Reddit status: access issues and outage reports
Some 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 11: Problems at Reddit
Reddit is having issues since 06:20 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 (57%)
- Errors (25%)
- Sign in (19%)
Live Outage Map
The most recent Reddit outage reports came from the following cities:
| City | Problem Type | Report Time |
|---|---|---|
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Sign in | 2 days ago |
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Sign in | 3 days ago |
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Website Down | 8 days ago |
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Website Down | 8 days ago |
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Website Down | 10 days ago |
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Website Down | 13 days ago |
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:
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just andrey (@andreyiscoding) reported@1Umairshaikh built a product nobody wanted first. spent 6 months perfecting it. got nothing. flipped it. spent weeks sharing online and being helpful with my reddit tool. using it got myself 3 paid users now trying to help others get their customers. the product was never the problem.
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Ironsong (@Ironsong13) reportedMy @LogitechG Pro Wireless mouse is so frustrating. The scroll encoder keeps dying, and it's a known issue on Reddit, apparently. I've replaced it twice, and this last one lasted less than a year. This is the only mouse I've used that has had this problem. What's going on?
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Mindini 5️⃣🐯 (@pink_sanguini) reportedI clicked onto a random Reddit thread and saw someone complaining about an English-language book, to which someone else replied complaining about how "Japanese media has a paedophilia problem" Every conversation is an opportunity to **** talk Asian people
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Kiki Danger (@itskikidanger) reported@reddit_lies He’s not wrong. It wasn’t the tattoo, the DV, the nasty Reddit comments that brought him down, in fact, Khanna and Sanders endorsed ******** out of him regardless of these otherwise disqualifying traits. And they would have fought the **** allegations if they thought he could still win.
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PeptRally (@PeptRally) reportedThe most common question in GLP-1 Reddit threads right now: "Is compounded tirzepatide still available?" Second most common: "Why did my price jump after month one?" Nobody's asking those questions before they book. That's the whole problem.
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Antman (@Antman07532103) reported@ThePPseedsShow PP I had no idea you were into gme, I followed you from day 1 of bbby, and never did you mention gme. In fact, the reddit sub you created "pp seeds" was looked down upon by the gme community.
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♰Æthelstan♰ (@Aethelstan_x) reported@ph409hhh Pipe down you ******* loser. Her name will be remembered in high esteem, unlike the useless, resentful reddit mods like yourself.
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Moody (@moodyofficial24) reportedI hope that little **** on reddit that came into my livestream awhile back talking **** spills his ice cream down his shirt
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OrganiqReddit (@OrganiqReddit) reportedAI companies spend millions to learn from Reddit. Founders ignore it. Google → trains on Reddit. OpenAI → partners with Reddit. Anthropic → gets sued over Reddit data. Why? Because Reddit contains something AI can't manufacture: Real people. Real problems. Real buying intent. If the smartest AI companies learn from Reddit... Maybe your startup should too.
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Stephen Bishop (@_stephenbishop_) reportedOur AI ads profitably spent ~$1.5M last month. All of our winners come from an AI-powered research process that we have dialled in. Here's our process: > Cluster running ads by angle (creative fatigue is usually angle fatigue) > Pull competitor ads and break them down into reusable frameworks > Rip verbatim customer language from reviews, ad comments, and competitor reviews > Use Reddit Answers to find more language (this crushes for good hooks) > Make AI tag every insight as evidenced to produce hallucination > Build the personas/angles from the out - then produce Full process guide is linked in the tweet below.
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DON (@mainhundon36) reportedInstagram & reddit are totally gone. People are retarded there, you cannot counter things there like Twitter and there is a coordinated campaign going on to spread misinformation & show modi as problem of everything. If action is not taken soon, this is going to be very harmful.
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tamimbuilds (@tamimbuilds) reportedI crossed $10 in lifetime revenue from Isolate. It took 4 months. 2 paying users. Both found me on Reddit. Some people would call this a failure. I call it proof that: • The product solves a real problem • Strangers will pay for something I built • The distribution channel (Reddit) works $10 → $100 is the next goal. What milestone are you chasing right now?
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OrganiqReddit (@OrganiqReddit) reported@CharuMitraDubey Reddit is underrated for first users. The key is finding threads where people are already complaining about the exact problem you solve, then engaging genuinely before ever mentioning your product.
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Ricardo Nunes (@RicJFNunes) reported@DoesItPlay1 I think the problem is that even if we buy physical games, the rest will probably not. Twitter and Reddit are echo chambers..it’s sad but I realistic don't see them revert the decision. We should in fact fight for better digital protection laws.
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GUL (@gulVasikova) reported$RDDT: Reddit is becoming much more than a social media platform—it is rapidly positioning itself as critical infrastructure for the AI era. Reddit announced that it is using advanced AI systems to crack down on coordinated spam campaigns designed to manipulate AI chatbots and search engines. As AI tools like ChatGPT and other large language models increasingly rely on Reddit discussions as a trusted source of information, protecting the quality of that content has become a major competitive advantage. This isn’t just about removing spam. It’s about protecting one of Reddit’s most valuable assets—its data. Think of it this way. If millions of people search Reddit before buying a product, and AI chatbots use Reddit conversations to answer questions, then fake reviews or coordinated spam could damage the platform’s credibility. If users stop trusting Reddit, advertisers spend less and AI companies place less value on licensing Reddit’s data. That’s why Reddit is investing heavily in AI moderation. The company now blocks around 23 million spam views every day before users even see them. It also detects roughly 25,000 additional spam posts daily, while user exposure to spam has fallen about 20%. Fake engagement is another target, with Reddit removing nearly 2 million fake upvotes every day, making it much harder for bad actors to artificially boost content. The improvements go beyond spam detection. AI has dramatically accelerated content moderation, reducing review times for harmful posts from hours to less than five seconds. That means Reddit can remove abusive or misleading content before it spreads across the platform. For investors, this matters because Reddit’s business increasingly depends on trust. Imagine two AI training datasets. One is filled with authentic discussions from real users, while the other is packed with bots, fake reviews and manipulated comments. AI companies will naturally pay more for the higher-quality dataset. By keeping its platform clean, Reddit is protecting the long-term value of its data licensing business while also improving the experience for advertisers and users. This also strengthens Reddit’s advertising business. Advertisers want their brands shown alongside real conversations, not fake engagement. A cleaner platform leads to better user trust, stronger engagement and ultimately higher advertising returns. Wall Street continues to remain constructive on the story. Needham reiterated its Buy rating with a $300 price target, Jefferies maintained a Buy rating with a $250 target, and Piper ******* also reiterated its Buy rating with a $215 target. The broader analyst consensus still points to additional upside from current levels. There is also speculation that Netflix is among several companies exploring a potential acquisition of Letterboxd, the fast-growing social platform for movie lovers. While only an early-stage rumor, the interest highlights the growing strategic value of highly engaged online communities. Reddit already owns one of the world’s largest communities, making its network effect even more valuable as AI, advertising and digital media continue to converge. The upcoming July 30 earnings report could be an important catalyst. Investors will be watching for continued user growth, advertising momentum, AI licensing revenue and management’s outlook. If Reddit delivers another quarter of strong revenue growth while demonstrating that its AI moderation tools are improving both platform quality and monetization, it would further support the long-term investment thesis that Reddit is evolving into both a leading advertising platform and one of the internet’s most valuable AI data assets.
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Chunga (@LuvChunga) reported@LucarioProject There is literally a server on plutonium that removed the ability to steal enemy care packages and move sentry guns... the server mods on plutonium are reddit mods
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Daniel Hartness (@hartness_daniel) reported@MetzUAC1530 @AtheistTakes This portrait shall be titled: "A Slow Day on Reddit"
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Subscribr (@SubscribrAI) reportedKids are making $30,000 a month running fake 105 year-old grandma channels on YouTube. There is a pattern running right now that most operators cannot see. The internet is full of free longevity information. Reddit threads on centenarian diets. Blue Zone forum posts about Okinawan grandmothers. Longevity study breakdowns from journal readers. Facebook groups of people obsessed with living past 100. All of that content is free. Sitting there. Waiting to be repackaged. Someone else is taking it, wrapping it in an AI character pretending to be a 105 year old centenarian, and turning it into 20 minute YouTube documentaries. A channel called Time Lesson started posting March 13, 2026. In 4 months it has 56,100 subscribers, 86 videos, 3.9 million total views, and 45,985 average views per video. The formula is dead simple. Every title follows the same template. "At 105, I Eat 4 Foods Every Single Day And Repair Kidney Fast — Doctors Can't Explain It." "At 112, I Not Been Sick For 35 Years And Eat 7 Foods Every Single Day — Doctors Can't Explain It." "At 106, I Eat Only 1 Food to Lower Blood Sugar FAST — Doctors Can't Explain It." Same age framing. Same "Doctors Can't Explain It" hook. Same 20 minute video length. 86 uploads in 120 days. That is daily posting on autopilot. The top video pulled 500,000 views. 10.9x the channel average. The second pulled 446,000 views in 5 days. The channel is making around $30,000 a month from AdSense alone. And here is the wild part. There is no ebook. No product. No affiliate link. No email in the description. If they attached a $47 ebook they would cross $60,000 a month easily. The playbook is dead simple. Step 1. Pick a niche where free information is scattered across Reddit, forums, and public journals. Step 2. Build an authority character the audience wants to believe. A 105 year old grandma. A retired cardiologist. An Amish elder. Any archetype that carries automatic trust. Step 3. Lock in one title formula that hooks the audience every time. Same age framing. Same closing line. Same length. Same thumbnail style. Step 4. Ship daily for 90 days. Read the outliers. Double down on the winning topic angle. Step 5. Attach a $47 ebook from video 1 to double the revenue. Free information wrapped in an authority character wrapped in a repeatable formula. That is the whole business. The window is closing every month. The kids running this play are already 120 days deep.
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Jahse (@hoopsnsuplexes) reported@Flawlesslikeeli it feels very gen z when you watch it even down to when bear looks stuff up on reddit not that’s that’s specifically gen z but you get it
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ThornsInMyFlesh (@My_Thorns) reported@bIazinguniverse wading through fandom bullshit on twitter/reddit wherever has really made it all tedious for me too. It used to be far more simple , just pop in what you like and enjoy it without all of the online bullshit dragging it all down.
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Guna (@gunaa_dev) reported3 days left before my 27th birthday deadline. 0 paying customers. product is ready. onboarding is fixed. I've tried: → Twitter replies (some traction, no conversions) → cold DMs (ignored) → Reddit (got shadowbanned, back with a new account) → SEO (too slow for a 3 day deadline) what am I missing? specifically how did you get your first paying customer? what was the actual move that worked? not looking for motivation. looking for the specific thing I haven't tried yet.
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YOP (@yop_tome) reported@MarvelRivals Can you please fix your PS5 servers? I went to Reddit to confirm it’s not just me, but I’ve been disconnected from four different matches today.
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SpoocleMacBoogle (@spoocle) reported@tolgatr0n Reddit is actually the worst place on the internet. Numerous times I made posts that didn't break any rules, and some people liked them and comments were positive, but the mods took them down anyway. I hate Reddit mods so much!
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Keean Edward (@keean_edward) reported@akbuildsit making posts on reddit is probably the issue. you're better off looking for places to reply than making posts yourself.
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J⏩ (@JcardinaJ) reported@terrynewman Reddit is, for the most part, a long running anti western civilization psyop cesspit of foreign interference and their useful idiot targets. Nothing meaningful comes out of there and it should have been shut down a very long time ago.
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From the river to the sea (@BustTheNotes) reported@AlanOwens4107 @actingliketommy Blackwater merc and former reddit posts about wanting to engage in genocides make him a terrible candidate. Personally I find those things VERY difficult to overlook. Unproven allegations aside.
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dough flamingo (@mango2133) reported@mgpaykiss Someone on Reddit daid he might have cte and I’m like that actually makes sense. Like his brain is broken or something.
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Clyde (@parklief) reportedthese past months i just said ok im never gonna make this ill let it go but funny enough like.. a sweet oomf of mine offered to help me recently and also someone on reddit but the issue is the same as always...: no writers..!...cant have a story without it being written!!
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Andrew Wilkinson (@StartupsILike) reportedDiscord was built for gamers and became the infrastructure for the internet. Jason Citron had already sold a gaming company, OpenFeint, to a Japanese firm for $104 million before he was 30. He started Hammer & Chisel in 2012 to build games, but the games didn't work. What worked was the internal communication tool they'd built to coordinate while making them. Gamers needed a way to talk while playing existing options were laggy, complicated, or expensive. Discord launched in 2015 as a free, low latency voice and text chat platform built specifically for gaming. It spread through gaming communities on Reddit and grew almost entirely by word of mouth. Then it stopped being just about gaming. Study groups started using it, then artists, writers, NFT communities, sports fans, and investment groups. The server and channel structure turned out to work for any community that wanted a persistent, organized space to talk. By 2020 Discord had 100 million registered users, and by 2021 it had 150 million. Microsoft offered to acquire it for around $12 billion. Discord turned it down. The company raised funding at a $15 billion valuation instead. Discord now has over 200 million monthly active users across virtually every interest category imaginable. The failed game studio accidentally built one of the most important communication platforms of the last decade.
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Raspoutine Ⓥ (@Amdukias) reportedLOL, @RamTrucks are so insecure about their products that the voting up or down on their ads on Reddit is disabled. That tells me everything I need to know about never buying a Ram truck.