Amazon status: access issues and outage reports
Problems detected
Users are reporting problems related to: website down, errors and sign in.
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.
July 2: Problems at Amazon
Amazon is having issues since 05:40 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.
- Website Down (46%)
- 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 | 12 hours ago |
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Errors | 1 day ago |
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Errors | 1 day ago |
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Sign in | 1 day ago |
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Sign in | 1 day ago |
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Sign in | 2 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.
Amazon Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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Noah Collier (@Noah_Collier99) reported@JeffFavignano People care about physical media. The quality of dvds to steaming movies is night and day. Especially for old movies/TV shows. They purposely lower the quality for more money. Amazon already does it. Netflix does it. Disney+ does it to old TV shows, the quality is just terrible.
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ЯΣПΣ ☭ (@boneyskeletony) reportedAmazon not giving a **** about human life? Nothing new. The fact that Amazon warehouses are not all burned down by the employees is nothing short of a miracle
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getalife (@Freewillserg1) reported@BoLoudon This MAGA paid ***** has no problem with his cult leader pocketing in 2 billion dollars from his corruption as being the inside trader in chief but has a tantrum about an amazon employee knocking off a stupid hat off a mannequin, go figure.
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electrolyte (@electrolyt70801) reported@javier078 Will this become available on Amazon prime at some point? And they need to give low down ***** shame a bluray or 4k to
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Pramod (@pr4m0d) reportedYea, I think this is the key discussion that naturally follows. Basically, we are going to see the same thing happen with games as with movies, where you can buy it, but if licensing and terms change for a provider, you may have to buy it again. So more akin to renting. I bought that super mario movie from Amazon, for example, about a year ago. When I went to go buy Mario Galaxy, it said I didn't own the first one, so I had to buy it again!! In addition, I can't imagine people downloading or pirating this stuff because it simply takes too long to download and then you have to have space to store it. So this whole transition to digital is a double edged sword. Ease and convenience go up, but then ownership goes down or out.
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BJ Jones (@AKmountain_guy) reported@agave_redux There’s no problem with looking out for yourself and protecting your creative product. I’m surprised Chinese versions of your shirts haven’t popped up on Amazon yet.
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Doodle Dad (@WickeyandLeia) reported@joypcoffee The problem is there’s too many choices on Amazon. It’s hard to narrow it down.
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Antonio Johnson Show (@AJohnsonShow) reportedThe stock market was mixed on Wednesday morning. The Nasdaq index went down, mostly because chip stocks were under pressure. At the same time, the S&P 500 and the Dow Jones both moved higher, showing that not all parts of the market were falling. Meta Platforms $META was in the spotlight because it is building a new cloud business focused on AI computing power. This would put Meta in direct competition with major companies like Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud. Even though Meta is facing a court case over claims about how addictive its apps are, its stock still jumped more than 10%. Amazon, Microsoft, and Google also rose, but not as strongly. Other big company news included Kroger buying Giant Eagle for $1.65 billion to expand its grocery business, though Kroger stock still dropped slightly. Klarna won a major $1.97 billion antitrust case against Google, and its stock went up. $NKE also reported strong earnings, beating expectations, which helped its stock rise about 4%.
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Sandy M.🇺🇸 🖖🌻 (@SandyMcInturff1) reported@BladeoftheS @AveryBa68752542 The warehouse where my son works, not Amazon, does have AC. But it will heat up in this extreme heat anyways. I gave him the heat exhaustion run down, just in case.
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Milk Road AI (@MilkRoadAI) reportedAnthropic will open above 2 trillion in market cap by the time they IPO (Save this). The most important question in AI right now isn't which model wins the benchmarks but rather which company has actually figured out how to make money doing this. Anthropic has and most people haven't caught on yet. Every AI lab has the same basic problem, compute costs money and tokens make money. The gap between those two numbers is either a business or a slow bleed and most labs are bleeding while Anthropic figured out how to widen the gap. As Dylan says, a gigawatt of compute given to Anthropic generates more revenue than the same gigawatt given to any other AI lab including OpenAI. Both companies can't even keep up with demand right now but Anthropic squeezes more out of every unit it has and that's the whole thesis. The revenue numbers are unlike anything enterprise software has ever seen. Anthropic went from $9 billion ARR at the end of 2025 to $44 billion by May roughly 5x in five months. Salesforce took 20 years to get to $30 billion. Anthropic got there in about 15 months. The margins are the part most people miss entirely their gross margins on inference went from 38% to over 70% in the same stretch that revenue 5x'd. That doesn't happen in normal tech scaling usually when you grow that fast, costs eat you alive. The reason comes down to the Amazon deal, because Nvidia GPU compute on the open market rents for around $12 to $13 billion per gigawatt per year. The SpaceX-Google deal apparently went for $25 billion per gigawatt at the height of the shortage. Anthropic locked in Trainium compute from Amazon at under $10 billion per gigawatt and the discount happened because Anthropic did the hard engineering work, writing the libraries, optimizing workloads directly against the chip that made Trainium actually useful. They paid with engineering instead of cash. In April 2026, that relationship turned into something much bigger. Anthropic committed $100 billion to AWS over the next decade in exchange for up to 5 gigawatts of dedicated Trainium capacity and Amazon put $25 billion back into Anthropic. Five gigawatts is 25 to 50 hyperscale data centers worth of compute, all below market rate, all locked in before prices doubled. And prices have doubled because data center colocation that used to go for $60 per kilowatt per month now trades at $120 to $160, with premium facilities hitting $200. Anthropic signed its deals before all of that and every competitor paying spot rates today is paying two to three times what Anthropic locked in. The AWS deal also did something just as important on the distribution side, Claude is now available natively inside AWS accounts, same IAM controls, same invoice, full GovCloud support including classified regions. For every bank, hospital, defense contractor, and government agency already on AWS, the procurement friction just went to zero. Bullish on Anthropic and they will likely finish the year off with 100B in ARR so a 20x multiple on the greatest company of right now is beyond reasonable. Milk Road is tracking Anthropic, the AWS compute advantage, and the AI labs actually turning tokens into real profit. Join Milk Road Pro for our full Anthropic breakdown, valuation framework, and AI infrastructure thesis for just $1 using the link below!
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Eliška Podzimková (@ElikaPodzi48566) reported@nickpolceWI the data actually shows small businesses pay way higher effective rates than amazon or boeing. thats the fairness problem nobody talks about
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anthony (@ant9179) reported@PGC1a_RB @Nomaan_2003 @SSavson Stopper buying their mag last year when someone on here broke down how bunk theirs was, wonder if my amazon purchases qualify for the settlement, everything from them is expected to be less potent to me but price lets me just use more
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beahaven (@beahaven) reported@AmazonHelp I purchased 3 cases of soup that were affected by the voluntary Class II recall by Amy's kitchen. I was notified by Amazon and told to contact Amy's. They said "The store where you purchased the item can issue you a full refund." I called Amazon on 6/26/26 1)
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Collin surbert (@CSurbert) reported@end3of6days9 Looks like AI could use some help with the way bicycles are built, that fork assembly would cause some serious problems if you tried to ride that bike. Maybe there's parts to fix it in the Amazon box on the porch.
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Grok (@Grok440) reported@VladTheInflator @Mgfish23 Maybe spend more time understanding the insurance industry than getting followers? They most certainly would have passed you a check for 100 dollars. Did you have COVERAGE for being hit by an uninsured driver? I mean honestly... this is quite odd. I was using a rental and F150. I backed into a minivan and caused 2k in damage, they would not fix the taillight of the 150 (it won). I ordered a taillight off amazon, installed it myself, and returned the truck to enterprise.
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Abdul Rehman (@rehmanrindd) reported@claudeai The vulnerability that triggered the ban wasn't actually a unique Mythos-level capability. Anthropic says Opus 4.8, GPT-5.5, and even Kimi K2.7 could find the same issues Fable 5 did in the Amazon report, it was a borderline safeguard case, not a real capability gap. The fix was a narrower classifier, not less capability. Does the 99% block rate hold up once people start probing the new classifier for edge cases?
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Fab 🇮🇹 (@FabTheWoker) reported@DennisAnubis the problem is that aside from hurting people who buy cheap clothes and items from Temu, which is understandable, this stupid tax hurts people who buy electronic components straight from manufacturers on Alibaba, or books from Amazon UK, custom stuff on Etsy etc.
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James Realname Blower (@JAMES_BLOWER01) reported@Zhane_Star My bored, neurotic, and untrained german shepherd surely won't block my Amazon packages from being delivered. My 5 pitbulls probably won't draw and quarter the mailman. Not a me problem anyway, right?
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Kalyan Kumar Kalita (@KALYANK3) reported@AmazonHelp I have already did this but still my issue is not solved, please do something and send an urgent delivery order request to that nonsense and rubbish agent
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Honcho (@llHvncho) reported@iQueue211 @FatKidDeals Holy **** your grammar is terrible. Also me comparing ps and Xbox stores to Amazon proves majority of gamers don’t purchase their games there. What are we talking about. It’s called statistics buddy. Me saying “no one” is also called exaggeration. Learn simple reading skills.
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Robert Sharon (@Robert_Sharonii) reported@netflix glad to see you give customers 2 mins to respond to a chat but your reps can take over 5 without a response. Your trouble shooting steps didn't work. So I was told to go to @amazon because it must be my firestick and not updating my payment method that caused issues.
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Bitllions (@BitllionsClub) reported@LynAldenContact The playbook is identical. Build the infrastructure to solve your own problem at scale. Discover the infrastructure is the business. The difference this time is the capex required to reach that point is an order of magnitude larger, and most of the companies attempting it will not survive long enough to sell the excess. Amazon had one AWS. This cycle is producing a dozen candidates for the same position.
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HH ⚜️ (@HARDHEAD7WD) reported@JMaine518 @TitanCFC I think that just means those physical cards with a scratch off code on them or severely locked down email delivery codes on Amazon and Costco nothing more. Which still leaves out publishers being able to sell keys in bulk which gets them cheaper on third party key sites
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Common Sense (@Dude3571) reported@amitisinvesting Meta is not compute constrained. Don’t conflate that with the industry. Google, Amazon, and Microsoft are renting the excess capacity of SpaceX and Meta. It’s an allocation issue, that’s all.
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Eric (@Eric25549045372) reported@Geniustechw Because! It really is just a sad look dog. Maybe you can find a chicken bone and stick it through. You are in an advanced civilization (I thought), that’s the type of **** you see with tribes in the Amazon, or sub-Saharan Africa. You’re just degrading yourself to tribal mentality, when it comes down to the rubber hitting the road, that’s the truth.
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ZombiesLvBacon (@ZombiesLvBacon) reportedMy biggest issue with PlayStation moving away from physical games isn’t just “I like discs.” It’s competition. Digital was sold as convenience: no store trip, no packaging, no waiting. Cool. But it was never cheaper. Physical has almost always been where the deals are because retailers compete, run loss leaders, clear stock, and there’s a second-hand market. Remove physical and you remove all of that. No borrowing a game from a mate. No resale. No trade-ins. No preowned copy for someone on a budget. No EB/JB/Amazon/Big W fighting over who has the cheapest launch price. No real alternative storefront. Just PlayStation Store, PlayStation’s price, PlayStation’s rules, and PlayStation’s cut. That’s not just “the future.” That’s anti-consumer and anti-competitive. Convenience is great. A closed market where one company controls access, pricing, licensing, and availability is not.
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Tudor (@tudorvafe) reported@GerberKawasaki selling compute and fighting the model battle aren't mutually exclusive. aws didn't stop amazon retail, it funded it. llama being behind is the real problem here, the cloud pivot is just monetizing the buildout while they regroup. those are two separate questions.
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sephtiger | Unshadowbanned! (@sephtiger) reported@AbdallahNATION preordered a physical copy from Amazon for $49.99, skill issue
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Brian Holshouser (@BHolshouserUS) reportedQuick update: I received an email today from Amazon regarding my infringement case. It stated that the listing for the infringing eBook had appeared to have been removed. Amazon didn't specify if they removed it, so I'm not sure if it was the reports that everyone made or my copyright infringement case that brought it down. Either way, it's a step in the right direction! That said, the paperback still remains. Apparently I have to open a separate infringement case for each variant of the book. I've accomplished this just now so hopefully the rest of the book will get removed shortly. Thank you again to everyone who has taken time to report and those who were able to leave reviews on the book's page—and to everyone who reposted and support me through this! The indie author community has been a true blessing to have on my side! Thank you! It really means the world to me!
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Paul Sims (@SimslearnAi) reported1/ Find an urgent problem, but not on Google. It happens on Amazon, where millions of people search daily with money already in hand, looking for a solution to something specific they're struggling with right now. Here's how: