1. Home
  2. Companies
  3. Amazon
Amazon

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 9: Problems at Amazon

Amazon is having issues since 02:40 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%)
  • 29% Errors (29%)
  • 25% Sign in (25%)

Live Outage Map

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

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Portland Sign in 8 minutes ago
Austin Website Down 9 hours ago
York Website Down 11 hours ago
Troyes Sign in 1 day ago
Paris Website Down 1 day ago
Dover Website Down 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:

  • someguy283
    EM (@someguy283) reported

    Just saying, if an independent seller was selling returns as new and at full price and lying about it, they'd be shut down or facing fraud charges. Meanwhile, Amazon does it thousands of times a day.

  • svikashankar
    vikas shankar (@svikashankar) reported

    @AmazonHelp I am now being asked to wait 5–7 days for the refund, then place a new order and wait another 10–15 days for delivery. The water purifier was an essential item, especially with senior citizen parents at home. This issue was not caused by me, yet I am facing the inconvenience.

  • TechPowerCheck
    TechPowerCheck (@TechPowerCheck) reported

    The headline says this is about AI-generated merch. The deeper issue is marketplace power. If Amazon can generate the design, host the listing, process the sale, enforce the rules, and ship the product, outside sellers compete with the platform’s full stack.

  • someguy283
    EM (@someguy283) reported

    @AmazonHelp I've already set up a return. This has happened to me almost a dozen times already and you've never solved the core issue. Stop selling returns as new. This thing was clearly something that should have been caught.

  • endofmarx
    2nd Renaissance ☦️ (@endofmarx) reported

    @mrmikeMTL And so simple any handy idiot can fix it in his driveway with parts ordered off Amazon.

  • LukeCag98980120
    Luke Cage (@LukeCag98980120) reported

    @MoviesThatMaher it will do well and people will watch on amazon for years.. problem was simple it’s a 200 million dollar movie and the main character isn’t a star and the star of the movie has been in flop after flop even though is a decent/good actor

  • SafprodsP
    SafprodsPink (@SafprodsP) reported

    @TillyMcReese If you genuinely want to do a project like that, start looking into other platforms. YouTube will shut it down eventually. Shop the idea around to Roku channels for example. A friend of mine did a show on Amazon about his family. He is a tattoo artist.

  • ScottyBeamIO
    SCOTTY BEAM (@ScottyBeamIO) reported

    IF YOU SELL ON AMAZON AND DON'T HAVE AN AI AGENT MANAGING YOUR ADS, YOU ARE LEAVING MONEY ON THE TABLE EVERY SINGLE DAY This guy built a Claude AI agent that runs his entire Amazon ad operation 24/7. No agency. No manual reviews. No wasted budget. Every morning it: –> Pulls all campaign data automatically –> Analyzes every single search term –> Identifies exactly what's bleeding money –> Finds exactly what's converting –> Delivers the exact fix before he opens his laptop This morning it caught one keyword eating 16% of his entire budget with almost zero return. Found it in seconds. Told him exactly what to do. One year ago he knew nothing about Amazon ads. Wasted thousands figuring it out manually. Now Claude runs the whole thing. Amazon ad agencies charge $2,000-$5,000/month for this. Claude builds the agent for free and it works every single morning without being asked. The sellers still managing campaigns manually are losing money on keywords they don't even know exist. Bookmark this post. Full breakdown in the video below.

  • FrankPOliver
    Frank Peter Oliver (@FrankPOliver) reported

    Proof, as Pope Leo said, #Ai does not replace human compassion - I had to get a refund from Amazon, and after it directed me to its Ai customer service and resolved my problem, I typed "Thanks" in the chat - and it responded, "Do not understand what you asked." Ai needs to go.

  • vermontexan
    Vermontexan (@vermontexan) reported

    @GraduatedBen They unfortunately do not sell incandescent bulbs at Target, ACE Hardware or anywhere I know..one must purchase from Amazon where most of them are broken upon delivery. ???

  • I_see_dragons
    Raen (@I_see_dragons) reported

    @_BarbatosLupus_ @Wario64 Amazon has issues wirh Nintendo so they often go up later than other retailers

  • DitchdiggerBill
    Bill Miller 🇺🇸🦅🖖🟧 (@DitchdiggerBill) reported

    @amazon I have been an Amazon customer many years, and rarely have any trouble but when I did I found it near impossible to actually get help from customer service, and the issue is still unresolved. So now I am reduced to this, complaining about it on SM😬

  • NicoleMincu
    Nicoland (@NicoleMincu) reported

    Just wanted to let ppl know Amazon Japan delivers to Spain/Europe.You can sign in on Amazon Japan with your regular Amazon acc.The delivery is like any other shop Asia-Europe. I paid 31€ for Anan magazine ( 6 for the mag, 25 delivery). They have pretty much all the mag (+)

  • SeanPolley
    Sean Polley (@SeanPolley) reported

    SpaceX Is Three Businesses Wearing One Name Ask ten people what SpaceX does and most will say rockets. A few years ago that answer was complete. It isn't anymore. The company lists publicly this week under the ticker SPCX. Before the headlines settle on what it's worth, it's worth understanding what it has actually become, because the single name on the ticker covers at least three separate businesses, each with its own economics. Here is how I'd break it down for an investor trying to see past the noise. The part that actually makes money Most of SpaceX's revenue has nothing to do with sending anyone into space. It comes from Starlink, the satellite internet network now serving more than 10 million subscribers across over 100 countries. More than 10,000 satellites support it, and the subscriber count has nearly doubled in 15 months. The old telecom giants needed decades to reach customer bases that size. The financials follow. Starlink revenue climbed about 50% last year to $11.4 billion, roughly two-thirds of everything the company takes in. It's also profitable, and it grows more profitable with scale. Each subscriber pays every month, and that predictable income funds the next batch of satellites. The closest analogy is the cloud business buried inside Amazon. A quiet compounding machine sitting inside a company most people file under something else entirely. The part that built the moat The rockets are still the foundation, even if they aren't the cash register. Falcon 9, Falcon Heavy, the Dragon capsule, and the much larger Starship handle NASA flights, defense payloads, and commercial cargo. That work brought in about $4.1 billion in 2025, and SpaceX carried more than 80% of everything humanity put into orbit that year. That last figure is the real story. If you build satellites, sensors, or anything else headed for space, you generally need SpaceX to get it there. The company owns the on-ramp. What it doesn't own yet is easy profit from this segment. A single Falcon 9 flight runs somewhere between $15 million and $28 million, and developing Starship has already absorbed more than $15 billion. The launch business buys position and leverage. It hasn't started handing back cash. The part most people miss Here's where it gets interesting. In February 2026 SpaceX acquired xAI, the company behind the Grok models, and with it the X platform. So a share of SpaceX is now also a share of one of the larger artificial intelligence operations on the planet. The pieces fit together. xAI supplies the models, X supplies real-time data and a distribution channel, and two of the world's largest compute clusters, Colossus and Colossus II, supply the horsepower. That segment generated around $3.2 billion last year, and the contracts keep getting larger. SpaceX recently agreed to rent computing capacity to Anthropic, the maker of Claude, for a reported $1.25 billion a month. That's one customer. The company estimates the long-term market for this work near $28.5 trillion. Seeing the whole company Put the three together and the picture changes. SpaceX is a global internet utility, the gatekeeper to orbit, and a major AI platform, all operating under one roof and one ticker. For the investors I advise, the takeaway isn't whether SpaceX is impressive. It plainly is. The real questions are quieter. How would a position like this change your concentration and liquidity? Does it move the plan you already have forward, or just add excitement to it? This is exactly the kind of decision that should start with a conversation, not a click. Have it before the listing opens, while there's still time to think clearly. Sit down with your advisor, walk through how a holding like this fits the portfolio you already own, and decide whether it belongs there on the merits rather than the momentum. Whether SpaceX is right for your investment portfolio is a question worth answering deliberately, ahead of the moment everyone else is reacting.

  • pymtexecutive
    PaymentExecutive (@pymtexecutive) reported

    🔍 Let's break down WHY this deal matters beyond the headline. @Payoneer's real value isn't its brand — it's the RAILS. The strategic logic: ✅ Merchants can now "accept payments" AND "pay out globally" under one vendor ✅ Shared compliance, fraud controls & volume on the same network = lower per-transaction cost ✅ Harder to replace = higher switching costs for enterprise clients ✅ Emerging markets + Amazon/Walmart/eBay marketplace relationships = instant distribution The signal to CFOs: the standalone cross-border payout provider is becoming extinct. Integrated checkout-to-settlement platforms are the new standard. Source: Finimize / Reuters, June 9, 2026 @Nuvei @Payoneer #B2BPayments #PaymentsInfrastructure #CrossBorder

  • anzilone
    Mohammed Anzil (@anzilone) reported

    @AmazonHelp I have a simple question: if the first call was unclear due to network issues, why doesn't the delivery agent make a second call before marking the delivery as attempted?

  • ceeoreo_
    ceora 👩🏾‍🏫👩🏾‍💻 (@ceeoreo_) reported

    I’m assuming this might present some complex security issues specifically IAM especially since you’ll need to verify the agent to have access to your Amazon account and your credit cards which is where things might get a lil tricky. Perhaps even legally😭

  • richgjaci
    Misses microwaving fish in the office (@richgjaci) reported

    @AmazonHelp @amazon @FisherPaykelUS, had to pay for a new pump because my return could only be refunded. New pump was properly packaged, but still had a broken piece around the magnet. I want to do a second return and get a brand new one in the box.

  • Nyrofomo
    Nyro (@Nyrofomo) reported

    Competitors sell what's popular. I sell what they're missing. While 99% of Amazon sellers open Helium 10, scroll through trending lists, and copy each other - they're missing one thing: by the time a product hits the trends, the money is already gone. BSR is taken. Reviews are stacked. Price is raced to the floor. I stopped chasing trends. I started reading complaints. Every single day, thousands of buyers leave 1-star reviews - and literally explain what product they wanted to buy but couldn't find. That's not feedback. That's a free product brief handed to you on a silver plate. I dump 500 of those reviews into AI. Get back a JSON with specific failures - material, mechanism, size. Find a supplier on Alibaba who already solved the problem. Order samples. Launch a listing built around the exact words people used in their complaints. The result: $14.99 sale price. $7.11 landed cost. 48% net margin. While everyone else is cutting prices just to survive - I'm selling the only product in the niche that doesn't break after a month. Total active work: 3–4 days. AI subscription: $20/month. Starting capital: $2,500. There's no secret. Everyone else is just still doing it by hand.

  • gemoscatelli
    Gerardo Moscatelli (@gemoscatelli) reported

    @ErwinDonald @MichaelAArouet Maybe locking down the economy to bankrupt local businesses while asymetrically benefiting Amazon and other US Big Tech companies who were accomplices in this global biological attack against the world using a GoF virus assembled in a Chinese lab was not a good idea? Maybe Europe is governed by traitors compromised by the CIA/USAID?

  • RuslanKD
    Ruslan (@RuslanKD) reported

    @JesseDornfeld Jesse, your entire argument falls apart the moment someone visits your page. You literally wrote a Christian book, gave it a title, cover design, product description, category placement, distribution channel, and a price tag. You can't make this up LOL You have done the exact thing you're condemning. The only difference seems to be scale. When you package Christian ideas and sell them, it's ministry. When someone else does it successfully, it's "mixing business and ministry." That's not theology. That's special pleading. 1) "Demonstrate that I am wrong that you like money." That's an appeal to motive. Scripture judges actions and fruit, not your psychic ability to read hearts. By that standard, anyone who earns income likes money. 2) "It is not biblical to mix business with ministry." Then why are you selling a book on Amazon? If your book isn't free, congratulations: you've mixed theology, publishing, distribution, marketing, and money. 3) "You are not a pastor." 1 Corinthians 9 never says, "Only pastors may receive compensation." That's you adding words to the text because the text doesn't say what you want it to say. 4) "The Bible never says we should make a profit from our gifting." Argument from silence. The Bible never says a Christian author can't sell a book either, yet yours isn't free. 5) "You make money from superchats." People voluntarily support content they find valuable. That's not exploitation. That's literally how patronage has worked throughout human history. 6) "John Piper doesn't do it this way." Appeal to authority. John Piper isn't the standard. Scripture is. 7) "Show me someone in the Bible building a business around ministry." Paul literally made tents while preaching the gospel. Lydia was a merchant. Proverbs 31 describes a woman running multiple profitable ventures. God never condemned business. He condemned greed. 8) Acts 5, Acts 8, 1 Timothy 6 None of those texts are about authors selling books, musicians selling music, podcasters receiving support, or creators monetizing content. That's proof-texting, not exegesis. 9) The biggest problem. You keep equating: "Someone earns money" = "Someone loves money." Scripture never makes that leap. That's your assumption. And the irony is hard to miss. You're criticizing Christians for monetizing their work while literally having a book for sale on Amazon. Apparently monetization is evil when other people do it. This is exactly why Christians can't have nice things. A ministry gets well-funded, reaches millions, hires staff, builds infrastructure, serves people at scale, and instead of celebrating the fruit, someone shows up demanding that everything operate like a first-century house church while selling books in their bio. The issue isn't that Christians are making money. The issue is whether they're making money dishonestly. Those are not the same thing. Scripture condemns greed. It does not condemn competence, stewardship, compensation, profit, business, publishing, media, or building something valuable that serves people. If it did, your Amazon page would be in trouble too.

  • urmi_mithiya
    urmi mithiya (@urmi_mithiya) reported

    @amazon @amazonIN there are lot of issues now a days with regards to delivery, my 1st product was mentioned delivered and handed ti security where in reality it was not, another product was supposed to be delivered on sunday and its not yet delivered, can you check please

  • leandrixgarciae
    Leandrix Garciae (@leandrixgarciae) reported

    File access issues on Fire TV Stick 4K Max (Android 11) - Request for native file picker Dear PPSSPP developers, I am writing to report a recurring issue regarding file and ROM access on the Fire TV Stick 4K Max (2nd Gen), which runs on Android 11. To give you some context, on my older 2021 Fire TV Stick 4K (which is not the Max version, running Android 9), emulators like Redream and Snes9x EX+ can read the USB drive perfectly fine. However, this has become a widespread and well-known issue among users: this file restriction is strictly due to the Android 11 update on the new Fire TV Stick 4K Max, a problem that now affects PPSSPP as well. I tried using several file managers specifically to see if the latest version of PPSSPP could bridge the gap and access the USB drive through them, but without success. The tested apps (latest versions from Amazon Appstore) were: - ES File Explorer File Manager - X-plore File Manager - AnExplorer (as recommended in your FAQ) Tested Emulators on the 4K Max (various versions, none successful with USB storage): - Redream - Snes9x EX+ - DraStic DS Emulator - ePSXe 2.0 (only accesses internal storage) Regarding PPSSPP specifically, V1.11.3 is the most recent version I found that can at least access internal storage, but it fails to recognize the USB drive entirely. I suspect this is because Android 11 on the 4K Max lacks the native "Files" system app that Android 9 had. The breakthrough solution: Despite these Android 11 restrictions, RetroArch v1.22.2 (from the Amazon Appstore) is somehow able to successfully access both internal storage and external USB drives on this exact device. Perhaps the PPSSPP team could look into how RetroArch achieves this and implement a similar native file picker/manager within the app. It is honestly a shame to be locked out of the standalone app because PPSSPP is by far the best way to play PSP games; running them via the PPSSPP core inside RetroArch just doesn't offer the same stability or graphical quality. Right now, I am stuck using an older version of PPSSPP on the internal memory, but since it has very limited space, having full access to the USB drive is absolutely essential. I truly hope you can look into this, as a native file management solution would be a total game-changer for Fire TV Stick 4K Max users who love your emulator. Best regards, Leandro @henrikrydgard @PPSSPP_emu

  • JewelMeone
    Melissa Bradshaw 🤠🐴🙏🇺🇸 (@JewelMeone) reported

    .@RepMaryMiller @SenatorDurbin @SenDuckworth Oracle: 3,126 H-1B petitions, 30,000 laid off. Amazon: 2,675 petitions, 30,000 cut. H-1B workers paid 15% less. The cap is broken. Pass S. 2941 to close the loopholes.

  • shapeshiftdream
    Varushka Franceschi (@shapeshiftdream) reported

    My IMDbPro account is inaccessible due to an Amazon account linking error. I cannot log in, cannot renew, and support has never responded to my tickets. @IMDb @IMDbPro please help — this is my professional profile as a working filmmaker

  • Spectralegato
    Javier Uribe (@Spectralegato) reported

    @Wario64 Amazon took the page down 😬

  • owlfuckrr
    🔞a good “boy” (*******)🔞 (@owlfuckrr) reported

    @lavindicat My biggest worry is if Amazon pressured them to tone it down since they seem so strict with Hazbin… pls fight back if so crew we need this 😭

  • AuretherS2
    aurum rumi (@AuretherS2) reported

    @fossymossy1 we are killing thousands of indians per summers by cutting down the amazon dont mess with us

  • mhp_guy
    Chris Koerner (@mhp_guy) reported

    This guy bought a $300 inflatable movie screen on Amazon as a Christmas gift for his family and turned it into a $100,000 a year business at 80% profit margins. He just booked a $10,000 week. His startup cost was literally that Amazon gift. This is backyard movie theater rentals. But here's where it gets really freaking cool. Derek realized movies can't start until 9:30 PM in Texas summers because it doesn't get dark until then. That doesn't work for seven year olds. So he built the world's first indoor air conditioned inflatable movie theater. Full carpeting. LED lights. Four window AC units he bought off Facebook Marketplace for $150 each. He charges $1700 for it. His outdoor packages start at $375 and scale up from there to $1500. Then he added LED dance floors because kids kept dancing after the movies ended. Those rent for $3,000 and he'll have it paid off in eight rentals. In this episode Derek: - Breaks down how he went from unprepared at his first HOA event to a $10K booking week - Shares how he sources equipment from Alibaba and Facebook Marketplace - Tells me why his best clients are people sitting on a few acres who don't blink at price - Gives me the exact package structure he uses, from $375 starter to $1,700 indoor This one is awesome. Check it out.

  • CaroIynJohnson
    Carolyn Johnson (@CaroIynJohnson) reported

    Amazon issues record-setting Canadian dollar-denominated corporate bond deal