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Reddit

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 14: Problems at Reddit

Reddit is having issues since 07:00 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.

  • 64% Website Down (64%)
  • 25% Errors (25%)
  • 11% Sign in (11%)

Live Outage Map

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

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Indio Website Down 2 days ago
Rosenau Errors 2 days ago
Pélissanne Sign in 5 days ago
Adelaide Website Down 9 days ago
Brisbane Website Down 11 days ago
Bengaluru Website Down 12 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:

  • _dreamybangtans
    *** 🦋 (@_dreamybangtans) reported

    @withlovekirin i’m all for tab getting the lashings he deserves – fire him, charge him, hold him accountable deservedly. but mayhaps we should stick to the facts and focus on the most urgent and critical issue at hand. why are we suddenly digressing into unconfirmed reddit sources now?

  • rashiumapathi
    Rashi Umapathi (@rashiumapathi) reported

    I helped a SaaS founder go from zero to 20 paying customers in 6 weeks. No ads. No Product Hunt. No cold calling. Here's the exact playbook we used (and why most founders skip the most important step): Step 1: We didn't market the product for the first 2 weeks. Instead, we talked to 30 potential customers. Not selling. Asking. "What's the most frustrating part of [problem]?" Their exact words became our homepage copy. Step 2: We picked ONE channel. Not Twitter AND LinkedIn AND Reddit AND email. Just one Slack community where 2,000+ of their ICP hung out. We showed up there every day for 4 weeks. Never mentioned the product once. Week 4: Someone asked the exact problem we solve. Another member replied: "There's someone in this community who knows a lot about this." That one referral = 20 paying customers. Trust takes 4 weeks. Ads take 4 minutes. You get what you invest. Step 3: One piece of content. Not a blog post. A definitive guide. 5,000 words. Answered every question about their category. Ranked on page 1 within 60 days. Still sends signups every week. The full playbook: → Talk to 30 customers before you market anything → Steal their exact words for your copy → Pick ONE community and be the most helpful person in it → Write one piece of definitive content → Let referrals and SEO compound Focus is distribution. If this helped, repost so other founders see it.

  • dead_baseball
    Baseball's Not Dead (@dead_baseball) reported

    @_xDeath It was a comment on Reddit where I broke down his ceiling by BB/9 band.

  • KyonaMicha
    Kyona Micha (@KyonaMicha) reported

    @sanrinifem1 faces are wrong way around, reddit anything is terrible.

  • broski48952
    broski48952 (@broski48952) reported

    @0_error404 @ToonHive @calmdown_robby Glitch isn't even indie shut up damn with that reddit image bullshit get ******** outta here man

  • SaitejaChallap1
    TJ (@SaitejaChallap1) reported

    Day 13 of 100 - rebuilding my client base & growing my micro SaaS to $1K MRR. Reddit has beaten me up more times than I can count. Posts removed. Bans. No upvotes. People roasting you. Losing motivation. Telling yourself, "Reddit is not for me." I've been there. But in a world where anyone can build with AI, the only ones who stand out are the ones who can market & sell. The problem is, we don't have thousands to throw at ads. We don't have a massive follower base either. The answer is organic. Reddit, SEO, social media. So I'm building something that turns Reddit posts & replies into lasting Google traffic, AI recommendations & new customers. Launching next week. Day 14 tomorrow. 👇

  • Justice_099
    Justice 099 (@Justice_099) reported

    @TerryH38609 You choose to believe the bullshit you want. You know when you have some situation or conversation happen and you wimped out and then obsessed about it all day about how you wanted it to have gone down? Those are the stories that end up on Reddit.

  • patye91
    LIKENG| REDDIT MARKETING (@patye91) reported

    How To Get High-Ticket Clients Commenting 3–4 Times a Week on Reddit? Your first visible contribution on reddit starts with COMMENTS. Here's the right way to write replies that actually convert, and avoid shadowban. 👇 →Find threads with real friction. Look for posts where someone is clearly stuck, asking something specific, or dealing with a real problem. For instance, if you're a social media manager, don't answer a post about: “ how to grow a social media account " but instead”how to get my content in front of the right audience on instagram” or “ how to manage my 02 Instagram accounts” . These ones are very specific. By dropping a valuable comment there …you are not solving a problem, but opening a door to potential job opportunities because people who struggle with the exact problem might reach out. →Don’t reply to threads that are already saturated. Dropping a comment in a post with 1k+ upvotes and 100+ comments doesn't make sense. →Don’t reply to threads with vague prompts. Questions like “How do you all handle X?” or “What do you think about Y?” are often too broad. →Make sure you have context for the issue. I got a client that way. The man was asking on how to position himself as a data analyst on social media and I helped. He wanted to work with me, but I was looking for jobs with clothing brands at the time.

  • ChudetteAmagi
    Yabi (@ChudetteAmagi) reported

    @Flankerchan @milkalade i have read everything from "the CCP doesn't allow it ever" to "Project Aces got an in-person meeting with AVIC", without any sources and all coming from Reddit IMO, i think that PW doesn't want to risk getting in trouble with the US/EU MIC for cooperating with AVIC

  • memeradarxxx
    MemeRadar (@memeradarxxx) reported

    A 19-year-old student made $11,200 in one week with “AI-generated kittens.” She hates cats. YouTube launched a new Shorts monetization program with big bonuses for “viral pet content” on Monday morning. By Tuesday evening she had 47 videos (15–60 seconds each) and 8.4 million views. She simply opened Reddit and Twitter at 2 a.m. and saw a post: “YouTube is paying up to $7000 per million views in the Animals & Pets category during the first 30 days of the new program.” She did the math on her phone calculator. Closed her eyes. And understood. Three prompts to Claude: “Write 10 scripts for ultra-viral short videos with cute kittens: unexpected twists, slow-mo, trending sounds, and on-screen text.” Then she fed every script into Kling AI + Runway + CapCut (all through one template). Four minutes later — ready: a fluffy British Shorthair in glasses falling off the couch in slow motion, text “when monday hits” + trending sound. Another 40 seconds for subtitles and hashtags. She uploaded the first one at 3:47 a.m. Woke up — 1.2 million views. By lunch the second and third were already doing 400k views per hour. The algorithm decided she was now a “cat channel.” By Friday she had 47 videos. Some hitting 3–4 million views each. Total earnings for the week — $11,200 (AdSense + YouTube bonus program). She didn’t film a single real cat. Didn’t buy props. Didn’t edit by hand. Just once a day she opened her laptop, ran a script that pulled fresh trending sounds from TikTok, generated new prompts, and uploaded the videos. Everyone read the same YouTube announcement. She just opened a second tab.

  • MilePosavina
    zarja 𝜗𝜚 ࣪˖ ִ raf ⋆.˚sy (@MilePosavina) reported

    @2961AZUREWAY if i ever win the lottery the first thing i will do is buy reddit and shut it down permanently

  • NeoSchmied
    NeoSchmied (@NeoSchmied) reported

    @number_pizza111 I think I even saw more anti-wehraboo-overreaction in reddit lately than wehraboos. The Red Army wasn't this "zerg rush meat wave", but it did have serious problems at the start of the war and wasn't led by miliary geniuses who cared deeply about their soldiers.

  • irejectmychild
    I Reject My Child (@irejectmychild) reported

    This Reddit **** for idiots is so much more embarrassing and undignified than when Biden was like a half dead guy running the country with his pants always falling down, and that’s saying a lot

  • dlifeof_jay
    Jay⚡️(The AI/ML Guy) (@dlifeof_jay) reported

    Bro, why am I just discovering Reddit???? People literally post their problems and are open to solutions 😭

  • Slkoshka
    Slkoshka (@Slkoshka) reported

    @bee_fumo I got curious how Omarchy was handling this because my main complaint about it was automatic AUR updates. There's literally no discussion about this at all. There's one GitHub issue with zero replies and a Reddit post with like 3 comments. Those people live in their own world.

  • dhruv2038
    Dhruv (@dhruv2038) reported

    Is reddit chat down?

  • BugInUrPants
    one of the creatures that struggle (@BugInUrPants) reported

    love reddit bcs it just saved my life again from making terrible mistake lol. this like 3rd time i dodge bullets bcs reading reddit discourse.

  • kimionpole
    mar 🐜🤙🏼 (@kimionpole) reported

    Yall are lowkey the same ones who swore up and down Kimi wouldn’t fight for a championship this year and “he isn’t ready” and all that other bs we are NOT declaring it over because of a “Fp1” result son 😭 go doom post on Reddit

  • LiamNorris25413
    Liam Norris🇺🇲 (@LiamNorris25413) reported

    @ComardeThe97931 @ProjectAncap Reddit is down the hall and to the left

  • adefilaadeyinka
    Adeyinka Prime™ (@adefilaadeyinka) reported

    Step 1: Write down what your buyer is searching for. Not your product name. Not your features. The problem they'd type into Google or Reddit at 11pm. "Best tool for tracking contractor invoices" "How do I get my first 100 users" "Is there a cheaper alternative to [big competitor]" That's your starting list.

  • nobodyknows2322
    Bird on Fire 🔥 (@nobodyknows2322) reported

    @MostlyMonkey These kind of people doom scroll all day on Reddit about how they'll never own a home and don't even bother looking into first time homebuyer/down payment assistant programs *of which there are many* I've discovered

  • StartideProphet
    Startide Prophet (@StartideProphet) reported

    @Oblivio07951899 @evilvillain1231 Reddit atheism is so tiring. The problem of evil is so stupid to begin.

  • kolita_one
    Bhargab Kalita (@kolita_one) reported

    @WasimShips This is a super solid breakdown. I totally agree with the 'reddit beat every channel' part. It's so true for early customers. Finding those specific founder threads with real problems is the hard bit though. You can spend ages just looking for them. And then trying to figure out what to even say. Honestly, this is literally why I made Xoru. It helps founders find those exact conversations and figure out what to write. Because doing all that manual research, like he did, takes forever. But it really does work. Finding that warm demand is everything when you're starting out. It makes such a difference compared to cold outreach. I've wasted so much time on cold DMs myself. This whole system makes a lot of sense.

  • blueshades2020
    Kevin 🍓 (@blueshades2020) reported

    @TohBoi76791 @Oo_Cotext_Women @SaifAhmadSaiif This ignorant freak is barely at a primary-level and doesnt understand even basic history. He's probably the kind who got his education from reddit threads and history gossip with people who are just as clueless as he is. That's the kind of problem this generation is dealing with

  • CraftTanner
    Tanner Richard Craft (@CraftTanner) reported

    I told someone on the disclosure day reddit thread that the people who liked the movie aren't paid shills and they just have a different opinion and I got down voted to oblivion they ******* hate it over there

  • RagingZionist23
    reet (@RagingZionist23) reported

    @FactoryQuack Once someone goes through the trouble of collecting all of this they should add links to report them to reddit, X, whatever and include them in reports on the entire community. Dangers to society.

  • dhruv2038
    Dhruv (@dhruv2038) reported

    @Reddit - fix your damn chat - i was talking to a girl and now i might lose her because of your ****** outage.

  • 0xaos
    0xaos.base.eth 𐤊₿🇵🇱 (@0xaos) reported

    @OfficialTravlad Retail buys $SPCX for rockets & cars (wrong company). Reality? You bought a $1.77T AI fantasy, orbital servers & Mars base hopium. Read the IPO papers. Aerospace revenue is a rounding error next to the AI cash burn. Check Reddit/YT. DYOR.

  • AnthroApostle
    Anthropic Apostle (@AnthroApostle) reported

    @badtakesmachine Purple pingers should stick to what he does best, which is exposing poorly kept or run down rental properties. Its hard to take him seriously when his main source for a tweet is a rumour on reddit lmao.

  • patye91
    LIKENG| REDDIT MARKETING (@patye91) reported

    If you plan to promote your SaaS on reddit… Here are 8 prompts to craft posts that will convert 90% of times 👇🏾: 1. The "Warning Before You Launch" Hook (Same structure as original) Write a Reddit post targeting indie hackers or solopreneurs who are about to launch a SaaS product. Open with a warning hook like "If you're about to launch your first SaaS… read this first." Establish credibility in 2–3 sentences (years of experience, relevant background). List 4–6 numbered, bolded mistakes people make before launching, each with a practical fix or prompt. Keep a conversational, non-preachy tone. End with a soft mention of a tool you built for yourself, offer to share it without pushing it, and close with a genuine question to the reader. Length: ~400–500 words. 2. The "I Did It Wrong So You Don't Have To" Confession Hook Write a Reddit post where you share a painful mistake you made (e.g., lost $3k in AWS bills, got hacked, lost all your users overnight). Open with the outcome first: "I lost $3,000 in one night because of a single line of code." Then walk backwards through what happened. List the 3–5 root causes with bold headers. End with what you'd do differently and a question asking if others have had similar experiences. Tone: honest, slightly self-deprecating, but educational. Length: ~400 words. 3. The "Nobody Talks About This" Contrarian Hook Write a Reddit post that challenges a common belief in a tech or startup community. Open with: "Everyone tells you to [popular advice]. Nobody tells you [the hidden downside]." List 4–5 counterintuitive truths with bold headers and short explanations. Use phrases like "this cost me 3 months" or "I see this constantly." End with a nuanced take that shows you're not just being contrarian — you actually care. Close with a question. Length: ~350–450 words. 4. The "Quick Sanity Check" Listicle Hook Write a Reddit post framed as a checklist for a specific audience (e.g., people using no-code tools, first-time freelancers, new YouTubers). Open with: "Before you [take a major action], here's a quick sanity check." Use 5–7 numbered items with bold titles. Each item should have 2–3 bullet points of practical detail. Include one item that most people completely ignore. Mention a tool or resource you use personally. End with an open question. Length: ~450–500 words. 5. The "I Reviewed 100 [Things] So Here's What I Found" Data Hook Write a Reddit post where you share patterns from a large sample you've personally observed (e.g., 100 portfolios, 50 landing pages, 30 cold emails). Open with the number upfront: "I've reviewed 100 indie hacker landing pages. Here's what almost all of them get wrong." List the top 4–5 patterns with bold headers. Be specific — name the exact mistake and the fix. Avoid being condescending; frame it as "easy to miss" not "stupid." Close with a soft CTA and a genuine question. Length: ~400 words. 6. The "This One Change Made a Big Difference" Transformation Hook Write a Reddit post about a single specific change that had an outsized impact on your results (revenue, traffic, productivity, etc.). Open with the result: "One small change doubled my conversion rate." Spend the first third on context and credibility. Explain the change in detail with bold subsections. Acknowledge what didn't work before this. End with caveats (so it doesn't feel like a brag) and ask if others have found similar wins. Length: ~350–400 words. 7. The "Things I Wish Someone Told Me When I Started" Nostalgia Hook Write a Reddit post addressed to your past self or to someone just starting out in a specific field (coding, freelancing, content creation, etc.). Open with: "I've been doing [X] for [Y] years. Here's what I wish someone told me on day one." List 5–6 lessons with bold titles. Mix practical tips with mindset shifts. Use personal anecdotes briefly (1–2 sentences each) to ground each point. End with humility — acknowledge you're still learning — and ask readers what they'd add. Length: ~450 words. 8. The "Free Tool / Resource Drop" Value Hook Write a Reddit post where you share a free resource, tool, or system you built or use. Open by leading with the value: "I built a free [tool] that does [specific thing]. Here's how it works and why I made it." Explain the problem it solves first (2–3 sentences). Show how it works with a short walkthrough or bullet list. Preemptively address "why is this free?" or "what's the catch?" End with a genuine invitation for feedback and a question about what else people would find useful. Tone: generous, not sales. Length: ~300–400 words.