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Reddit status: access issues and outage reports

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 16: Problems at Reddit

Reddit is having issues since 03:00 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.

  • 56% Website Down (56%)
  • 24% Errors (24%)
  • 20% Sign in (20%)

Live Outage Map

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

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Douai Sign in 4 days ago
Olathe Website Down 5 days ago
Da Nang Sign in 7 days ago
Chhindwāra Sign in 8 days ago
Puteaux Website Down 13 days ago
New Delhi Website Down 13 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:

  • TRILLUDAN2
    Trilludan 2 (@TRILLUDAN2) reported

    @Not_Dik @not_airspeed It was a BA flight with steering problems after landing. There's a good thread answer from a pilot on Reddit explaining why

  • xio999bsky
    XIO ◈ 熊张杰 🔜 AX M3 (@xio999bsky) reported

    @Ace_Loreine Unfortunately the sources are reddit, however it is true that Zhoukouwang (the url is different) is a municipal news network. Also the thing to consider is all articles went down one by one, not together (which can be the result of spam reporting)

  • theothello007
    𝗢𝗧𝗛𝗘𝗟𝗟𝗢 (@theothello007) reported

    @0xAbhiP can’t even list the amount of times I have found solutions to my problems on Reddit

  • petecallaghans
    Pete Callaghan (@petecallaghans) reported

    I've spoken to a lot of distributors over the last few months. Majors and independents. On music fraud, they all say the same thing: Everyone wants it fixed. And nobody has said it is not a problem. Almost everyone in the industry has been stung by it. So if the industry agrees, why is it still happening? Because agreeing is easy. Actually solving it is the complex problem. The real fix needs 3 things: 1. Distributors/DSPs sharing the right data 2. A legal framework everyone can trust 3. A system that protects sensitive information at scale That is where it gets complex. The tech is the easier part. The complex bit is the industry is fragmented. Competitors need to collaborate. And trust has to be built before anything changes. That is the real problem. If you work on the distribution side, I would love to speak with you about what you are seeing. ps, I posted about Groovian on a Reddit thread and the reuploaders downvoted me. Ha. Probably a good sign.

  • sixpathskaioken
    SixPathsKaioken (YouTube) (@sixpathskaioken) reported

    @Manugaming40610 @tekagen_irande My girlfriend bought it for me, I was on my way back from the bank having deposited cash to go and buy it when she did. My big problem with the community is people acting like it's not being actively supported, thus meaning things can improve. I'm in the camp of those who actively enjoy 6 and how it functions (even if I'd like to see break holds gone entirely, or use your entire meter if they are to remain) On the subject of the costume price argument. I'd like to point out that this is an issue with gaming as a whole right now, not just DOA. This is from reddit, regarding ownership of all LoL skins. Which might I add is seven years old. The same length of time since DOA6 Vanilla was abandoned. To buy every skin in LoL: 990815RP which is 963 Skins 990815RP ÷ 3500Rp = 283,09 Purchases x Rp tier 25€ = 7077.25€ Euro or 7836,09$ Dollar <=3500RP 990815RP ÷ 5000RP = 198,163 Purchases x Rp tier 35€ = 6935.70€ Euro or 7679,37$ Dollar <=5000RP 990815RP ÷ 7200RP = 137,65 Purchases Rp tier 50€ = 6880.65€ Euro or 7618,41$ Dollar <=7200RP 990815RP ÷ 15000RP = 66.05 Purchases Rp tier 100€ = 6605.43€ Euro or 7313,68$ Dollar <=15000RP" Quotations marks signifying what was said in the post. Marvel Rivals often charges 20 or even as high as 25 at times for skins. At least we got four different colour variations for that same price point!

  • Kviraj722
    Viraj Kawa 🇮🇳 (@Kviraj722) reported

    Had an interesting team discussion today that changed how I think about ownership as an engineer. We usually assume ownership just means "the code I wrote" but that's honestly such a narrow way to look at it. A security issue in one module isn't just on the developer who wrote it. It puts the whole product at risk, the business, and the trust people have put in what we've built. And here's the thing if a vulnerability ever goes public on X or Reddit, nobody's going to remember whose module it was. They're just going to remember the product failed them. That's what really stuck with me. Ownership isn't only about shipping features fast. It's about writing code that's actually secure, reviewing changes properly instead of rubber-stamping them, asking the uncomfortable questions, and thinking about how what you build today affects everything else down the line. The Product Owner gets to decide what we build and when. But the quality of what actually gets built that's on us as engineers, every time. Small realization, but it hit me writing code is a technical skill. Taking ownership of it is an engineering skill. And they're not the same thing.

  • TxdoHawk
    Mike (@TxdoHawk) reported

    Lots of "I saw attractive people doing gig work" stories on Reddit lately. I've seen some myself in the last few weeks. "Pretty privilege" is real and you do not want to see these people schlepping burgers/groceries, because it probably means the rest of us are in big trouble.

  • victor_bigfield
    Victor 🧢 (@victor_bigfield) reported

    my feed is full of "passive income" posts. set it up once, make money while you sleep. the dream. my actual day: fix a bug before breakfast, answer support tickets during lunch, ship a feature while my wife asks what exactly i've been doing all day. there's nothing passive about this. every euro is earned twice. but when a stranger on reddit says "this tool saved me hours" it hits different. that's the part they don't screenshot.

  • endofhistory236
    Truth Nukem 🦍☀️🔳 (@endofhistory236) reported

    @leightonnotcool @Painefulfacts @Slatzism Reddit is down the hall and to the left good xir! But yes, your study that says paying for a guy for the rest of his life is cheaper then executing him is transparently fake and retarded 🌈

  • dbrightmac
    Bright | 🫁 (@dbrightmac) reported

    Stop launching on Product Hunt. 90% of founders learn this lesson the hard way. Product Hunt is not a customer acquisition channel. It never was. The people upvoting your app are not your customers. They are other founders waiting for you to upvote theirs back. That is the entire system. A room full of builders clapping for each other while their apps sit with zero paying users. Here is what a Product Hunt launch actually looks like for 90% of founders: Spend 4 weeks preparing. Write the copy. Make the graphics. Beg your network to upvote you on the day. Hit the front page. Get 800 visitors. 60 signups. Check back in 30 days. 4 of them are still active. None of them paid. The platform was never designed for your customer. It was designed for developers, tools teams, and founders who love discovering new products. If you are building for that audience, Product Hunt makes sense. If you are building an app for non-technical founders, freelancers, coaches, e-commerce store owners, or anyone else with a real problem, the people who need your app are not on Product Hunt. They are not refreshing the feed. They are not waiting for your launch day. They are on Reddit asking questions your app can answer. Or they are just one direct message away. // Reddit is where real buyers talk. Find the subreddit where your customer lives. Read what they complain about. Show up in those threads. Add value before you ever mention your app. When you do mention it, you are not pitching a stranger. You are answering someone who already told you their problem. That is a warm lead. Product Hunt gives you a cold upvote. // Cold and warm outreach still works. Find 20 - 100 people who match your exact customer profile. Send them a message. Not a pitch deck. Not a demo video. One sentence about the problem and one question. 100 messages. 20 responses. 10 calls. 5 paying customers. That is more than 90% of Product Hunt launches deliver. And it takes less time than designing your launch graphics. Stop optimising for applause from other builders. Start finding the people who actually have the problem your app solves. They are not on Product Hunt.

  • Allie_Gal1
    𝓐𝓵𝓲𝓬𝓮 🏳️‍⚧️🐾 (@Allie_Gal1) reported

    Reddit is down the hall to the left

  • hoplesslyretard
    King Veloliraptor ✝️🇺🇲🐈 (@hoplesslyretard) reported

    Facts. The only real problems we had in weebshit back then, especially on **** like /a/, were Gaia kods coming in and being annoying retards about basic ***** **** like Naruto, or else whiny moralfags from reddit & Tumblr who did the same **** we see all these tourists doing now

  • Miss_Lakewood
    Abigail Lakewood (@Miss_Lakewood) reported

    “Every other self-published doorstop on Amazon has one: Princess Elowen Stormblade, or whatever edgelord name the author thought sounded badass after three energy drinks and a Reddit thread titled “How to Write a Waifu Who Isn’t a Waifu.” She’s introduced strategically, oh yes. The hero’s just lost his mentor/girlfriend/horse, and boom—there she is, dual-wielding plot armor and daddy issues.” — The Warrior Princess: a rant I decided to create a warrior princess who would earn the respect of the readers so I joined forces with English author Richard Pembroke and we came up with Abigail Corven, a different breed of Strong Female Character The Corven Ledger - Carved in Dust and Bone “Are you willing to sacrifice what the hero wouldn't?”

  • vimentality7
    vi (@vimentality7) reported

    IS REDDIT DOWN???????

  • OhChyLanta
    Cheyenne (@OhChyLanta) reported

    @sIicksista I didn’t come from TV Time unfortunately, I just added everything manually 😪 some people have been saying on the Serializd Reddit that they’ve been having trouble though

  • 1PercentBetterT
    1PercentBetterToday (@1PercentBetterT) reported

    @VadimStrizheus that's what i discovered/learnt from this 2 wks when I was trying to validate the problem Im solving. -Probably look at reddit, fb grp and app store too

  • Russy30063671
    Russy (@Russy30063671) reported

    @GoatBeardzDD How quickly was the Reddit post taken down and anyone try to reach out to dude after?

  • shshankred
    Shashank (@shshankred) reported

    @Royalsinghz3 You are right and you are wrong. IG is captured. Reddit is a wasteland. But they continue to count for nothing. Government plays on very slow, very large issues. And there is no attractive alternative leadership figure.

  • NoCrickets4Devs
    🦗 (@NoCrickets4Devs) reported

    Type one sentence. It searches 6 places devs actually talk. live right now. • Reddit • X • Hacker News • GitHub issues • Stack Overflow • 21 dev forums

  • snnuypup
    snnuy (@snnuypup) reported

    @Th3wrrd3n @tapeworm_house I’m gonna delete this thread just since I have a lot of bad past w that server overall! But if you wanna you can dm me if you wanna save the Reddit 😭 I was high initially and quite heated abt seeing her around again

  • CommanderCrolly
    Commander Crolly (@CommanderCrolly) reported

    @David9260071738 @TeamYouTube there's loads of posts on Reddit and Google forums about this issue. No solid answers on it though unfortunately. I've not changed anything I do regarding video specs or titles etc, short feed just doesn't exist right now.

  • 95lkr003jgr
    ${noname} (@95lkr003jgr) reported

    @Fight_Archives_ Sir, Reddit Military Experts are down the hall and to the left.

  • Kathe56Kat
    KAT. a. Lack ❤️🌹❤️🌹❤️🌹 (@Kathe56Kat) reported

    @driscoll1142 @buckylynne12 @TheJFreakinC U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has faced local kidnapping investigations and public outrage following several high-profile incidents where agents detained individuals—including U.S. citizens—without warrants, only to drop them off elsewhere after realizing the error. [1, 2] Key Incents and Accusations •The Target-to-Walmart Incident: In January 2026, widespread outrage erupted after ICE agents detained a 17-year-old U.S. citizen working at a Target in Minnesota r/minnesota - Reddit. Agents later dumped the teenager miles away in a Walmart parking lot, bleeding and crying r/minnesota - Reddit. • •The ChongLy Scott Thao Case: In St. Paul, Minnesota, federal agents forced open the door of a U.S. citizen, ChongLy Scott Thao, removing him in his underwear PBS News. Local prosecutors and the Ramsey County Sheriff investigated the raid as a possible kidnapping KSTP, noting that ICE lacked a judicial warrant and that the actual suspect they claimed to seek was already in state prison CNN. [1, 2] • •Wrongful Detainments Near Schools and Towns: Under aggressive enforcement quotas, agents have mistakenly detained individuals, including a disabled teenager in Los Angeles who was handcuffed outside his high school and later released when agents discovered they had the wrong person PBS News. [1, 2] • ICE Official Stance The U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) strongly denies these characterizations, stating that "ICE does not 'kidnap' people" KSTP. The agency maintains that its officers execute targeted operations and that standard safety protocols allow them to temporarily hold individuals present at an operation site to verify their identities CNN. [1] Policy Fallout The high frequency of mistaken identities, community pushback, and tragic incidents linked to high-stress enforcement pressure led ICE to pause most vehicle-based traffic stops NBC News. Meanwhile, several state and county officials have filed lawsuits against the federal government to challenge the jurisdiction and tactics used during these raids The Guardian NBC News.

  • thereal_adam
    The Real Adam (@thereal_adam) reported

    @dch0241 @JaredSandler The emails have been slow trickling out apparently. I received mine about an hour after others on Reddit first got there's. I will say switching to BZZR was rather seamless, but with that said, the website is rather lacking, are are apparently the options of streaming platforms.

  • farzadkhosravi_
    Farzad Khosravi (@farzadkhosravi_) reported

    A founder I coached burned $100k building the wrong product. The 5-question test that would have caught it in a week 👇 He wrote clean code. He shipped fast. He built the wrong thing perfectly. He "knew" his buyers wanted a deep, complex dashboard. He never asked any of them. Assumption is the most expensive line item in any startup. Step 1: build the persona around pain, not demographics. "CFOs, 35 to 50" tells you nothing. Instead, aim for something specific: When X happens, the user experiences Y. They try to solve it with A, but it doesn't work due to B and C reasons. We solve this through the Z method. Step 2: run the Mom Test. Ask about the past, never the future. "How did you handle this last week?" beats "Would you use this?" every time. People lie about the future to be nice. They can't lie about last Tuesday. Step 3: lurk where they complain. Reddit, Discord, niche forums. He finally read competitor reviews. Every complaint used the same word: too complex. He'd spent a year adding complexity. Step 4: fake-door test. A landing page that promises the solution. Drive traffic. Count who clicks "buy" before you build a thing. Demand you can measure beats demand you imagine. Step 5: pre-sell. Money on the table is the only validation that doesn't lie. If they won't put down a deposit, a yes is just a compliment. The Wallet Vote Meter, weakest to strongest: a like, an email, a survey, a meeting, a data share, a prepayment, a renewal. If they won't pay $20, you have a hobby, not a company. He rebuilt around the real pain. Simpler interface, one job done well. Adoption that had been flat for months finally moved. Same founder, same skills, pointed at something people wanted. Test before you build. Or after, if you already overbuilt. 5 to 10 real conversations this week is never too late. TL;DR: talk to buyers, ask about the past, chase money not compliments. I write one No BS teardown like this for founders every week. Free. Link in the reply.

  • zergrush777
    Viewtiful Joe (@zergrush777) reported

    @InverseNinjas @ranmasaotome96 Damn, Jamboree is reddit? I loved Superstars but wanted to get Jamboree. This is terrible to hear

  • migurd_greyrat
    migurudo (@migurd_greyrat) reported

    @vtubed9 @Xenos_RIFS @Jaereku ******* Reddit had no problem with Loli, tourists started to ***** about lolis after anime went mainstream in 2020

  • saen_dev
    Saeed Anwar (@saen_dev) reported

    Reddit feels spammy because most launch posts are about the product, not the problem it solves. The communities that actually convert are the ones where you spent three months answering questions before anyone knew you were building.

  • GhoulStuffs
    Traumatized Ghoul (@GhoulStuffs) reported

    As a man and adult failure, I currently have: 1. Expired passport 2. Expired driver's license 3. A 0 balance bank account (not maintaining minimum quota, i give my mom money) 4. A smartphone (with screen that glitches/buttdials by accident), and a laptop with battery and BIOS issues (slightly). 5. No baby, still virgin. But I goon online a bit to make up for it. 6. One boss, she is my source of stable income. WFH self-employed/freelance-ish word-of-mouth work arrangement. These are my stats in 2026, plus I just started taking SEO/AEO/AIO and GEO classes a month ago to level up and upskill. What have I achieved so far? Got 800k impressions on Reddit in 2024 when my dad went missing and recovered him in 5 days thanks to r/India. Got hacked on Instagram once by a German who got jealous of me having 80 followers and he spammed Mr. Beast reels on my feed (thus, my IG getting flagged and connected accounts all deleted). Grew a gooning page to 5k followers on insta before that and got taken down. Got perma banned on both Instagram and Reddit (+VPN blocked by network security and device fingerprinted) after that. Dropped out of school after 10th grade and landed a job. Used it to support my ailing parents for years (they couldn't work when I was a kid, health issues) until I started working for my boss. Also ran a YouTube gaming channel from 6th to 8th grade (HDUltimateGamingHD) which is now dead since I lost access and forgot both email and password.

  • prachijain_x
    Prachi Jain (@prachijain_x) reported

    @flytradr_guy try to research about your user's problem on reddit and other open platforms