, their posts performed well with little effort. In other months, they struggled to earn a few hundred impressions, despite publishing at the same frequency and putting in the same amount of work. founder assumed their industry was simply becoming too crowded. Then they noticed several people in that same industry consistently earning strong engagement, which made the"crowded market" explanation feel increasingly incomplete. The useful response came from someone who suggested studying successful creators more systematically. Not copying their posts, but examining the topics they repeat, the stories they tell, the formats they rely on, and the conversations their audience keeps rewarding. I keep thinking about that discussion for two reasons. Most people publish before deciding what they want to be known for. Without three or four clear content pillars, every post becomes an isolated attempt to attract attention. One week you discuss leadership, the next week you discuss productivity, and eventually your audience cannot explain why they should continue following you. High-performing content should be treated as audience research, rather than personal validation. Every post reveals which problems, phrases, stories, and perspectives actually resonate with the people you want to reach. The strongest ideas can then become sales conversations, newsletters, videos, carousels, workshops, or future posts presented from a different angle. A content strategy is not a calendar filled with random topics. It is a repeatable system for learning what your audience values, strengthening the ideas that work, and letting go of the ones that only sounded impressive inside your head. create me best graphics for this post,

  • bowtiedcrake
    BowTiedCrake (@bowtiedcrake) reported

    @Bowtiedplayer They’re simply LARPs and don’t want it bad enough. Not willing to strategize and invest, just expect trad girls to fall into their lap. If young: University chapel, choir girls, run the whole game of asking how to join/contribute. Church camps and programmes. Yes, cringe if not your thing. But for every goofy ubertrad there are girls who are just there because of their friends or family influence. Even merely expanding their idea to accommodate “high trad potential girls” - so many girls from moderate families with no daddy issues who you can game into your Christian frame and who would happily baptize for you, if you know what you’re doing. There’s an entitlement in online trads which definitely contradicts Christ’s own example. It’s as embarrassing as Reddit atheist incels tbh

  • steeze_0
    Steven Bell (@steeze_0) reported

    I randomly read Google Trends fine print and I think we’re all using it wrong for consumer research. 😑 The chart NEVER shows how many people are searching. Not anywhere. It scores a term against its own peak. A score of 100 can be a million searches.. or four hundred. Even if it says "up 200% since last year" it could be a jackpot or 20 people in Kentucky. No one can tell the difference. That’s the problem. So here's a quick test I use now to vet out trends with Google search trends: Line keeps touching zero = small base of searches Smooth line around 70/80 = investigate further with reddit, tiktok hashtags, and junglescout. Jagged line = noise not demand

  • D_nasty02
    Darren (@D_nasty02) reported

    @bornposting Maybe I’m off base, but wasn’t that what Penny Parker was supposed to be way back in the day? Even down to the clear “Eva-like” mech? Or is that just some Reddit bs

  • JRTheWavyOne
    Javon (@JRTheWavyOne) reported

    @GameSpot When I was playing OG God of War, if you told me that a new God of War game coming in ~2027 would have a talking Reddit cube there's no chance I would have believed you. If Laufey was called Forspoken 2 it would sell 30 copies and the dev would shut down a month after release.

  • filipprompt
    Filip Franzén (@filipprompt) reported

    $100K in the last 12 months from YouTube and digital products with zero paid ads. All traffic came from organic YouTube. Here's the exact blueprint Chose niches by wallet, not by interest. "how to make money online," faceless content, AI content, simple business systems. Not because I cared about them personally. Because rising search demand + existing paid products = buyers already there. If the market's already spending, you don't have to convince anyone. You just have to show up better. Validated the demand before I built anything. Read every comment section, Reddit thread, and Twitter reply in the niche. Same pain points repeated over and over: "my faceless channel isn't converting," "i post but nothing sells," "how do I actually make my first sale?" Then cross-checked Gumroad and Whop to see what was moving. Real competition = real dollars. Wrote the front-end product like a text to a friend. 60-page guide walking through the full system. Niche selection to video production to sales. No design fluff, no branded intro, no theory. Priced to convert, not to look premium. Built a free community as the funnel entrance. Every new subscriber lands here first. Guide pinned at the top. Members' wins, receipts, and screenshots do the selling. I'm barely in the community day-to-day. Ran multiple faceless channels in parallel. Stock clips, Elevenlabs voiceovers, clean thumbnails, sharp titles. Every video's pinned comment and description points to the free guide. Studied top channels in the niche and saved their winning thumbnails, hooks, and structures as templates. Built one system that runs across channels. Research → script → edit → upload. Same pipeline, different niches. 3–5 videos per week per channel. Focused on evergreen "how-to" and case study formats that keep watch time high. Optimized every video for the algorithm, ruthlessly. Strong hook in the first 15 seconds. Clear CTA to the free guide. End screens, cards, playlists funneling to the offer. Tracked which topics, thumbnails, and video lengths actually converted views into sales. Doubled down on winners. Killed losers within a week. Built the funnel with earned upgrades at every step. Free video → free guide → $27–$97 product → high-ticket for the serious ones. Nobody skips a level. Every step earns the next. Posted receipts everywhere. Sales notifications, student wins, revenue screenshots. Proof beats copy every single time. Raised prices as testimonials stacked. Added upsells behind the front-end so committed buyers had somewhere to go. Automated the boring stuff. Uploads, community replies, evergreen content refreshes. Once the systems were built, daily work collapsed. Two things kept it compounding: Staying disciplined on niche. Algorithm rewards clarity. Publishing through the flops. Consistency is what teaches YouTube to trust you. Tools I actually used: X / Discord to find editors Shopify for the digital product store Whop for the free and paid community ElevenLabs for voiceovers YouTube Studio for analytics Trello to manage the team Claude for basically all of the above $100/month in tools early on then reinvest profits to hire freelancers The real leap happens when views, proof, and community start feeding each other. More content → more trust → higher conversion on the same traffic. That's when the compounding kicks in. That's the whole system.

  • SunKofi_Main
    SunKofi The Almighty Homosexual (@SunKofi_Main) reported

    I want it known that the second the remove dislike update happend all my content switched to ai reddit story times and TV show/movie clip edits which is taking forever to fix back to normal

  • vrabel_fil59853
    Filip Vrábel (@vrabel_fil59853) reported

    @GreentextWizard the problem was using reddit in the first place.

  • steeze_0
    Steven Bell (@steeze_0) reported

    I randomly read Google Trends fine print and I think we’re all using it wrong. 😑 The chart NEVER shows how many people are searching. Not anywhere. It scores a term against its own peak. A score of 100 can be a million searches.. or four hundred. Even if it says "up 200% since last year" it could be a jackpot or 20 people in Kentucky. No one can tell the difference. That’s the problem. (Especially if you’re using it for product/market discovery) So here's a quick test I use now to vet out trends with Google search trends: Line keeps touching zero = small base of searches Smooth line around 70/80 = investigate further with reddit, tiktok hashtags, and junglescout. Jagged line = noise not demand

  • scraftdile
    🐊 $aфgiganté (@scraftdile) reported

    @ruronikage Its fake, saw it on the reddit, we're not there yet, but there still is a scalper issue

  • autohematophagy
    hepatitis X (@autohematophagy) reported

    suffering a retinal detachment and immediately going on reddit to talk about the glitch in the matrix I'm living through