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Amazon status: access issues and outage reports

Problems detected

Users are reporting problems related to: website down, errors and sign in.

Full Outage Map

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.

June 16: Problems at Amazon

Amazon is having issues since 03:20 AM AEST. Are you also affected? Leave a message in the comments section!

Most Reported Problems

The following are the most recent problems reported by Amazon users through our website.

  • 46% Website Down (46%)
  • 28% Errors (28%)
  • 26% Sign in (26%)

Live Outage Map

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

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Paris Sign in 7 hours ago
Troyes Errors 8 hours ago
Hastings Errors 16 hours ago
Fareham Website Down 1 day ago
Isles of Scilly Sign in 1 day ago
Pierre-Bénite Sign in 2 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.

Amazon Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • mimi4minjae
    ♡₊˚ Mimi ♡'s Suminjae ˚₊♡ (@mimi4minjae) reported

    @fixonmae I bought Vinyl parcels on amazon for his bday md vinyls. They also fit the fix off desire ones. i already shipped all orders in these

  • BewynDaniel
    Bewyn Daniel | KDP Ads (@BewynDaniel) reported

    AU Amazon ads update 🇦🇺 6 orders this week A$113 in sales 14.5% ACoS (target is 25%) Sounds great right? Except I have A$81/day in budget capacity and I'm only spending A$2.36/day. The budget isn't the problem. The bids are. Learning this stuff in real time. 📚

  • acrockettmain
    A.C. Rockett (@acrockettmain) reported

    Jeff Bezos just came out of retirement. Not for another e-commerce company. Not for a chatbot. He's building an "artificial general engineer." AI that doesn't generate text. It generates blueprints. Specifications. Manufacturing processes. Give it an engineering problem. It solves it. $6.2B launch funding. $10B raise in April. $12B raise this week. ~$30 BILLION raised in under a year. Still in stealth mode. JPMorgan. Goldman Sachs. BlackRock. All in. Target markets: → Aerospace: $400B/yr → Semiconductors: $700B/yr → Automotive: $3T/yr Plus a $100 billion acquisition fund to buy the companies and apply the AI directly. And Bezos said this on CNBC: "This could be bigger than Amazon." The man who built a $2 trillion empire just said his new startup could be bigger. Nobody is talking about this.

  • _Harriet90
    Harriet (@_Harriet90) reported

    @MichaelLCrick I don’t know what your issue is, it’s a business decision for Amazon

  • _LondonAngel_
    Tracy 💫 (@_LondonAngel_) reported

    @AmazonUK please help. Trying to place age restricted order,but it says credit card is needed. I have a debit card and ID, no credit card. Been transferred 5 times & no associate has understood the issue. Spoken with Randriamora, Santhosh, Njara, Mohammed & now Dhan. @AmazonHelp

  • drewtewell
    Drew Tewell (@drewtewell) reported

    @Shaun2011324 Probably an Amazon Web Services outage

  • tayvano_
    Tay 💖 (@tayvano_) reported

    Evidence (cherry-picked) that it's not just Amazon and it wasn't necessarily them even pushing a specific vuln report to the USG: > "Amazon was responding to a request for feedback" > "Amazon wasn't the only company to raise concerns" > "Calls from Amazon as well as at least 5 other companies to senior officials on Thursday night / Friday morning led to the shut down"

  • Slovdave
    Pigeon (Toast) Bert. (@Slovdave) reported

    @Macnessie Business rates have been strangling the high street for more than 20 years mate. But sure, try closing Amazon down and see what happens. Are you confident you could out run the lynch mob?

  • DayleenVann
    Pissed-Off Canadian (@DayleenVann) reported

    @1111Nebula @Savage16May Yes, it works the same. Basically it’s a currency bank account that’s linked to your Wise card (Visa/debit) you can use it to buy online too. It’s also linked to my Apple Pay, so when we were in New York, I could just tap to use the subway and pay in USD. I also use it for Amazon US and Amazon Mexico. One of my sons went to Roatan, Honduras last year. Thankfully, his girlfriend listened to me and got her Wise card. After they arrived, his TD credit card got locked and so did hers. Even after calling TD (him) and CIBC (her) before they left. They still got flagged and locked. So here they were, first day of a 10 day holiday with no cards to use, no cash to withdrawal. I could send her a transfer through Wise. She got it in seconds in her Wise account, and now had money and a card that worked. CIBC locked her account so she couldn’t even send herself money to her Wise account. This winter they went to Costa Rica and used Wise the entire time. In 2022 my husband and I moved to Mexico. I was so pissed at Canada that I never wanted to come back, so I needed a secure way to access my money. Wise has been that for me, no issues at all. Now we travel full time, so it’s been great. Another feature I like. The card has something called “jars” it’s basically an account within your account. Say you get your card skimmed or stolen. Normally, the thief can empty your bank account before you notice. With Wise, I keep most of my currency in jars. One for USD one for pesos etc. when I need money in my everyday use account, I just move it over. Takes seconds. If my card was skimmed, they can only get what’s in the main account, not what’s in jars. They’re essentially locked, until you move it. In Mexico it’s common for ATM’s to have issues. You can also freeze/lock your entire card if you want. It’s all easy to manage in the app. Sorry for the long reply, I just really like the product and highly recommend it to family and friends.

  • 38twelveDaily
    38twelveDaily (@38twelveDaily) reported

    Security researcher Katie Moussouris says the alleged bypass in Fable 5 (described in a paper by Amazon security researchers) shouldn't trigger export controls. The behavior difference is minimal: asking a model to 'review code' vs. 'fix code.'

  • FSDyinzer
    FSD Yinzer (@FSDyinzer) reported

    @justin_tz_ @mikepat711 I just used amazon. It really comes down to personal comfort. The one on the bottom I bought first was a little too stiff for me I wasn't able to adjust anything on the inside. The top one was more pillow-like and came with additional stuffing so you can adjust the stiffness. I've been using the top one since September.

  • sexyanimemilfs
    ******* muppet treasure island (@sexyanimemilfs) reported

    In theory these efforts are ostensibly (I’m looking at you, Amazon Invincible) well-meaning. But the disconnect that occurs is usually just awkward or ends up creating more problems than it probably was worth. Luz Owlhouse was obviously not meant to be Afro-Latina.

  • georgefassett
    George Fassett, Jr. (@georgefassett) reported

    And @Amazon @AmazonAlexa - it locks the echo show up constantly. Trying to play any music is lagged terribly you can’t get to setting to make it random or loop then to advance the track to the next song. Problem 1) by native nature of your playlists feature you can’t save settings like (always start randomly with an all song loop) so when you select a playlist it just plays the first track in the playlist b) it does not save persistence, so you can’t pickup where you left off in the random playlist. c) you can’t select no duplicates until the loop is finished, so while it is random, I want to hear all 10 or 100 songs before you randomize again and start over d) due to this when you start on an echo show listening to a playlist when you finally get to, it lags badly, so it starts playing the very first song every time. And you can’t get the interface to respond until it’s 1 minute into the damn song. And it’s always the same song because it always plays the first song. The old way before this crap Alexa+ “upgrade” - song pops up you hit arrow down to get options, hit random, hit loop, then hit next song and it picks a random song. My playlist has 289+ songs in it. Works great on mobile (aside of it always wanting to stream even if you downloaded all the songs which is stupid, and the setting to play it from download doesn’t work unless your in airplane mode, which is stupid-there is a spot, we all have them and know them, where calls drop driving home from work, and music cuts out right at that spot everyday even though I’ve downloaded the songs, it should be playing the download and not using data.) - Anyhow. Use your own products would you. And make them better.

  • Richard_Labit
    Richard Labbé (@Richard_Labit) reported

    @Vortasis @benbackupbackup The "closed finite system" is reality. There is not an infinite number of trees, or an infinite number of cattle or humans. A lumber capitalist wants the maximum profits which requires more and more trees to be cut down. You can see this in real time by just looking at the amazon

  • reoindustries
    REO Industries (@reoindustries) reported

    Full text of our letter below: A letter from REO - The Case for a Simple Truck The vehicle we deserve. There is a vehicle missing from the American market. It is small enough for a real garage, big enough for a family or a day's work, cheap enough to skip the seven-year loan, and built well enough to outlast it. What is REO? In 1901, Ransom Eli Olds built America's first mass-produced car, and it sold for $650 — about $25,000 today. After being pushed out of Oldsmobile, he founded a new company on his initials in 1905, and for seventy years REO built some of the most respected trucks in America, including the 1915 Speed Wagon, the ancestor of the modern pickup. We're bringing REO back to do the same job in a different era. What Broke? The average new vehicle now costs over $50,000, and the cheapest new pickup opens above $28,000 before anyone touches the options sheet. None of this happened by accident. Fuel-economy rules rewarded bigger footprints, a 25% tariff walled off small imported trucks (and still does), dealers bury the sticker under fees, and the manufacturers walked away from the bottom of the market because the loaded trim pays better than the honest one. Toyota still builds exactly this kind of truck, brand new, on three continents — but you can't buy one here.The buyers didn't leave. The products did. What We're Building The Runabout carries the name of Olds' first car. It is a family of small, body-on-frame, mechanical-4WD utility vehicles powered by a combustion engine — built in Texas and sold direct, with no dealers, no markup, and a website price with no hidden fees. First comes the T4X, a two-seat work truck targeted at $21,500, with the T4C crew cab truck and the S4C compact family SUV to follow on the same frame. We call this class of vehicles the Ameri-Kei, as they're heavily inspired by the simplicity and utility of the Japanese kei trucks.Initial design work is underway, and you'll know a REO when you see one: steel, authentic, honest, all business. Why Gas? Every new car startup in America is electric, while 90% of American buyers are not. Those companies raised record money chasing a fraction of the market, and every American EV maker except Tesla now sits billions in the hole. We exist because of those failures, and we build for the everyday American who simply wants a vehicle that works.Gas refuels in five minutes in every town in America, and every mechanic in the country already knows how to fix these powertrains. When the law and the supply chain change, we'll add other powertrains — but we'll do it late and on purpose, because delayed adoption buys proven parts at falling prices. The same goes for autonomy. We'll never bolt beta software onto your truck. The Runabout is engineered to be modular and forward-thinking, with a roof and wiring ready to accept sensors without cutting metal — so when self-driving is boring and proven, an REO can take it. Tried and true is the strategy, whatever it happens to be bolted to. Built Open The Runabout is designed to be repaired and modified by the person who owns it. Every control is a physical switch or lever, and the only screen in the cabin is a small display for diagnostics and Apple CarPlay. There is no parts-pairing, which means no component is ever software-locked to your VIN, and the diagnostics read out in plain English on a $30 scanner. The parts catalog is public, fairly priced, and backed for twenty years, and the bumpers, door cards, headliner, and trim all come off in under five minutes with common tools. There are no subscriptions and no feature locks.And then we go somewhere no automaker has gone: the truck itself is fully open source. Anyone can build a part for it, because nothing on the vehicle checks where a part came from. On top of that, we run an authorized maker program. Makers who pass our quality verification get the factory mounting patterns and a spot on our online marketplace, where they sell directly to owners at fees lower than eBay, RockAuto, and Amazon. Verified makers competing on the same shelf means the customer wins twice — prices come down and quality goes up. And our owners' community will live in the same app as the marketplace, run by the factory in the open: no more Facebook groups to dig through, no more forums to chase. Other companies fight their aftermarket. We're building the Runabout around the customer, and we want the customer to talk to us — on a forum sponsored and monitored by us, the OEM, in the most transparent way possible. What We're Asking For Today We're opening reservations now, before the renderings are finished and before the configurator is live — and we're doing it on purpose, because REO gets built in the open. A reservation is $25, fully refundable, and we hold that money separate from the company and never spend it to operate, so it is always there to come back to you the moment you ask. You are not buying a finished truck. You are putting your name down early and watching it take shape, and we'll keep you posted as the design, the specs, and the configurator come online. There is no fixed delivery date and no final price yet, and we won't pretend otherwise. Cancel any time before you buy and the $25 goes back, no questions asked. Every reservation tells us — and every supplier, engineer, and partner this truck needs — that it should exist. We're REO. Let's build cars like they used to be. Sincerely, Zach De Bernardi Founder & CEO, REO Industries, Inc.

  • 29Sarthak
    Sarthak Chawla (@29Sarthak) reported

    Multiple customer service chats, multiple promises, same result: no delivery. @amazonIN @AmazonHelp if there was an issue, customers deserve transparency instead of repeated assurances that don’t happen.

  • borntogambles
    Born to gamble (@borntogambles) reported

    $10,000 in 10 days. A brand-new Shopify store. The creator says Claude AI did 90% of the work. The product nobody would guess: snake shin protectors. He started with hard criteria. Solves a problem. 4.5+ on Amazon. $35 minimum profit. Rising demand. 3 to 5 active competitors on Facebook or TikTok. Then he handed the search to Claude. He ran Claude Opus 4.8 in the desktop app's co-work mode, wired to Winning Hunter's MCP, an ad library pulling live spend data from the biggest dropshippers. He set it to act without asking. Ten minutes later Claude returned 10 products with ads dated between May 30 and June 9, each with the name, the problem, the price, the store, the competition. The reason he trusts the machine over himself: humans pick products with their feelings. The creator says beginners drown in options and freeze. Claude doesn't freeze. It chose the snake gaiters off the data and named the buyers: hikers, dog walkers, people scared of snakes. A small niche older buyers shop, where AI video ads read as real because the audience doesn't know what AI looks like yet. He cloned a winning Facebook ad inside Higgsfield's marketing studio, generated an avatar from a prompt (a gray-haired man in his 50s who looks like he works outdoors), pulled a voice off ElevenLabs, and assembled the spot in CapCut. The original creative cost a studio. His cost a prompt. Facebook strategy on a Miro board: $50/day, 3 broad ad sets, 3 ads each, 9 total. His dashboard from April 26 to May 11: gross sales over $11,000. Average order value $47. Conversion rate 3.6%, above industry standard. By June 8 the store was clearing roughly $1,000 a day. A product 99% of beginners would never touch made $11,000 because a machine had no taste to get in the way.

  • mainefortrump
    We Have your back🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸 (@mainefortrump) reported

    @hexclad Bad warranty used less then 7 times coating damaged advised not to use Amazon said it would be replaced never happen as hexclad said no on warranty lost $120. Our first purchase of HC no problem went back to old salad master 50 years old

  • No5mallf3at
    William O’Brien (@No5mallf3at) reported

    @harbingerofwoke @triplesmarxism There is a general problem of how the academic side of leftism can take hold socially. How do you get workers to actively advocate for their own interests, but the idea that just making current academics work in Amazon warehouses would help is hilariously dumb.

  • StartupsILike
    Andrew Wilkinson (@StartupsILike) reported

    At its peak, Wish was worth more than Macy's, Nordstrom, and Gap combined. By 2024 it sold for $173 million, which was a 99% collapse from the top. Peter Szulczewski left Google in 2010 after helping build their ad ranking system and started a company around one idea: show people products they want before they even know to search for them. Amazon was built for search, Wish was built for scrolling, and for a while the difference worked brilliantly with $2 leggings, $1 phone chargers, and knockoff gadgets shipped directly from factories in China to mailboxes in America and Europe. By 2021 Wish had 90 million monthly active users and $2 billion in revenue and had overtaken Amazon in app installs across 42 countries. The problem was the products people were actually receiving, and once enough customers opened enough packages and posted enough photos online, the gap between what the app showed and what showed up at the door became impossible to ignore. Fake sellers flooded the platform, packages took weeks to arrive, and the company knew about the quality issues and kept scaling anyway. Then Apple's iOS 14.5 privacy update wiped out the ad targeting Wish ran its entire customer acquisition on, and their cost to acquire new users went vertical right as the reviews were driving old users away. Temu showed up with a cleaner app, faster shipping, and real logistics infrastructure, and Wish had no credible answer. Szulczewski stepped down in 2022, the company cycled through 3 CEOs in a single year, revenue fell from $2 billion to $278 million by 2023, and in April 2024 Wish sold its operating assets to a Singapore company called Qoo10 for $173 million. Qoo10 then went bankrupt 9 months later, and by November 2024 the courts had shut down Wish entirely. The actual product was always the problem, and the company spent 4 years and a billion dollars in ad spend choosing not to fix it.

  • long
    Jonathan Long (@long) reported

    The fact that Mantle is shutting down and Shopify didn't just scoop them, tells you all you need to know. Combine that with the absolute **** show the app store has become. They don't give a flying ****. Copy cat apps (like 100% ripped) just allowed to exist. ******* scraped Amazon reviews passing as ******* app reviews. Pure dumpster fire and they don't give a ****. @ShopifyDevs

  • jplaysnintendo
    JimPlaysNintendo (@jplaysnintendo) reported

    @Techman_Z01 Problem is this Amazon won’t send me it till Monday on ps5 and switch Thursday on release day what to do lol

  • thisisdonbaba
    Mide Oman 🍃 (@thisisdonbaba) reported

    Never anticipated how much of adulthood would just be unsubscribing from emails and breaking down Amazon boxes

  • willitstimothy
    Timoteo (@willitstimothy) reported

    @verkiwho @AmazonMGMStudio I think it should be Teal’c. He’ll just sit down, raise an eyebrow, and we’ll have Amazon swearing to make ten seasons of a new show plus spinoffs. #SaveStargate

  • prasadjoshi1982
    Prasad Joshi (@prasadjoshi1982) reported

    @AmazonHelp Its bothering me too much despite of repeated reminders in several intervals you are unable to resolve problem. @Consumercourt help me file the complaint against #Amazon

  • FI36767
    Hitesh (@FI36767) reported

    @AmazonHelp Despite sharing the required details, which were already available with you, the issue remains unresolved.

  • Blackintus
    BlackIntus (@Blackintus) reported

    Bill Ackman is down 10% year-to-date while the S&P is up 8%. His new $5 billion Pershing Square USA fund (PSUS) trades 20% below its April IPO price of $50. He missed the memory chip trade entirely. But here’s the twist: PSUS now trades at a 20% discount to its net asset value. The portfolio — Amazon, Microsoft, Meta, Uber, Brookfield — trades near all-time lowest valuations according to Ackman. 💰 YOUR MOVE: This is the closed-end fund discount trade. $PSUS at $39.68 gives you Amazon, Microsoft, Meta, and Uber at a 20% haircut to their market prices. The European fund $PSHZF trades at a 30% discount to NAV. The math: if the discount closes to 10% (still high for a closed-end fund), you make 12.5% just on the discount compression — before any stock appreciation. The risk: Ackman’s fees are 2% annually — nearly double typical closed-end funds. And he’s underperformed the S&P 500 by 25 percentage points over the past year. But the underlying portfolio at 20% discount to NAV is the rare case where the wrapper is cheaper than the contents. Buy the discount, not the manager. @Blackintus

  • xatacrypt
    Xatacrypt (@xatacrypt) reported

    Claude Fable 5 will remain unavailable for a long time Today I saw that Polymarket traders are giving a 70% chance that Fable 5 will become available again in the US > I think these odds are clearly too high The US government demanded that Anthropic completely ban access to the model for all foreign users I believe the problem is much more serious than that On June 15, Anthropic met with the US administration but couldn’t reach any agreement As we know, Amazon also found a jailbreak in the model and reported it to the authorities. > I think the US government is also demanding strong restrictions on Claude Fable 5 for all users Fable 5 was positioned as a Mythos-class model with very strong coding capabilities > If the company is forced to heavily limit the model, how groundbreaking will it stay? After heavy safeguards, it could easily turn into "just another good coding model" > Then what is the point of this "new" model? These are my thoughts. I'd be interested to hear your opinions on this

  • honestduane
    Duane - 🧙‍♂️🖖 - keybase.io/dfk (@honestduane) reported

    @QuinnyPig @ajassy Even a broken clock is right twice a day. Amazon and anthropic compete with each other. It makes sense that Amazon would want to sabotage a competitor that’s doing better than them, has a better reputation than them, etc. Amazon‘s problem is that it’s not customer focused enough.

  • abhayrai778
    Abhay Rai (@abhayrai778) reported

    @greensoulergo @AmazonHelp I haven't received any email, call, or message from @greensoulergo regarding this issue. How am I supposed to be confident that I will get support? The return window closes on 20 June, and I am concerned about what happens if that date passes without any resolution.