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Amazon status: access issues and outage reports

Problems detected

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

May 24: Problems at Amazon

Amazon is having issues since 08:20 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.

  • 48% Errors (48%)
  • 32% Website Down (32%)
  • 19% Sign in (19%)

Live Outage Map

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

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Clarksville Errors 4 hours ago
Romeoville Website Down 6 hours ago
Paris Website Down 9 hours ago
Sofia Sign in 9 hours ago
New York City Website Down 10 hours ago
Mechanicsburg Errors 1 day 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:

  • JoshuaSeattle1
    Joshua@Seattle (@JoshuaSeattle1) reported

    @mariana057 But...that's my FAVE!!!! (Truthfully, all I buy from Starbucks these days is bags of their Italian Roast coffee beans. They're going through some financial issues these days and all the local ones I used to go to are gone now; So these days I just buy it via Amazon.)

  • adiafthoro
    ...And Justice for all. (@adiafthoro) reported

    @frank_dragon88 @TheRubberDuck79 Amazon was loosing millions for years till it became profitable. Any other company would shut down and probably its owner would be bankrupted & jailed… but this doesn’t apply to the owners of the dollar printing machines.

  • petitecyclist
    Petite Cyclist (@petitecyclist) reported

    @slow_tri_guy I don't have a problem wearing long sleeves, but the cheap ones I just got from Amazon in an emergency are not comfortable

  • OfWonk
    Revenge of the Quack (@OfWonk) reported

    @Andy_Dyer_NOVA @LoftusSteve Also, his entire theory is bullshit anyway. He’s describing a problem with resource allocation that society ought to be aggressively addressing so as to continue to have a functional civilization where people can still do things… create make an “Amazon.”

  • LoganRankings
    Logan Rankings (@LoganRankings) reported

    @JohnDracy @Harbaugiants @RationalGMENFan Yes, and that’s hypocritical of me. However, almost any giant conglomerate whether it’s Walmart, Amazon, target, etc has similar issues so it’s essentially unavoidable in life. I do try to avoid companies that participate in greater evils such as supporting Israel

  • DjFred_Eddison
    Live Breaks (@DjFred_Eddison) reported

    @ohms133 @GOP_is_Gutless Her belong elected has nothing to do with Amazon deciding to close down Amazon Fresh. FYI

  • gilroy_mary
    Mary Gilroy (@gilroy_mary) reported

    @Vikramthapad @amazonIN Hi Vikram I'm having the same issue with Amazon, their "customer service "is absolutely appalling

  • ONELONEDOLPHIN
    Dr. Di Chadwell, A&P, Hon.C.TDNN, Ret. (@ONELONEDOLPHIN) reported

    @AmazonHelp No DM's ur website doesn't allow us to EDIT phone numbers in ur window to turn on 2 step verification. Can't tell you any PLAINER than that? What part of your website is BROKEN don't you understand? YOU ARE CHOOSING TO DELIBERATELY PISS OFF CUSTOMERS & send our business ELSEWHERE

  • LovelyMadi19
    Marisol Domena (@LovelyMadi19) reported

    THATS WTF IM TALKING ABOUT!! You pollute our air, soil, water you paying or getting shut down. I rather a food store or a store period than Amazon making all this money and don’t even pay the state he at in their taxes. No accountability, nothing. But MAMDANI said NOT TODAY JEFF!

  • bitappend
    Mayor T (@bitappend) reported

    @txgermanbre they didnt tear down much other than the streetcar systems in the big metros, on the behest of GM. Its more that our country exploded and had most of its development post automobile. Combined with the 1950s Eisenhower highway system (thank you germany). Walmart and Amazon destroyed what was left of the old main st.

  • Angie_BoPeepers
    Squirrely Dangie 𓃠 𓅃 😷 (@Angie_BoPeepers) reported

    @JaneDoeEy3d @battlehateharm I don't have an Amazon account but my mom does, I can ask her to look into that as well. Unfortunately with balance and dizziness issues I don't really grocery shop but I know mom also goes to winco.

  • norbu_tyle23940
    Tyler Norbu (@norbu_tyle23940) reported

    @alwayslastone @GOP_is_Gutless @Lonna320 Yes but they bought Whole Foods. Amazon is shutting down all of their Amazon Fresh and Amazon go stores to concentrate on Whole Foods and their online presence. Those stores weren’t performing in the ****** paradise cities.

  • catalinamike47
    catalinamike47 (@catalinamike47) reported

    @maddenifico I can’t wait for this to be appealed. Are the IDLE POLICE sitting on the curb waiting for PRIME Delivery Trucks to arrive with a Stop Watch in their hands to measure standing time? Amazon calculates its delivery routes to demand an average of 20 to 30 stops per hour. When broken down per stop, this equates to roughly 2 to 3 minutes per stop, which includes the physical delivery, scanning, taking a photo, and returning to the van to resume travel. Travel Time: The algorithm factors in the physical distance between drops, local speed limits, turn radiuses, and typical neighborhood traffic, but it relies heavily on assuming the driver travels at or near the speed limit. Delivery Time: The physical stop-and-deliver time is typically assigned about 30 seconds to 1 minute for a straightforward house drop. Resume Travel & Group Stops: The algorithm allows for "group stops" (where multiple addresses are bundled into one stop location). When resuming travel, the system relies on standard walking and driving algorithms, but does not always account for unmapped delays like finding parking or navigating gated communities.

  • davearcher404
    David Archer (@davearcher404) reported

    @loudoggeek @PalmerLuckey @mcuban It would only take a walmart or an amazon or some other large provider to undercut the prices on drugs and care, and they would do it for market share. McDonalds and Wendys can't currently price-fix cheeseburgers, because Burger King stops them. Government makes price fixing possible.

  • RebeccaTucker85
    Rebecca Tucker (@RebeccaTucker85) reported

    @MChe38767 @MelaninDominant There are tribes in places like the Amazon Rainforest that have never encountered modern civilization. These people are so primitive that they panic and start throwing spears if they see an airplane, because they genuinely have no idea what it is. The issue with ever trying to contact them or even help them in a natural disaster is that they have zero immunities to modern day illnesses so they would probably die very quickly.

  • AmarSin86223402
    Amar Singh (@AmarSin86223402) reported

    @amazonIN @amazon Kindly, solve the issue at earliest.

  • LeesanVilla
    Leesan Villa (@LeesanVilla) reported

    @Teamsters started to get sold out & the middle class was sold down the river along with it! We need to unionize Amazon! How about these giant data centers?

  • jaypberube
    Jay Berube (@jaypberube) reported

    @JeffBezos Your company @amazon has terrible customer experience. **** customer experience companies should not exist. Terrible UI and UX—your developers are trash and built it to scam people. What ******* company that professes to “serve the public” charges them a years subscription as a slap when they cancel. This is exactly why I’m leaving, when you have a stupid sales team not sell but architect the system to steal by default.

  • xavierprabhu
    Xavier PRabhu (@xavierprabhu) reported

    @amazonIN @AmazonHelp haven't got the item. it says delivered. complain on 19th morning. till date no update. folate, can't see anything good about amazon customer service. broken, no response & on top as a customer can't even complain despite not receiving item. how scary its?

  • RichardEHagen1
    Richard E Hagen 🇺🇸 (@RichardEHagen1) reported

    @GOP_is_Gutless Isn’t Amazon closing down their fresh stores all around the country? No fan of Seattle’s mayor, but Amazon Fresh shutting down is not just a Seattle thing.

  • CuratorPunished
    The (Quixotic) Multipolar Curator (@CuratorPunished) reported

    @MoreLimitless The issue is that Amazon was not giving them money for the season to go in bigger scales that the story desperately needed so they scaled everything down and brought a lot of disappointment. The finale at least makes sense with the story and what little they had.

  • aasimmajeedkh
    Aasim Majeed AMC (@aasimmajeedkh) reported

    🚨 THE ENTIRE AI BOOM MIGHT BE BUILT ON FAKE REVENUE. Latest corporate filings show that OpenAI and Anthropic alone make up over half of the entire $2 trillion future cloud backlog held by Microsoft, Oracle, Google, and Amazon. This massive pipeline is actually being created through a circular accounting trick called a round trip revenue loop. But how it works ? A tech giant gives billions of dollars to an AI startup as an "investment". But hidden in the contract is a strict rule forcing the startup to hand that exact same money straight back to the tech giant to rent their computer servers. Look at the documented case of Microsoft and OpenAI. When Microsoft invested $13 billion into OpenAI, it didn't just give them cash; it gave them "cloud credits" to use Microsoft servers. OpenAI used those exact credits to train its AI models, and Microsoft then turned around and recorded that server usage as brand new "cloud revenue" from a customer. The tech giant is literally paying itself with its own money and calling it a sale. This is why OpenAI’s annual cloud bill has ballooned to over $60 billion, double its actual revenue of $25 billion, kept alive solely by this recycled funding loop. Anthropic runs the exact same play, spending $2.66 billion on Amazon Web Services in just nine months, which was basically 100% of all the money it earned at the time. This manufactured demand triggers a second accounting trick where tech giants book massive paper profits. Every time a startup gets a higher value from a new funding round, the tech giant updates the value of its investment on its books and counts that unearned paper gain as direct profit. In Q1 2026, Alphabet reported a record $62.6 billion profit, but $28.7 billion nearly half, was just a paper markup on its Anthropic investment. In the same quarter, Amazon reported $30.3 billion in profit, but $16.8 billion of it was just an Anthropic paper gain. While Amazon reported record profits, its actual free cash flow collapsed 95% to just $1.2 billion because it had to spend $44.2 billion in real cash to build physical data centers. This has created a massive danger where these giant companies rely heavily on just one or two unstable startups. Microsoft has 49% of its $627 billion future backlog tied to OpenAI, while Oracle has an incredible 54% of its entire $553 billion pipeline relying on OpenAI alone. This perfectly mirrors the 2001 dot-com crash when Global Crossing and Qwest Communications swapped identical fiber-optic network capacity with each other just to book fake sales. Qwest had to erase $1.4 billion in fake income, and Global Crossing went completely bankrupt. The only difference is that the dot-com swaps were illegal, but today's AI loop is fully legal under current accounting rules. This legal loop inflates tech company stock prices, forcing automatic retirement accounts and index funds to buy even more of these tech stocks. It is a self feeding loop where investments, sales, and stock prices all go up on paper without the AI technology ever making real cash profits.

  • Kenneth27523471
    Walking with Yeshua 3150 (@Kenneth27523471) reported

    @AmazonHelp my packages keep getting delivered to the wrong address . Have been told 4 times the issue was resolved only to have another package delivered to the wrong address.

  • Activistraushan
    Mulayam Singh Yadav (@Activistraushan) reported

    @Bajaj_Finserv Unable to use my Bajaj card on @amazonIN because the expiry year is 2051, while Amazon only shows options till 2046. Please fix this issue. #BajajFinserv #AmazonIndia

  • MissingBigDon
    🇺🇸 Lil' Miss White Trash Deplorable 🍊 (@MissingBigDon) reported

    Amazon Fresh was a terrible idea anyway.

  • MCKid79662742
    MCKid (@MCKid79662742) reported

    @TheFilesWithDUB Marc works for "them" Somehow Amazon ruins everything but NYC is the most anti business / entrepreneurial policy arbiter in the entire US If one sign in your store is 1 inch off center the fees are draconian Taxes / fees / insurance / utilities ... the list goes on and on Somehow none of that is real in Marc's world In order to progress we need to NORMALIZE forcing progressive policy makers to admit defeat instead of making excuses ... it's childish

  • Bea27056114Gary
    Gary Beaumont (@Bea27056114Gary) reported

    @MarcoFoster_ @charise_lee Shut down Amazon let 30 thousand workers go on welfare

  • BullTheoryio
    Bull Theory (@BullTheoryio) reported

    🚨 THE ENTIRE AI BOOM MIGHT BE BUILT ON FAKE REVENUE. Latest corporate filings show that OpenAI and Anthropic alone make up over half of the entire $2 trillion future cloud backlog held by Microsoft, Oracle, Google, and Amazon. This massive pipeline is actually being created through a circular accounting trick called a round trip revenue loop. But how it works ? A tech giant gives billions of dollars to an AI startup as an "investment". But hidden in the contract is a strict rule forcing the startup to hand that exact same money straight back to the tech giant to rent their computer servers. Look at the documented case of Microsoft and OpenAI. When Microsoft invested $13 billion into OpenAI, it didn't just give them cash; it gave them "cloud credits" to use Microsoft servers. OpenAI used those exact credits to train its AI models, and Microsoft then turned around and recorded that server usage as brand new "cloud revenue" from a customer. The tech giant is literally paying itself with its own money and calling it a sale. This is why OpenAI’s annual cloud bill has ballooned to over $60 billion, double its actual revenue of $25 billion, kept alive solely by this recycled funding loop. Anthropic runs the exact same play, spending $2.66 billion on Amazon Web Services in just nine months, which was basically 100% of all the money it earned at the time. This manufactured demand triggers a second accounting trick where tech giants book massive paper profits. Every time a startup gets a higher value from a new funding round, the tech giant updates the value of its investment on its books and counts that unearned paper gain as direct profit. In Q1 2026, Alphabet reported a record $62.6 billion profit, but $28.7 billion nearly half, was just a paper markup on its Anthropic investment. In the same quarter, Amazon reported $30.3 billion in profit, but $16.8 billion of it was just an Anthropic paper gain. While Amazon reported record profits, its actual free cash flow collapsed 95% to just $1.2 billion because it had to spend $44.2 billion in real cash to build physical data centers. This has created a massive danger where these giant companies rely heavily on just one or two unstable startups. Microsoft has 49% of its $627 billion future backlog tied to OpenAI, while Oracle has an incredible 54% of its entire $553 billion pipeline relying on OpenAI alone. This perfectly mirrors the 2001 dot-com crash when Global Crossing and Qwest Communications swapped identical fiber-optic network capacity with each other just to book fake sales. Qwest had to erase $1.4 billion in fake income, and Global Crossing went completely bankrupt. The only difference is that the dot-com swaps were illegal, but today's AI loop is fully legal under current accounting rules. This legal loop inflates tech company stock prices, forcing automatic retirement accounts and index funds to buy even more of these tech stocks. It is a self feeding loop where investments, sales, and stock prices all go up on paper without the AI technology ever making real cash profits.

  • WMC_WORLD
    World Monitoring Center (@WMC_WORLD) reported

    THE ENTIRE AI BOOM MIGHT BE BUILT ON FAKE REVENUE. Latest corporate filings show that OpenAI and Anthropic alone make up over half of the entire $2 trillion future cloud backlog held by Microsoft, Oracle, Google, and Amazon. This massive pipeline is actually being created through a circular accounting trick called a round trip revenue loop. But how it works ? A tech giant gives billions of dollars to an AI startup as an "investment". But hidden in the contract is a strict rule forcing the startup to hand that exact same money straight back to the tech giant to rent their computer servers. Look at the documented case of Microsoft and OpenAI. When Microsoft invested $13 billion into OpenAI, it didn't just give them cash; it gave them "cloud credits" to use Microsoft servers. OpenAI used those exact credits to train its AI models, and Microsoft then turned around and recorded that server usage as brand new "cloud revenue" from a customer. The tech giant is literally paying itself with its own money and calling it a sale. This is why OpenAI’s annual cloud bill has ballooned to over $60 billion, double its actual revenue of $25 billion, kept alive solely by this recycled funding loop. Anthropic runs the exact same play, spending $2.66 billion on Amazon Web Services in just nine months, which was basically 100% of all the money it earned at the time. This manufactured demand triggers a second accounting trick where tech giants book massive paper profits. Every time a startup gets a higher value from a new funding round, the tech giant updates the value of its investment on its books and counts that unearned paper gain as direct profit. In Q1 2026, Alphabet reported a record $62.6 billion profit, but $28.7 billion nearly half, was just a paper markup on its Anthropic investment. In the same quarter, Amazon reported $30.3 billion in profit, but $16.8 billion of it was just an Anthropic paper gain. While Amazon reported record profits, its actual free cash flow collapsed 95% to just $1.2 billion because it had to spend $44.2 billion in real cash to build physical data centers. This has created a massive danger where these giant companies rely heavily on just one or two unstable startups. Microsoft has 49% of its $627 billion future backlog tied to OpenAI, while Oracle has an incredible 54% of its entire $553 billion pipeline relying on OpenAI alone. This perfectly mirrors the 2001 dot-com crash when Global Crossing and Qwest Communications swapped identical fiber-optic network capacity with each other just to book fake sales. Qwest had to erase $1.4 billion in fake income, and Global Crossing went completely bankrupt. The only difference is that the dot-com swaps were illegal, but today's AI loop is fully legal under current accounting rules. This legal loop inflates tech company stock prices, forcing automatic retirement accounts and index funds to buy even more of these tech stocks. It is a self feeding loop where investments, sales, and stock prices all go up on paper without the AI technology ever making real cash profits.

  • MarvelExrth616
    Earth 616 (@MarvelExrth616) reported

    Amazon almost cancelled The Boys before anyone watched a single episode Eric Kripke reportedly fought both times to keep the show exactly as it was. No toning down. No compromises. No making Homelander slightly less terrifying to protect advertiser relationships. The show's extreme content made internal decision makers deeply uncomfortable during production. Graphic violence. Corporate satire sharp enough to draw real blood. A superhero show that treated its heroes like actual villains. Two separate internal discussions about cancelling the show entirely happened before a single episode aired publicly. The concerns were simple this is too much. Too violent. Too satirical. Too risky for a mainstream streaming platform trying to compete with Netflix.