Reddit status: access issues and outage reports
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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.
At the moment, we haven't detected any problems at Reddit. 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 Reddit users through our website.
- Website Down (61%)
- Errors (28%)
- Sign in (11%)
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 | 10 hours ago |
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Website Down | 5 days ago |
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Sign in | 6 days ago |
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Errors | 7 days ago |
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Website Down | 10 days ago |
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Errors | 10 days ago |
Community Discussion
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Reddit Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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James Kanasawa 金沢 (@OceanArmor) reported@WatcherGuru Reddit needs to go down permanently.
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🥀 (@0xRizzler) reported@ThinkingUSD my portfolio is down bad while my forgotten reddit login is up 400%
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Pearl Agarwal (@pearlagarwal7) reportedStart with people who already feel the pain. Not your friends. Not family. People who have complained about this problem publicly on @Reddit, @X, @LinkedIn, or community groups. They are already telling you they need a solution. Just show up in that conversation.
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Adam Taylor (@adamtaylorl) reported4/ To fix it, we went digging. We pulled 500+ customer reviews and Reddit threads. We wanted the exact, raw language people used when they were venting to strangers online.
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Marzi (@Marzipan1356921) reported@euphoria27374 @Altermerea I know, but it seems to be spot on… I joined —out of curiosity— a transmaxxer discord server via Reddit a few years ago… just to quietly read what they said. Almost all of it aligns with what the transfeminines on X/Twitter say and do.
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Raul Robin Oruman (@rroruman) reported@aleabitoreddit Reddit isn't underperforming because the thesis is wrong. It's because the moat depends on unpaid moderators who can quit at any time. Growth and profit don't fix that vulnerability. Wall Street is pricing the structural risk.
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MarxismEpsteinism (@MarxismEpstein) reported@ax_angelo "Put down the chicken wings janny and join green reddit (nasheed)"
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vansh (@vanshdevx) reported@adityakumar__03 If your product is solid and really have the potential to solve the user problem then X , reddit like platforms are enough , you just need to stay consitent
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Tmos Monstrocity (@TmosMonstrocity) reported@Azkawayi @infantry_nw @Rothmus Explaining a limitation of AI, great now explain the limitation of human kind. Why is it some artists can paint beautiful pieces of art work, and some are shirty Reddit artists that draw cartoon fan art that sucks so bad it makes my eyes bleed? Lets get down to the nitty gritty, we have a few AI that are learning, but we have millions of trash artists. Yet AI is bad, but all these horrific trash artists that can't draw themselves out of a paper bag are fine? Sure does seem like you're are just "Prejudice and a hypocrite".
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Taiwo Oladosu (@TaiTechSolution) reported@rkarre566 @tibo_maker You’re already ahead of most founders just by doing that first 👍 Most people rush into posting links, then assume Reddit “doesn’t work” when the real issue was timing + positioning. Once you spend enough time observing, you start noticing: • recurring problems • language patterns • what gets engagement • and the exact moments where a product mention feels natural instead of forced That’s usually where traction starts compounding.
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Devesh | Reddit Marketing (@deveshlogs) reportedLet’s be clinical about this for a second. Reddit gets more Google traffic than most news websites. LLMs were trained on it. Perplexity crawls it in real time. And B2B founders are still writing blog posts nobody asked for. This isn’t a content quality problem. It’s a placement problem. The data has been screaming this for two years.
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𝙒𝙖𝙨𝙨𝙖𝙮𝙮𝙮 (@_profsay) reported13/ Hit the fsck_filesystems wall. Phone kernel-panics 60 sec into fsck on the partial system partition. Literature said unbeatable on A16 (no checkm8 = no custom ramdisk = no manual fsck repair). Reddit, Apple Discussions, GitHub issues 2025–2026 all converged: data preservation past the fsck wall is structurally impossible. Refused.
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American (@american703902) reported@SychinLegacy @TW0HEADEDBEAST Like Im going to ignore the yield sign in hopes that the humanitarian in the tinted altima will allow me to merge into their lane when its time. If we could operate with this much cooperation traffic would be the least of our worries. ******* reddit people make me furious
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Alex Wyatt | Meta Ad Creatives (@Alexwyatt47) reportedYour customers are writing your next winning ad right now. You're just not reading it. Amazon reviews. Reddit threads. Trustpilot. TikTok comments. The exact words people use to describe their problem, what they tried before and what finally convinced them to buy. We pull 1,000+ of these before writing a single line of copy. 30 minutes of reading reviews will do more for your ad strategy than a week of brainstorming.
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Crafty | LEGO Fortnite (@CraftyPlaysLF) reported@FGMuffins @DeepDelveVentus Absolutely agree. Only reason I would think it’s Epics “Job” is I believe they selected the people, but I could be wrong. Epic Developers are moderators on the Reddit, they could fix it almost overnight tbh.
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Marzooq Asghar (@marzooqahq) reportedSEO in 2026 looks NOTHING like SEO did in 2020 the market has moved faster than ever before most companies are still wasting thousands of dollars on outdated tactics every month here’s what you need to be doing right now to keep up: - LLM SEO - entity building - reddit distribution - organic attribution - programmatic SEO - AI prompt discovery - buyer decision mapping - AI-first keyword research - growth loops from search - comparison page systems - decision page frameworks - topical authority architecture - structured all content for LLM citation - AI search discovery (ChatGPT / Perplexity / Claude / Gemini) the core principle: clear positioning around a specific problem your buyer has NOT random tactics targeting all broad keywords and hoping for the best we implemented this exact stack recently for our client Musicfy they went from ZERO organic visibility to: - 692k organic clicks - 7.4M impressions - 3,000–6,000 signups per day from search - organic search now driving the majority of their $2M+ ARR the playbook is changing change with it, or get left in the dust
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ᖭི༏ᖫྀ (@_mothboo) reportedreadinf people’s stories on reddit about their cats keeping them company whenever they’re feeling down/sick how could people ever think cats are mean?
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Nakul Bhardwaj (@_NakulBhardwaj_) reported@TheAhmadOsman Why hasn’t anyone found Caffeinate for MacBook yet, which solves this issue, I guess people have stopped finding solutions themselves by Googling and reading through Reddit posts now.
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Raider Ty (@RaiderTy92) reported@ACertainHTXEspr I’ve run this same scenario on Reddit going back to 1994. Basically if you’re a not a conference champ and you’re ranked from 21-24, you’re in trouble.
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Raymond Ekpo (@raymonduekpo) reported@Ysquanir That’s actually the core skill on Reddit. You lead with the problem your users have, not the product. The posts that work look like genuine participation, not promotion. But to do that well you need to be really clear on who you’re talking to and what they’re already saying about their problem. That’s where most founders get stuck before they even open Reddit. What’s the app? I want to understand who the buyer is.
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eBot Servers (@eBotServers) reported@RoliumGens oh noooo stay away.. check reddit zaiglm subreddit.. They have been cancelling renewals on mass users and forcing them to resubscribe to new plans with reduced limits. Really dig into the subreddit and you will find lots of people reporting api errors and a ton of problems
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Doctor Sam (@DoctorSamPepper) reported@wolffishyy @businessman5959 @FemboyDCS iirc the CEO piledst did an AMA on reddit about the game and most answers boiled down to "we know you want it but its not our main priority rn", so that made a lot of people reach their breaking point
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***** (@RapistAgartha) reported@jetneptune_ Reddit is just porn and libtard **** these days. The day that it shuts down permanently will be a great day
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Hridoy Rehman (@hridoyreh) reportedHow to validate an idea using Reddit: 1. Search the Problem Go to Reddit and search for the pain point (e.g., "hate managing invoices" or "can't find good freelance designers") your idea solves. And set the filter to Top / All Time. 2. Read the Posts Like a Heatmap If you see dozens of threads complaining about the same problem across multiple subreddits, that's a real problem. Then, we all realize there is no solution or only a partial one. 3. Check the Upvotes / Comments High upvotes + many comments = strong pain, active community, real demand. Low engagement = niche problem or weak urgency, people don't care enough 4. "Someone Should Build This" Signal Search phrases like "I wish there was an app", "why doesn't X exist", or "I'd pay for...", these are goldmines. Users are literally handing you validated ideas. 5. Spot the Workarounds If people are sharing DIY solutions (spreadsheets, manual processes, duct-tape tools), that's a strong signal. This means the problem is real and no good solution exists yet. 6. Find Targeted Subreddit Check which subreddit the complaints live in. That community = your first customer base. You can post there, run surveys, or do direct outreach.
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Neco The Sergal (@NecotheSergal) reported@Pirat_Nation Google itself is a broken mess but now they're relying on it's broken *** algorithm 'and' Redditor opinions? Really? lmao. 'Reddit Experts'. The only thing redditors are experts on is bitching and finding things to be offended about.
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Anubhav (@Anubhavhing) reportedReddit is still the best free channel for first users but not how most people use it wrong way : create account post "hey i built this check it out" get ignored or banned right way : find subreddits where your exact user already hangs out read for 2-3 weeks. learn the tone. understand the language. comment helpfully. no links. no pitching. profile views convert way better than direct links mention your product only when it is genuinely relevant for beauty and wellness : r/SkincareAddiction, r/MakeupAddiction, r/30PlusSkinCare your users are already there complaining about the exact problem you solved
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spokesman da Associação dos Economistas Anti-Pobre (@gfiorini__) reportedso he's dumping the "Temu version of Reddit" that users enjoy and insvesting heavily in a Temu version of [insert any number of generic messaging apps] that has nothing to do with the original feature and that no one gives a **** about why? 'cause they can't fix the ******* bots
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Filip Panoski (@FilipPanoski) reportedReddit drives 50% of my signups. Here's the exact playbook anyone can copy: 1. Find the threads • Google "best [your category] reddit" • Google "[competitor] alternatives reddit" • Look for the "what do you use for..." threads 2. Reply with help, not a pitch • Answer the question first • Provide as much value as possible • Mention your tool by name only if it actually fits 3. DM the OP after, with context • Offer to help, not sell • Reference their exact problem • No link in the first message That's it. Boring. Repeatable. Works.
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akila. (@becka1icious) reportedmybe you weren’t a terrible person maybe you were just reddit user
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IndiJo (@odd_joel) reportedion before acquisition point hit hard. I made the same mistake with my own iOS app (Moshi, a mobile terminal for devs). Spent two months pumping users in through Reddit and X while the first-week drop-off was 40 percent. Stopped all acquisition for three weeks, fixed onboarding, added one tiny push notification that brought people back, and the same acquisition effort suddenly produced way more keepers. The "use your own product religiously" one is also underrated. The only reason I noticed how broken my onboarding was is because I started using it to monitor my own Claude Code agents from the couch. Bugs jumped out within a day. You really cannot find them by intentionally testing, only by being a real user with a real need.