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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.

June 17: Problems at Reddit

Reddit is having issues since 04:20 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.

  • 63% Website Down (63%)
  • 26% Errors (26%)
  • 11% Sign in (11%)

Live Outage Map

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

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Indio Website Down 5 days ago
Rosenau Errors 6 days ago
Pélissanne Sign in 8 days ago
Adelaide Website Down 12 days ago
Brisbane Website Down 14 days ago
Bengaluru Website Down 15 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:

  • cosmic_oro
    C̴̦̆o̵̬͊s̶̥͝m̷̤̌ȉ̴̺c̵̖̋ ̵̤̾C̵̪͒h̶̄ͅa̵̬͠ȏ̵͍s̵̪̀ (@cosmic_oro) reported

    @StompaofDaWord Well since this is a lie, lemme answer you. No. The fans who buy the minis and engage with the hobbies ARE the ones who are complaining about GW retconning WH lore and watering it down to cater to the tourists (you) and Reddit who do want it to be “woke and horrible”.

  • AnybodyEls93913
    @ThePrashant (@AnybodyEls93913) reported

    The ultimate group project: millions of devs provide the code, StackOverflow provides the answers, Reddit provides the discussions—and a handful of founders get a $60B payout. The incentive structure of the internet is officially broken. 🤯

  • Lunacy30964935
    Lunacy (@Lunacy30964935) reported

    @eliotranch @TheAkoFiles If I could lead reddit I would tell moderators to **** off and be mostly hands-off. Only ban actual spammers that make it hard to use the site. Also I'd unban everyone who's ever been banned, then permaban everyone who frequents gamingcirclejerk (the source of many problems)

  • Typhoic
    Team Canopus 最高! 💫🌠 (@Typhoic) reported

    @YagiNaito @timelydoublejet nnoo the assets on reddit got taken down, is there any other way to see?

  • terran975
    terran975 (@terran975) reported

    @NicoRobin_XYZ Idk, when i was in my worst moment needing support from anything else, my post in reddit got completely ignored. maybe you need to be a bit of famous or known to be asisted, or maybe i commited an error and i did not knew?

  • IrLOPER
    Nate Higgers (@IrLOPER) reported

    @assburgerstim Yeah that ain’t your fault but always be wary of going down the road of self hatred and pandering to the “mainstream” ethnic identity or whatever these reddit lot call it I ain’t good with terminology

  • Karanx274
    karan (@Karanx274) reported

    everyone told us reddit marketing is dead, we keep hearing reddit's basically dead for growth now moderation's brutal, communities getting nuked, too risky, organic's over this is for them, we just took a community from nothing to 161k views in a month 10k people a weekly visitors in two of our communities, built in about two weeks, on the platform everyone keeps calling closed for business it isn't about numbers, it's that we're doing this at a time when Reddit communities are under more scrutiny than ever.. moderation standards are stricter, community quality matters more, inactive or poorly managed communities are getting restricted or removed yet people are still choosing to join, participate, and return to ours one of these communities is already ranking among the top communities in its niche cause the problem was never reddit or organic marketing the problem was treating reddit like another marketing channel build something worth returning to and the growth follows, build a garden, the butterflies show up on their own!!

  • TraderBreeze
    Scott Davis (@TraderBreeze) reported

    @JamesJa14090207 @AlphaMoat @MattFinnFNC No it was a choice. The dipshits stayed home and played video games and had parents who didn’t want to be bothered by raising their kids. These kids are probably on Reddit 24/7. Boomers were terrible parents

  • Randaccounting
    Randaccounting (@Randaccounting) reported

    @Blueroctor @ShepardJd41503 @avidseries The only place I can find anyone saying they didn't fix the leaking was on a hyper biased reddit post. I tried finding a source, could you link one?

  • dvento
    Dan Vento (@dvento) reported

    I reset the timer. Day #1 trying to get my app public. - **** #Reddit just published one of the removed posts on my reddit profile. - This weekend I'll try to fix the unique id for premium users - Next big thing: try harder to get some attention

  • att1cuswashere
    silas/atticus | LISTEN TO INSATIABLE NEOW (@att1cuswashere) reported

    Why do fans feel entitled to an artist's work? Do they even understand their favorite artist? Gods, that's insane. (Prompted by multiple reddit posts ive been seeing about Keath taking down ATH Reprise from Spotify)

  • stiffrhomboids
    ambatunek (@stiffrhomboids) reported

    @TansuYegen Somebody on reddit did the math, u need 220 block of ices of that size to turn the water temp down by 1 C°.

  • nullshotai
    Nullshot (@nullshotai) reported

    @RoundtableSpace The catch with full autopilot is Reddit flags autonomous posting fast. The fix is keeping a human on the publish button: let it find threads and draft, but you approve what goes out. (basically why we went semi-autonomous with ours.)

  • Irfanbuilds
    Irfan Mohamed (@Irfanbuilds) reported

    Stop hunting beta users on Product Hunt. Find them where they already complain: X & Reddit. • Filter competitor followers by ICP keywords • Monitor competitor complaints & mentions • Find "alternative to X?" Reddit posts • Help first, pitch later Beta acquisition isn't a broadcast problem. It's a conversation problem.

  • ParthJadhav8
    Parth Jadhav (@ParthJadhav8) reported

    @mohittwwt Github took it down without notice. Not just repository but entire account. The developer clarified on Reddit that it’s not DMCA. But not sure of the reason to take it down yet.

  • AnikiSmashFSP
    Aniki Smash FSP (@AnikiSmashFSP) reported

    I brought this up on the C9 reddit and how we used to foster talent, even if we didnt keep it. Someone in the comments pointed out that the last time C9 won the region they still had an academy team. Very interesting detail. Could be nothing, could be a LOT to do with issues.

  • saguppa
    Saurav (@saguppa) reported

    In less than 2 months, Reddit generated 600K+ impressions for my SaaS. (i know, i should have started 2 yrs ago) In 2025, my team and I ended the year at 3.3M LinkedIn impressions. LinkedIn contributed about 30% of the growth that took us from $550K to $1M ARR. LinkedIn is still performing amazingly well. So, why Reddit now? Because not one of those 3.3M impressions showed up when someone typed "best LinkedIn automation tools" into ChatGPT/Claude/AI overviews. But Reddit threads do. And SalesRobot wasn't in those answers. That's a distribution problem LinkedIn can't solve no matter how well your content performs there. So I started posting on Reddit in March '26. 3 things I learned quickly: → Account age matters before you post anything. I got temporarily banned from r/SaaS early on for posting too frequently and including my SaaS's name in the posts. Spend the first few weeks only commenting. Build community presence before posting anything. → The first 30 minutes decide most of the outcome. A few posts that didn't get enough traction in the first 20-30 minutes, I knew they were going to flop. This mostly comes down to post quality and subreddit selection. A few genuine comments in the first 30 minutes is enough for the algorithm to start pushing it. Always read each subreddit's rules before posting. → Don't post the same post across 5 subreddits at once. Each subreddit has different rules and different mod tolerance. I narrowed it down to 3 subreddits per post, staggered by 48 hours minimum. → Attribution from Reddit to closed revenue is genuinely hard to trace. What I can see is that SalesRobot started appearing in AI-generated answers for our category after a few weeks of consistent posting and commenting. A LinkedIn post trends for 48 to 60 hours, and is restricted to the LinkedIn feed only. A Reddit thread about your category shows up in search results and AI answers for years. It took me too long and one failed attempt to get serious about this channel, but every month you're not on Reddit, someone else in your category is building the presence that shows up when your next customer asks an AI what tool to use. I want to be that answer.

  • KenAijmNight
    Julian (@KenAijmNight) reported

    I’ve been thinking a lot about visibility in Benelux esports. Not because nothing is happening. But because a lot of what is happening is hard to find. We recently tested a small “last 30 days” scan for public signals around esports in the Benelux. The result was interesting: most of what surfaced was noise. Global esports Reddit threads. International match discussions. Unrelated posts mentioning Netherlands, Belgium or Luxembourg. Very little that clearly showed what is actually happening locally. That does not mean the scene is inactive. It means the signals are scattered. Discord servers. FACEIT pages. X posts. LinkedIn articles. Private conversations. Community servers. Last-minute announcements. This creates a simple problem: If you are a player, team, fan, organizer or community member, it is hard to answer basic questions. Which teams are active? Which rosters are playing? What events are coming up? Where can you watch? Where can you support? Which communities are recruiting? What is the pathway from grassroots to higher-level competition? Team NL / ENC made this especially visible for me. If the Netherlands is competing, that should be a moment the community can rally behind. But for that to happen, basic information needs to be easy to find: Roster. Schedule. Streams. Format. Support links. Official updates. This is not meant as an attack on players, coaches, volunteers or organizations. Most people are doing this with limited time, limited staff and limited resources. But that is exactly why visibility should not be treated as an afterthought. Visibility is infrastructure. Without visibility: - players do not know where to go - teams do not know who is active - fans do not know what to follow - organizers do not know where demand is - good initiatives disappear inside private Discords For me, this confirms the direction I want to explore with Hexleague / HextechTools / Esport Atlas. Not “let’s launch another league” immediately. Not “let’s replace existing competitions.” Not “let’s fix the entire scene.” But first: A simple visibility layer for grassroots Benelux esports. Team profiles. Pathway explainers. Public resources. Monthly signal checks. Interactive check-ins for players and teams. Better insight into what teams actually need. One idea I’m exploring is a monthly “Benelux Esports Pulse” / “Hexleague Radar”: What was visible in the last 30 days? What was hard to find? Which teams, players or events deserve more attention? Which information was missing? Where are the practical opportunities? Not as an official news outlet. But as a way to collect signals, reduce fragmentation and make grassroots activity easier to discover. My current conclusion: Benelux esports does not only need more ambition. It needs better visibility, clearer pathways and reusable public information.

  • suryonak
    SURYONAK (@suryonak) reported

    @Shivam_h9 People use reddit quora discord substack medium too, can't leaker use them to create panic ? They still haven't, allowed backdoor for french govt, and Telegram has still toned down so much so in previous years Telegram of 2019-18 was diff ball game all together

  • lgbtqexy
    ♡̶ el (@lgbtqexy) reported

    im not taking song recommendations from posts in reddit anymore these people have terrible music taste

  • colonoscopy6667
    гorе (circus show spoilers) (@colonoscopy6667) reported

    Problem with being an internet darling is the most reddit zoomers will orbit you like flies to ****

  • diddykirkisrael
    spread kindness (@diddykirkisrael) reported

    @Awk20000 reddit is down the hall and to the left

  • amandaorson
    Amanda Orson (@amandaorson) reported

    Moved away from Openclaw and am using @NousResearch's Hermes prodigiously now. Practical use cases: 1. Daily Digest content aggregation (combined with the Last 30 Days skill) to surface specific real estate investor pain points, discussion, and competitive intelligence across X, Reddit, YouTube every morning. 2. Project Management: Reads Linear, Slack, and daily standup notes to (1) set the following day's standup agenda, (2) flag what was moved verbally in Slack but not in Linear, and (3) holds people accountable to doing what they said they would do in standup or didn't hit in Linear. Point Hermes at Linear via MCP, tell it to pull the day's ticket activity, compare against the morning standup agenda, and post a summary to Slack at 5pm. 3. Chief of Staff. Hermes reads my calendar across two different businesses, squares the open slots against my to-do lists, and adds the weather. I also have a farm, so if the forecast indicates it's going to rain this weekend (or I'm away) Hermes will slot in farm chores (mowing/ trimming) in the afternoon during the week and reallocate weekend time to deep work tasks (writing, coding, design). There's no such thing as balance, but this helps me ensure that my time is allocated efficiently based on business needs, meeting schedule, and the weather. There are other use cases, and I'm digging into more code-specific applications but not ready to share these yet. Hermes set-up was dead simple and time-to-value within the hour vs Openclaw (took me a full 2-3 days to really get to joy with the latter). I also found Openclaw was more brittle and required much more terminal-level maintenance than I've found with Hermes so far. This could be user error, its just been my experience. YMMV.

  • Aidanb2b
    Aidan Collins | Scaling B2B Offers on LinkedIn & X (@Aidanb2b) reported

    Claude Code + Reddit is making me go completely viral on autopilot. (steal my ENTIRE workflow + .MDfile completely free) And then I capitalize on it with a relevant post. I used to quite literally spend 45 min-2 HOURS scrolling trying to figure out what was trending. Now I run one command and get a full report in under 2 minutes. And it's how I've: - been booking 10-20 calls/mo with LinkedIn - nearly 2x'd my following in the past 3 months - going viral on autopilot for clients in multiple industries Here's how it works: --> Scrapes Reddit, Google Trends, Twitter, Hacker News, and the web simultaneously --> 4-layer relevance filter so you only see trends that actually matter to YOUR audience --> Cross-platform clustering. So if something is trending on 3+ sources, that's a content goldmine --> Spits out lead magnet opportunities tied to real pain points people are talking about RIGHT NOW The entire thing is a single markdown file you can plug into Claude, ChatGPT, or any AI tool. No API keys or code. Just paste it in and tell it your niche. Want it? 1. Comment "TRENDS" 2. Connect with me And I'll send it to you ASAP PS Reach is down for 99.999% of people.... But this is THE most predictable & consistent way to grow on Linkedin right now. Find what works -> use it to your advantage And you'll win.

  • brazigersu35lov
    Danila Bagrov (@brazigersu35lov) reported

    @AngelicKnight98 @Adleridk Reddit is down the hall and to the left

  • GuiOSlab
    Guilherme Anjos (@GuiOSlab) reported

    @akbx898 a few chatgpt referrals means you show up sometimes; invisible means not reliably. the real fix is less on-site, more being mentioned where models trust: reddit, comparison threads. what's sellary's category? i'll name the first 2 sources i'd chase.

  • panda_casts
    Code: Pan (@panda_casts) reported

    🚨SUPERCELL IS BEING SUED FOR USING A DESIGN FROM THE FIFA FOOTBALL!🚨 Supercell has been sued for using a design from the FIFA football without permission for the creation of Bolt! This football is called Trionda. In April 2026, The Hague International Court decided that Supercell indeed copied this design without permission, and now Supercell may have received a deadline by which they must change Bolt’s design so that they no longer have future issues with it, such as the game being blocked or even higher fines (beyond those they have already paid). This is a very extreme case, one that completely changes the lore of a Brawler as the redesign will be an American Football, also called the “Hand Egg” , so for those who love Bolt as it is now, you can give it a proper funeral! 😭🥀 Via u/fell4it on Reddit 🤔

  • WEMZ1SSUE
    WEMZ☮ (@WEMZ1SSUE) reported

    @averydotavi @SquashFold Reddit is down the hall and to the left

  • GregHoytLET
    Greg Hoyt (@GregHoytLET) reported

    @mikeoxbroad @PalmyrPar I'd say, generally speaking, people legitimately in relationships going the Reddit-venting route of largely non-serious issues (such as the one depicted where I guess she just wanted affirmation that young guys want her?) are possibly coping for their own forms of infidelity.

  • VukConfidential
    Vukasin Vukosavljevic (@VukConfidential) reported

    The cold-email tool I joined as employee #1 was closing in on $250K ARR with a blog nobody read. We were shipping articles on everything. Outreach, LinkedIn, entrepreneurship, whatever stuck. ~80% of our time went into writing, almost none into getting it seen. Several posts a month, basically zero traffic, zero signups. Two changes flipped it. Neither was "write more." Change 1: publish only money content. We killed the guides and the top-of-funnel stuff and shipped one thing: cold email templates. Why they worked: → We were already doing the outreach, so every template came with real results + a breakdown → Each one showed off a key feature (product placement built in) → It killed our #1 churn reason, "cold email doesn't work for us," by proving it does Every piece had to pass one test before it shipped: → Eyeball potential: will this pull a relevant audience that grows over time? → Placement potential: is our product the actual answer to the problem it raises? If it didn't sell the product, I didn't want to make it. Gourmet bait, not grabbing fish with your bare hands. Change 2: spend most of the time distributing, not writing. What that looked like with no traffic and no budget: → Promoted templates in our community + newsletter ("template of the week") → Went where the ICP already hung out: Quora, Reddit, growth forums. Enough upvotes on one and they'd push us to thousands in their newsletter → Traded backlinks in pods and groups to drag our domain rating up → Built our own pods. Started a 10-person LinkedIn chat, grew it into a group in the thousands. What it actually bought me was relationships. Journalists included, who got us on sites I could never land a backlink on myself Word of mouth, mentions and referral traffic kicked in and became one of our biggest early engines. Two people ran the whole thing. Money content brought revenue fast. Thought leadership builds authority slow. We needed both, but at $250K with a dead blog, slow was a luxury. So we led with what paid, and it funded the rest 🫡