Reddit status: access issues and outage reports
Problems detected
Users are reporting problems related to: website down, errors and sign in.
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 6: Problems at Reddit
Reddit is having issues since 11:40 PM 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.
- Website Down (62%)
- Errors (25%)
- Sign in (13%)
Live Outage Map
The most recent Reddit outage reports came from the following cities:
| City | Problem Type | Report Time |
|---|---|---|
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Website Down | 3 days ago |
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Website Down | 3 days ago |
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Website Down | 6 days ago |
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Website Down | 8 days ago |
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Errors | 8 days ago |
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Errors | 10 days ago |
Community Discussion
Tips? Frustrations? Share them here. Useful comments include a description of the problem, city and postal code.
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Reddit Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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ursidaeDHD 🐻🖖🏻 I'm just a bear. 🇬🇧🇮🇪 (@ursidaeDHD) reported@AgreeingBook13 @reddit_lies The only thing Reddit is good for is in-game builds, finding other players to game with, and tech support issues.
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Salt Mine Ranch ⚙️🛠️ (@SaltMineRanch) reportedUncensored AI is not. The problem with these LLMs is they didn't get vetted factual training data, they just had their ability to determine truth nuked by editing the model weights. They can be interesting or entertaining but they're useless for truth. They're lobotomized idiots who believe anything. An uncensored AI in the real sense would need to have its input data checked and verified for authenticity and its output guardrails removed. Making an LLM never reject an answer as false gets you a liebot and rumor generator. If you consider how much Wikipedia and Reddit drivel is in their training, it's obvious why they are dumb and most models are, but most models can discern bullshit when generating answers. The closest thing would be Grok with no guardrails and I'm sure we will never see that released and I wouldn't trust its input 100% because we know who exerts influence on training and see it cite drooling zombies as sources routinely. It, and others, are also susceptible to tainting from humans baffling it with bullshit. If 90% of people believe a lie, how does the model weight it? As if the lie is true. If 'experts' collude and repeat a lie? Same thing.
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evil gay spirit (@sebmygoat) reported@mosquatsaloon whatever fix you were writing has probably been thought of by afl reddit and thats beautiful
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Lele ꒰ᐢ. .ᐢ꒱ ☣︎˚ ⋆ (@cywluu) reportedHow many accts do u have twitter: 4 (lost login for 2) discord: 2 instagram: 3 facebook: 1 snapchat: 1 tiktok: 5 twitch: 1 steam: 1 youtube: 3 spotify: 1 pinterest: 2 reddit: 2 gmail: 5 telegram: 2
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meghan (@meggg11113) reportedtree paine needs to clock innnnn bruh, i shouldn’t be having to be explain some bullshit bc irls saw a dumbass tik tok to defend my girl from misinfo birthed on reddit snarks. like haven’t influencers been able to get their snark pages taken down 😭
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Alexis Santos (@deepfirstsearch) reportedDay 2 of learning distribution. 🧪 Spent time studying how people actually grow through Reddit. Biggest lesson: Don’t start by posting your product. Find conversations where your users already hang out. Be useful. Answer questions. Learn their language. Understand their problems. Earn attention before asking for it. 🎯 Today: find 10 relevant conversations and join them. Let’s see what happens. 🚀
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Flavio Brasil (@fwbrasil) reported@baldram I honestly doubt every project that features there without issues notify them. It's rather trivial to scrape common sources like twitter and reddit to report
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Cincinnatus C./Florentino drop 200M’s on Olise! (@_Moziah) reportedI use Reddit the way folks use ChatGPT. It’s always gonna be someone on the internet who had the exact same problem you had like 15 years ago.
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Sophie Queen x Fit Couple (@fitandhotcouple) reportedAnyone else had Reddit randomly stop loading only one specific account? My other accounts work fine, but one account suddenly shows “Looks like Reddit is having some trouble” every time I open it. Not sure if it’s a lock, restriction, spam flag, suspension, or just Reddit being Reddit. If any creators dealt with this before, what fixed it? Password reset, support ticket, waiting it out? Trying to fix it properly, not guess for 3 hours like a confused potato.
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Mohammad Anas (@mohmmad__anas) reportedThe Rhythm Problem: Why Posting Stops (And How to Start Again) I watched a founder stop posting. Not because she ran out of ideas or lost faith in building in public. She stopped because the gap between posts grew from three days to a week to two weeks, and somewhere in that silence the habit broke. Posting isn't primarily a creative problem. It's a rhythm problem. When you post consistently—twice a week, say—the act becomes reflexive. You know the tempo. You expect yourself to write on Tuesday and Friday. Missing one day feels like breaking a chain, which creates just enough friction to pull you back. The habit is strong enough to overcome the blank page. But when you post sporadically—Monday one week, Thursday the next, then nothing for ten days—there's no rhythm. There's only a vague intention. Each post feels like the start of something new, which means each one requires the full negotiation with yourself. Do you feel like posting today? Is now the right time? Do you have something good enough? By the time you've asked all these questions, the moment passes. I've built products with spotty adoption. The pattern is the same. A user tries the feature, gets value, then doesn't use it again for three weeks. The third time they return, the feature feels unfamiliar. They've forgotten the microflows. They renegotiate with the interface. Most never come back. Posting works the same way. The worst part is the feedback loop. Sporadic posts get lower reach because the algorithm doesn't know if you're active. Lower reach means less validation, which makes the next post feel riskier. The gap widens. Eventually you're scrolling past other people's posts thinking, I should do this, and you feel that sting of being on the wrong side of the creator divide. Then comes the voice problem. When you post every Tuesday and Friday, your voice is consistent because you're operating from the same frame of mind. The same values, the same perspective on the week. But when three weeks pass between posts, you've changed. You've had different conversations, hit different walls, learned different things. Your voice shifts. Your audience feels it. They start wondering if they actually know what you think. I see founders try to solve this with willpower. They commit to a schedule. For two weeks they crush it. Then life happens—a client call runs long, a bug fires at midnight, a family thing—and they skip one day. That's fine, they think. I'll post twice tomorrow. But tomorrow they're tired, and posting feels transactional now, forced. The rhythm is broken. Within a month they're back to sporadic posting. The only founders I know who post consistently are the ones who removed the decision. They didn't increase their discipline. They decreased the number of times they could say no. Some write the week's posts on Sunday. Some batch-write monthly. Some work with a collaborator who holds them accountable. The specific system matters less than the fact that it exists. Once the decision is external—once posting is something that happens to you rather than something you choose—the rhythm becomes sustainable. But here's what most systems miss: they only solve the timing problem. They get you to post on schedule. They don't solve the platform problem. When you've written one thought and now you have to write it again for LinkedIn, and again for Reddit, and again in a way that works for your blog, suddenly the rhythm breaks in a different way. The first write is fresh. The second is rote. By the fifth you're not even sure what the original idea was. You've become a translator when you should be a creator. Posts stop happening not because you forgot to write them, but because writing them five times is unsustainable. The habit requires consistency, but consistency with what? With the schedule? With the quality? With your voice? I built Spotlaiz because I kept returning to this problem with founders I knew. They had things to say. They were building interesting things. But the operational friction of multi-platform posting was eating the time that should have gone into building. So they'd ship less publicly, post less frequently, show up less consistently—and eventually step away entirely. The rhythm only holds if the cost of posting is low enough that the friction doesn't exceed the motivation. Right now, for most solo founders, the friction is high. Writing once and publishing five times is high friction. That's why the rhythm breaks. Lowering that friction doesn't require more discipline. It requires a different system. One where you write what you're thinking and it reaches every platform in your voice, not in five adapted variations. Where the decision to post is separated from the work of posting. That's the gap we're filling.
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nuslopjakraisin6 (@giggercranberry) reported@nr1Ruberis @PunishedGaki to be fair, his halloween hack had an instance of the word "******", but he looks down on the hack (so i'm guessing he's going to keep his games as wholesome reddit gold karma farm fuel)
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🗡️MUZAN (@classicplaygirl) reportedi’ve gone down a sub reddit of no tipping and i’m on board
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Karen Frazetta (@ZettaNog) reported@JoniStatus Capes, hair, and clothing has been broken since they updated to the new modeling engine back in Chapter 3. Actually got blown off by TWO CM's on Reddit, being told it "couldn't be reproduced".
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unclekip (@unclekip) reported@Tablesalt13 Check the victoriabc reddit page. Moderators are complete fascists taking down posts about this. Giving account bans for mentioning the name of the gang related
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Ayo (@Ayse_Crypt) reportedTraditional Web3 growth playbooks are broken because we are treating AI search like a random chat box. Well, It’s not. If a founder asks an AI the most secure “DeFi protocol” and your project isn’t named, you have lost users that didn’t know you existed. No amount of KOL campaign or paid ads can fix an AI engine optimization visibility problem. To fix this user acquisition problem, you need to understand that there is a template that is working for established companies. Focus your optimization on this 4 AI data consumption: 1• For legacy and media authority Proof: people Use @ChatGPTapp If your project lacks PR coverage, media mentions, or Wikipedia search, it simply means you don’t exist. ChatGPT would never acknowledge you. Fix it! 2• For community and social graph proof: people use platform like Perplexity to track real time human conversations. This platform uses discussion platforms for its research. Such as Reddit, Twitter threads or a trending post. If a community isn’t actively talking about you. You miss out! 3• For owed Data: @GeminiApp uses direct sourced data. It prioritizes brand content, clean site structure. If your technical architecture is messy. Gemini would never refer you. 4• Documentation and codebases: Engines like @claudeai does a deeper technical analysis, white paper and original research. Most B2B buyers and developers use this as their go to source. If this users can’t find your product here, you’re missing out again. There is a shift in the search engine meta. Millions of users are bypassing the standard search engines and opting for AI platforms for referrals. If your marketing strategy is just one landing page, Twitter contents and few influencers campaign, you’re invisible to the algorithm that actually direct capital and users. You need a content footprint that position you in the four AI data layers directly. Wanna learn more on how to fix your AI engine optimization ? Send a DM!
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Brady 💿 (@AchsuallyBeej) reported@NotiPlay_ This was my Reddit post! Luckily I was warned by other users on the subreddit because others were getting their posts taken down too. Mine was up for maybe 10 minutes.
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Mohammad Anas (@mohmmad__anas) reportedYour Agent Makes Videos. You Decide What Ships. I set up a video agent last month. Fully automated. Ten minutes, one script, three videos come out. Then I realized I had a new problem: I had too many videos. This is not a complaint I expected to have. The bottleneck shifted. It used to be: can I make videos fast enough. Now it's: how do I know which videos are worth publishing. My agent doesn't understand market timing. Doesn't read Reddit to know which topics are trending this week. Doesn't sense when my audience is in a different mood. It just makes videos according to a prompt. I can publish ten videos a week. But I should probably publish two. The solo founder who learned to automate output is now the solo founder who has to learn to automate the decision of what output to ship. This is a harder problem than it sounds. It's also higher leverage. I started paying attention to which videos my agent made that actually changed minds. Not views. Changed minds. There was a pattern. The ones that worked all had a point of view. The agent was capable of making those, but only if I was very specific in the prompt. I added a layer: the agent makes the video. A scoring system reads the final output and asks three questions: Does this say something new about the problem. Is this the clearest way to say it. Does my audience need to hear this right now. Two of those three get a yes, it publishes. Otherwise it goes in a maybe later bin. That filter is worth more than the agent that makes the videos. The tools that win in 2026 aren't the ones that make output faster. They're the ones that make you better at deciding what output matters. YouTube automation agents are shipping. Everyone's got one. They're all making similar videos at similar volumes. The founders who are winning aren't the ones with the best agent. They're the ones with the best filter. This is where I think most automation fails. It optimizes for volume. But a solo founder doesn't need more volume. A solo founder needs more clarity about what actually moves the needle. Your unfair advantage isn't making videos your competitors can't make. It's knowing which videos to make before you make them. Build the agent. But spend more time building the judgment. The agent will scale your output. The judgment will scale your impact.
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Bronx Born and Bred (@slipThaN00se) reported@Shadowthewufffc @Lewis15798820 Yeah and we trust them oodles. It's not like they downvote you on Reddit for even speaking about a problem or the staff have removed any human services.
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Labubufeetporn 🐇 (@sicaru1000000) reported@antpatsmusic @LUCIDNIGHTM4RE someone posted it on reddit when it came out but i think it got taken down
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Chick2Chickchick (@dieforlovr) reported@oxidativestate Only thing good to come out of Reddit is the terrible reviews on SSRIs, saved my life tbh
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Charles (@CDomainer) reported@andyburnham The country deserves more Think about what you’re actually doing Andy - the optics of this are just terrible. You’re doing a pre PM glory tour which is all fluff zero substance. No general election. No choice. No going to the electorate with a plan Less Reddit and Rugby League, more appointing senior cabinet ministers and taking serious questions with substantive answers please
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Marcus Orealist (@OrealistMarcus) reported@PhilipHermann @Bitcoin_Teddy Yeah but they have no financially illeterate people like our blacks who stay down bc of their own lack of knowledge. I try to help the fools they get me tossed off Reddit for life, their plan take billionaires money, $100 each how stupid can 1 race be.
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Mogomra (e/acc) (@MightyMogomra) reported@publicinte So tired of dudes like that posting reddit-grade cope. Yeah your metabolism goes down when you diet, but it doesn't go down that much. He's probably drinking sodas and has a candy drawer
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Classicidal Cavs Fan (@HugoatedChavez) reportedI think im too young to even know what reddit atheist is supposed to mean and that’s the damn problem
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David (@goaroundflaps15) reported@EmiratesSupport Hi, why is Reddit blocked when using Starlink on any of your aircraft? Also any update on the rollout of Starlink as it seems very slow
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Chmst Zmb (@ChemistZombie) reportedso now i dont have to constantly turn it on and off just because some sites think i was sending botted requests. also, my work laptop is locked down i can't install WARP or any other VPN. having this unblocked means that i could finally use reddit on the work laptop, at long last
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ere (@Z3Dino) reportedReddit tgread is useful until everyone has the same issue but noone sayd the solution.... 😭😭
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Jean | ☕️🌱 (@jeantvz) reported@Reddit Review the problems Reddit has, otherwise it will trigger a massive campaign to take down the site
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Adrian (@dedlibru) reported@JakeThe53997336 @AkiZanshin @Gumidess He blocked you because you behave like a reddit mod. This whole topic is about GAMES on physical discs. You're making wild leaps to drag us down to your stupid level and talk about movies. We're talking about games here. You don't buy physical games, you're a stinky hypocrite
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Cliff Unger (@CS3101) reported@XJosh Can we use this to shut Reddit down?