Amazon status: access issues and outage reports
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Amazon (Amazon.com) is the world’s largest online retailer and a prominent cloud services provider. Originally a book seller but has expanded to sell a wide variety of consumer goods and digital media as well as its own electronic devices.
Problems in the last 24 hours
The graph below depicts the number of Amazon 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 Amazon. 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 Amazon users through our website.
- Website Down (45%)
- Errors (29%)
- Sign in (26%)
Live Outage Map
The most recent Amazon 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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Sign in | 11 hours ago |
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Sign in | 15 hours ago |
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Website Down | 17 hours ago |
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Website Down | 1 day ago |
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Errors | 1 day ago |
Community Discussion
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Amazon Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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Rich Peter (@peterli34923561) reported$CIFR --- $CIFR, through its subsidiary Stingray Compute LLC, has closed on **$810M in senior notes financing** (6.000% coupon, maturing 2031). This war chest directly funds the buildout of its massive West Texas infrastructure footprint. The West Texas data center being financed by this raise is already locked in with Amazon on a 15-year long-term lease — meaning $CIFR now has extremely high-visibility, rock-solid cash flow moat ahead of it. As of Q1 2026, $CIFR has signed three data center campus lease agreements with top-tier hyperscalers, with total contracted revenue hitting a staggering $11.4 billion. 1.Valuation Re-rating: From Bitcoin Miner to AI Infrastructure Play Traditional Bitcoin mining stocks trade at depressed P/E multiples and valuation premiums, punished by price volatility and halving cycles. $CIFR has successfully pivoted into an AI/HPC data center play — its clients are investment-grade giants like Amazon, signed on 15-year contracts. The market is starting to re-price it using the stable cash flow model of SaaS / legacy data center names (EQIX, DLR). The valuation ceiling just got completely blown open. 2.Scarcity of Core Assets: Power & Speed At the end of the day, the AI race boils down to two things: power capacity and delivery speed. $CIFR controls massive power capacity and construction-in-progress pipeline across Texas and Ohio. Its Barber Lake project went from design to topping out in just 7 months. Large-scale power-ready data centers that can be delivered fast? They're extremely scarce in North America right now — absolute hot commodity. 3.Fundamental Inflection: Earnings Reversal Ahead Admittedly, $CIFR's Q1 2026 short-term results missed expectations — posting a -$0.28 EPS loss driven by crypto price movements and heavy CapEx spend. But here's the setup: its three campus leases begin contributing material net operating income (NOI) starting October 2026. Wall Street expects the company to swing to profitability for full-year 2026, with average annualized NOI surging to $646M by 2027** and hitting **$892M by 2035.
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Jakie PLA (@3DPrintAficio) reported@TheMindScourge Yep. That chip story was never confirmed by ANYONE. Apple, Amazon, Supermicro all denied it. Bloomberg doubled down and still nothing. Skepticism is the right call.
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Tanya Rofman ✨ (@tanyarofman) reportedWrite it down. A clear one-pager beats a confident voice. Amazon built its whole meeting culture on this. Over-share the why. Context is the one authority you can give away for free. Netflix calls it "context, not control."
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Sigmund Todd (@SigmundTod60526) reported@HifigoJp Love this set but there was some QC issues on amazon! That tanked the review scores via Amazon..... The gold amber colored ones are freaking special
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Duck it dude (@duckitdude) reported@AmazonHelp I have a laptop order which was pending from ages and now canceled then I placed another order today and that again went to 'potential delivery issue'. Worst part is I am unable to talk to customer care @amazonIN Is this what you do to a high value order?
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Jose Paul Martin (@jpmartin) reportedCredit card hacks that actually work in India (from someone saving lakhs on business class & 5-star stays): 1) Best card if you spend under ₹50K/month - SBI PhonePe Select Black. 10% back on utilities & travel, 5% on all online spends. Blended 7-8% return. No other card comes close at this spend level. 2) Spending ₹70-80K/month? HSBC Travel One. ₹5,900 fee waived at ₹8L annual spend. Points transfer 1:1 to Accor hotels. Expect 3-4 free international hotel nights per year. 3) The real game-changer - HDFC Infinia’s voucher hack. Buy Amazon/Big Basket/Croma vouchers on Infinia. Get 12-16% back in points. Even ₹50K/month in daily spending = 80,000 points/year. 4) Those 80,000 points? Transfer 1:1 to Singapore Airlines. Book business class to Japan. A ₹3L ticket for ₹6L of grocery spending you’d do anyway. That’s 50% return on redemption. 5) Japan on a budget without points - ANA’s Hello Blue Sale. ₹40K round trip Delhi-Tokyo. They throw in a free domestic flight (Tokyo to Osaka). Direct flight, 9.5 hours. Comes 3-4 times a year. 6) Biggest hack - book award flights from hub cities, not India. Qatar Q Suite: 160K points from Mumbai. 70K points from Doha (off-peak). Add a ₹15K Indigo positioning flight. Save 90K points on a single ticket. 7) Axis Atlas & Burgundy aren’t dead. Accor transfer is paused but Air India works - Bali for 12K points (normally ₹30-35K). Cards are harder to use, not worse. Expect Accor to return at adjusted ratios. 8) Magnus Burgundy tip - 5% return on first ₹1.5L, then ~14% above that. Best reserved for high-spend months (car down payments, big electronics). Blended 9-10% at ₹3L/month. 9) Amex Platinum Charge (₹78K fee) - worth it in year one (₹60K welcome benefits). After that, value comes from 5x vouchers, 10x Air India, 20x luxury partners. Real perk is Centurion Lounge access for family. 10) The trap nobody talks about - lifestyle inflation. Free flights & hotels shift your mental budget. You “save” ₹60K on flights, then spend ₹1.5L on the trip instead of ₹40K. The math only works if you hold the line. Key rule - only chase deals you’d actually use.
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Coin Post (@CoinPostMedia) reported$SPCX is now down ~20% from its highs. In market terms, that's the beginning of a technical correction. The company has already lost $600 billion in market cap since touching $3 trillion and dropped below Amazon in the rankings. Sounds bearish, right? 📉 Maybe. But let's not forget that this IPO launched on one of the biggest hype waves in market history, reportedly several times oversubscribed. A stock doesn't rally 70%+ in days without inviting extreme volatility on the way back down. Though it’s still hard to see SpaceX sitting among the top AI beneficiaries unless xAI integration changes the narrative significantly. 👉 My view hasn't changed: the real SpaceX thesis is still a long-term bet on the space economy, Starlink, launch infrastructure, and whatever role AI ultimately plays inside the ecosystem. The AI narrative likely helped justify some of the early enthusiasm, especially after the xAI connection.
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Rebel Picnic (@rebpic) reported@amazon Times are definitely not the same. Now I have 3 broken fire sticks. A fire TV that they will no longer update and Amazon could care less about their prime customers in 2026.
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Kutark Validus (@KutarkV) reported@JiltedValkyrie I had the same issue. Wouldn't surprise me if ******* Amazon threatened gify (sp?) with a lawsuit if they didn't pull them, since we were so succesful at annoying them.
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PsychoSoda20Xx (@OMEGA_ThUGZ) reported@AmiriKing Absolutely terrible for the Amazon worker 🫨
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Brown Munday (@KhansClan) reported@amazonIN It's incredibly frustrating that Amazon has made it so difficult to connect with a customer support executive. When customers have an issue, they shouldn't have to go through endless automated options with no clear way to speak to a real person. So frustrating
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Mikadzyki🌙 (@Mikadzyki_NFT) reportedBREAKING: ANTHROPIC AND THE US GOVERNMENT ARE NOW IN AN OPEN WAR OVER FABLE 5 On June 9 Anthropic released Fable 5, its first public Mythos-class model. On June 12 the government issued an export control directive, and both models vanished worldwide. Formally the ban targeted foreign nationals, but it covered even Anthropic employees without US citizenship. There was no way to tell its own people from outsiders through the API, so Fable 5 and Mythos 5 were shut off for everyone at once. There were two triggers: - first the White House learned that South Korea's SK Telecom, suspected of ties to china, had gained access to mythos through project glasswing - then Amazon showed officials a way to bypass fable's safeguards The irony is that Anthropic wrote the case against itself. For months the company played up the threat: - called mythos too dangerous for open release - said the model should require a license like a weapon - urged the whole industry to slow down development In the end the government took the company at its word and pulled the model, leaning on its own loud warnings. The condition for bringing it back is nearly impossible: block every jailbreak, something no public model can do. Anthropic in turn insists the panic is overblown: - the flaw found is minor and already known - gpt 5.5 and other models find the same bugs with no bypass at all And all of this just weeks before its IPO at a near-trillion valuation. The most powerful model in history lasted three days in open access.
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BlackFlagOfDeath™☠ (@BlackFlagOdeath) reported@AmazonHelp the prime tv app for the xbox is broken. I can't access my subscriptions purchased through Prime because you get stuck on the live tv tab. I just paid for a sub to Apple tv and can't access it via the xbox prime app.
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Kadir (@Kadirofficial) reported@AmazonHelp I paid extra for next-day delivery because I have a flight tomorrow. The order was marked “delivery attempted” without any actual attempt, and now I’m being asked to chase an unreachable agent instead of Amazon resolving the issue.
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🌸 Evie 🌸 (@dubiousevie) reported@iampricelexx_ From "The Strangers: Chapter 1" (2024). After their car breaks down in an eerie small town, a young couple are forced to spend the night in a remote cabin. Panic ensues as they are terrorized by three masked strangers who strike with no mercy and seemingly no motives. You can Watch it on Amazon Prime Video, Amazon Prime Video with Ads, Netflix.
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Barnesy🇺🇸🇺🇲 (@Itzbarnesy) reported@JeremyVineOn5 Sound like Starmer after Axel rakabunda with Amazon selling knives. The people are the problem pretty simple. Use some critical thinking
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Mikoto The Lich Fan 🇵🇸 🇸🇩 🇱🇧 (@rachsanjani2000) reported@49ducks No. Her crush towards Luffy didn't start until the end of Amazon Lily and before Impel Down
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David Lee (@davidyhlee) reportedHere’s what I think is really happening with Fable, as opposed to the @DavidSacks pitch, which is heavy on spin and selective framing. (Though I think he is a smart guy who is coming from a very good place.) 1/ Anthropic itself described Mythos as a serious security threat, if in the hands of the wrong people. 2/ Fable was released with guardrails to responsibly deploy Mythos-class capabilities. 3/ Despite highly regarded guardrails (and even overzealous guardrails, derided by many for their extreme nature), a prompt-based 'jailbreak' (persuasive prompting) was shown to unlock responses that, by Fable's own admission, is within the domain of cybersecurity, which it likely isn't supposed to discuss. Someone (likely an Amazon individual or team tasked with red teaming frontier models) reported this to the US Gov't. 4/ US Gov't asked Anthropic to patch this jailbreak. 5/ Anthropic figured it was no big deal, since the specific method of persuasive prompting (jailbreaking) and the specific type of response was (a) also a susceptibility of ChatGPT 5.5, and (b) probably not a big deal in the specific example provided. 6/ US Gov't disagrees with 5(b) because the same general pattern of jailbreak + response could hypothetically be used for much more nefarious and dangerous purposes. Coupled with a generally salty relationship between the US Gov't and Anthropic, this led to a '**** you' from the US Gov't in the form of the export control directive. 7/ US Gov't, though, probably didn't think of the '**** you' as a very serious punishment, since it imagined Anthropic would simply cut off access to users outside of the US, which the US Gov't probably imagined would be the reasonable resolution. (i.e. spank anthropic, don't kneecap anthropic) 8/ Anthropic, however, given the salty relationship, worries that if a Chinese visitor to the US who is clearly not a "US Person" accesses Fable 5, the US Gov't would come down hard on Anthropic. Or maybe an IRGC operative in Iran, or a hacker in North Korea accessing Fable 5 in the US via VPN. etc etc. Therefore Anthropic takes the approach of shutting down access to Fable 5. 😢 9/ Meanwhile, US businesses are losing the opportunity to learn to work with the most advanced AI model the public has ever had access to, and China's open models are given a chance to catch up.
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Jac (@bernese02) reported@CotswoldLadyB @thewhitecompany I ordered three large plastic storage boxes with lids from Amazon. They came in a cardboard box with zero pakaging. All three were smashed on one side. I had the same with a bottle of shampoo at Christmas - a fairly expensive bottle broken, rattling around in a too-big box.
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Adam Clark (Ruckus) (@AC_WordSlinger) reported@WhiteHouse Did the 7-foot-tall Amazon tranny who runs DJTs account fall down and hit their head after smoking cocoa puffs laced with adrenachrome or something? What are they even talking about.
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VivekDhonde (@vivekdhonde) reported@AmazonHelp Guess what, your SM response team sent me back into the same loop that I have suffered from so much. Now I have started realizing that your chat support system is run by zombies who have no clue of what my problem is, and how to solve it.
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JonChitown (@jonchitown11) reported@DiscussingFilm Dawww the truth comes out in the film thats a sleaze bag and now Amazon has to slow walk it back.
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Rakesh Panda (@rakeshpanda09) reported@Amazon @AmazonHelp Ordered 2 qty but received only 1. Item is missing from the package. Support says “no return or refund policy”. This is completely unacceptable. You shortchanged me and now refuse to fix it? Worst customer service experience. #AmazonFail #PoorService
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Ritesh Ora one red star (@oraone_ritesh) reported@ABPNews flipkart Amazon they all ask otp. If we give otp. Than our money will be hacked so who is responsible for that. Kindly tell delivery company do not ask for otp or else next time i 👊beat down delivery person who ask for otp so news tell this thing too all Indian people
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XRP_WealthFlow (@XRP_WealthFlow) reportedLooking at Amazon's monthly chart, it reached an All-Time High (ATH) of $5.6 in 1999 before crashing down to its bottom at $0.28. Afterwards, it could only manage a lackluster rebound to around $2.9—a 50% retracement from its ATH—and eventually failed in its attempt to break the ATH again in early 2008. To make matters worse, it got hit by the broader negative catalyst of the Global Financial Crisis, suffering the humiliation of a whopping 65% plunge from its local high. At this point, gripped by extreme fear, Amazon’s retail investors couldn’t take it anymore. They threw in the towel and dumped their holdings in waves—declaring what we call a massive "Capitulation." However, almost as soon as the retail investors handed over their bags, Amazon staged a fierce V-shaped recovery. Finally, in September 2009, it smashed through its previous ATH of $5.6. Only the investors who endured that hellish, 10-year-long box range from 1999 to 2009 got to taste Amazon’s devastating, one-way mega-bull run. If you had bought in around $1.9 during that 65% crash and held until now, you would be looking at a staggering return of about 16,000% based on the current ATH of $280. Of course, the number of investors who actually diamond-handed Amazon for this long is extremely small. Right now, XRP’s monthly chart shares a spine-chilling resemblance to Amazon’s chart back then. After hitting its ATH of $3.3 in 2018, it established a bottom at $0.11, and subsequently retraced exactly 50% to the $1.6 level before stalling. It attempted to break the ATH in July 2025 but failed, and has now been pushed back down to the $1.1 range—a roughly 67% drop from its high. Just like Amazon’s historical chart, the fear and fatigue among retail investors have reached an absolute peak. If the market gives just a little more correction here, we will likely see the final capitulation volume flood the market. There is a clear reason why XRP mirrors Amazon so perfectly—from the 10-year period trapped in a box range below its previous ATH, to the precise "shakeout strategy" designed to strip retail investors of their tokens right before the massive bull run. Ripple Labs CEO Brad Garlinghouse once noted in a media interview: "Ripple is to cross-border payments what Amazon was to books in the early days. And we’ll go beyond books." Amazon started out as an online bookstore, expanding its scale by leveraging infinite virtual space, and has now become the "Everything Store" and a massive tech titan. Similarly, Ripple Labs is executing an ambitious plan to use XRP not just as a SWIFT alternative for cross-border remittances, but to transfer all high-value data—including stocks, real estate, commodities, and bonds—as seamlessly and quickly as information travels across the internet. Brad claims that the XRP Ledger (XRPL) aims for decentralized finance (DeFi) without the intervention of centralized financial institutions. But my view is different. Because XRP will essentially act as the "water" flowing through the plumbing of the global financial system, Ripple Labs will interact with massive tier-1 banks and institutions to monopolize all asset markets, ultimately achieving "hyper-centralization." The words that market makers spit out to the public are always different from the grand narrative they hold in their hearts. We must accurately capture that core essence and refuse to be swayed by short-term price fluctuations. It doesn't matter whether the price of XRP is at its ATH of $3.3, $1, or if it temporarily dips to $0.7. Right now, the whales and market makers are simply gaslighting retail investors, drilling the mindset into their heads that "XRP is destined to be a cheap penny coin under $3 forever." Look at Amazon’s monthly chart attached here. Retail investors riding minor waves through short-term trading can never capture these kinds of historic returns. Look at the macro trend right now, buy XRP, and hold it long-term within the grand cycle!
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Joseph Hernandez (@hernandezforny) reportedThis is where New York invests nearly $300 BILLION of your retirement money: NVIDIA, Apple, Alphabet, Microsoft, Amazon, the biggest companies on earth. We own billions in all of them. So why won't a single one of them build here? Because @GovKathyHochul has made New York impossible. The highest taxes in America. Soaring energy costs after Albany shut down our power and blocked new supply. Regulation that punishes anyone who tries to create a job. The result: companies take our investment dollars and take their jobs to Texas and Florida. And here's what really gets me. The Comptroller, @TomDiNapoli, talks to these CEOs all the time. He's filed over 160 shareholder resolutions. He votes on 30,000 corporate measures a year. He calls them about emissions. He calls them about DEI. He calls them about board diversity. Not ONCE has he called to ask the only question that matters to New Yorkers: If New York invests in you, why aren't you investing in New York? He won't make that call. I will. As Comptroller, I'll use every share New York owns to bring jobs home.
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Tricky (@TheAuldGuy21) reported@AmazonHelp What’s the point of having Amazon returns boxes in Morrisons supermarket in the UK as they are always offline or not working at all , returning items to Amazon is pretty abysmal in my area and not many options
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SellerForge.ai (@SellerForgeAI) reportedAmazon's restock limits aren't arbitrary. They're calculated using your IPI score, sales velocity in the past 90 days, and available FC capacity in your region. If your limit drops suddenly, check for aged inventory first—units sitting 181+ days drag your IPI down fast, and Amazon penalizes slow-turn SKUs harder than most sellers realize. The fix isn't asking for more capacity; it's cleaning up what's already there.
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Hard Iron (@pourjour) reported@AmazonHelp thanks for the reply, how would that resolve the problem ?
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Benjamin Bakhshi (@benbstwits) reported@stoked_on_waves @CapitalShipyard Amazon is still renting A100s from 6 years ago profitably. They don't physically depreciate, they just are slow compared to future GPUs (thanks to $ASML), but they still aren't functionally obsolete since they are still way more efficient than any older school CPU data center.