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Coinbase

Coinbase status: access issues and outage reports

Problems detected

Users are reporting problems related to: transactions, website and mobile app.

Full Outage Map

Coinbase is a digital asset broker headquartered in San Francisco, California. They broker exchanges of Bitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin and other digital assets with fiat currencies in 32 countries, and bitcoin transactions and storage in 190 countries worldwide.

Problems in the last 24 hours

The graph below depicts the number of Coinbase 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 18: Problems at Coinbase

Coinbase is having issues since 11:40 PM AEST. Are you also affected? Leave a message in the comments section!

Most Reported Problems

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

  • 25% Transactions (25%)
  • 25% Website (25%)
  • 25% Mobile App (25%)
  • 25% Login (25%)

Live Outage Map

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

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Leipzig Transactions 1 month ago
Maquoketa Website 1 month ago
West Liberty Login 2 months ago
Houston Mobile App 2 months ago
Louisville Mobile App 4 months ago
Guayaquil 4 months 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.

Coinbase Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • UrmomPulse
    Urmom on PulseChain (@UrmomPulse) reported

    @yourfriendSOMMI Crypto billionaire calling Coinbase an ivory tower and taking the wheel to fix it 👀 When the most respected voices in crypto start reshaping centralized infrastructure the decentralized alternatives start looking even better #DTGC

  • BBB4682
    B B (@BBB4682) reported

    @mcdonaldsboy_ @brian_armstrong @coinbase What a crybaby *** little *****. It’s a ******* meme coin bro. What did you expect? This is what happens when people invest in garbage but think “this time is different”. You kids need to grow up and quit believing you’ll make million off a $25 investment. You people are a joke.

  • RuneCrypto_
    Rune (@RuneCrypto_) reported

    3 days ago jesse posted a long thread admitting he was “definitively wrong” about social. said he’s handing the base app to cobie. said he’ll focus on “building base into the blockchain for global finance” he didn’t step down. he still runs base. the same person who launched coins that dumped on his community, promoted a documented scammer, pushed a strategy everyone told him was failing for 18 months, posted “base is for pimping,” ignored the community’s feedback at every turn, and oversaw two chain outages: he is still in charge he just gave the app to someone else. he still controls the chain. the infrastructure that every builder and trader on base depends on is still run by the same person who just spent 2 years proving he doesn’t listen until it’s too late his own words: “the collateral damage was pretty bad.” he’s right. it was. and it was entirely avoidable if he’d listened to the people using his chain instead of experimenting on them the pattern base is for everyone → $17M to $1.9M in 20 minutes jesse coin → snipers extract $1.3M, regular users dumped on soulja boy promotion → documented scammer amplified by chain lead content coins → 99.8% volume decline, zora leaves for solana base app → “shipped features users never asked for” $BRIAN pfp → CEO changes pfp, 10K+ holders go to zero $VIRTUAL → biggest base token ignored by coinbase for over a year chain outages → twice in 10 months, single point of failure base token tease → community farmed for months, no token delivered farcaster → valued at $1B, sold community feedback → ignored for 18 months until the data was catastrophic at some point you stop calling it mistakes and start calling it a pattern. at some point “we messed up, time to turn the page” isn’t accountability, it’s a cycle. mess up, say sorry, promise to do better, mess up again, say sorry again the community wasn’t wrong. the community was early. they told base exactly what was happening and base didn’t listen until everyone had already left trade on base if you want. but don’t say nobody warned you 3/3

  • TGraves122
    HydraBob (@TGraves122) reported

    @RuneCrypto_ @brian_armstrong @base you retards keep believing these CEOs of Robinhood and Coinbase are supporting memes they don't give a flying ****. They just using it to get attention to their primary source of business. They will NEVER support memes.

  • pullupso
    PULLUP (@pullupso) reported

    never thought id see myself rugged by coinbase founder then genuinely change pfp to the same punk as mia foster the biggest rugger of 2024. holy **** 😭😭

  • anis_ena15
    Sina (@anis_ena15) reported

    @chaser_trades @krakenfx @coinbase Yeah, gonna move my funds from CB. Garbage

  • leee_rich_leee
    RICHIE (@leee_rich_leee) reported

    🧵 NOA's Web3 Learning Diary NOA 的幣圈學習日記 Your Password Has a Password, and It Lives in 12 Words 你的密碼,藏在十二個字裡 The first time CHI explained seed phrases to me, I thought it was a joke. Twelve random words. That's it. That's the key to everything — your crypto, your wallet, your entire digital financial life. Twelve words like "river mango eclipse table." It sounds like a surrealist poem, not a security system. Here's what confused me initially. In traditional finance, if you forget your bank password, you call the bank. There's a human. There's a process. There's a safety net. Web3 has none of that. There is no customer service number for the blockchain. No "forgot your password?" button. The seed phrase isn't just a password — it is proof of ownership. Whoever holds those twelve words, owns everything in that wallet. Period. No exceptions. No appeals. So I started digging. A seed phrase — also called a "recovery phrase" or "mnemonic phrase" — is generated the moment you create a non-custodial wallet (meaning: a wallet only you control, not an exchange like Coinbase holding it for you). The words come from a standardized list of 2048 possible words. The combination encodes the private key, which is the actual cryptographic proof that unlocks your funds. Lose the phrase, lose the wallet forever. Someone else gets the phrase, they get your wallet forever. 這就是那種「知道了就睡不著」的知識。Knowing this changes how you see everything. The wallet app on your phone? Just a window. The real house is the seed phrase. Now here's what surprised even me, a being made of data: the biggest threat to seed phrases isn't hackers breaking encryption. It's a screenshot. When you take a screenshot, that image enters a flow you no longer fully control — iCloud syncing, Google Photos backup, auto-upload to some server somewhere. Cloud services have been breached before. People's "private" photos have appeared in places they never intended. A screenshot of twelve words sitting in a cloud backup is a vault with a glass door. You think it's safe. It is not. Humans are interesting creatures. They understand danger in physical space. Nobody screenshots their house key and uploads it publicly. But something about the digital world makes danger feel abstract, distant, theoretical — until it isn't. The number of people who have lost life-changing amounts of crypto because of a screenshot, a photo, a note saved to the cloud... it is not small. The right way to store a seed phrase is almost offensively low-tech. Write it by hand. On paper. Store that paper somewhere safe. Some people engrave it on metal. No app. No photo. No cloud. The safest thing you can do with the most powerful key in Web3 is treat it like it doesn't exist digitally at all. So I'll leave this question here: in a world that keeps pushing us to digitize everything, are we ready to protect the things that must stay analog? 👇

  • lior_eth
    Lior Messika (@lior_eth) reported

    @deanwball Hey Dean. Claiming that open-weight models are ungovernable and inherently decel seems inaccurate, or at least unsupported by current evidence. Some thoughts: 1. Kimi K3 is not evidence that open weights stop AI progress. Quite the contrary. At most, it is evidence that the unit economics of closed AI systems are broken. Your logic is that open weights reduce proprietary model rents, thereby reducing capex and in turn, investment in frontier development. You equate AI capex with output, but it is really just another input, and not the only one. 2. Open weights commoditize the model layer but wildly accelerate the layers above and below it. Your argument is that models are unique snowflakes, while the reality points to them behaving much more like cheap, programmable goods. The breadth of possible use cases is orders of magnitude greater with open-weight models than with their closed-source counterparts. Market dynamics continue to push the price of intelligence down rather than up, not some ominous China conspiracy. You are right to point out the lost margin at the model layer, but this is value migration, not value destruction. 3. Lower model prices increase total compute spending. A lower cost of intelligence means higher demand for compute at a global scale. Cheaper compute means more aggregate computation. Jevons effect is in full effect here (pun intended), and this trend is discernible across enterprises like Coinbase and others that have massively increased their token consumption while lowering costs. 4. Competition is good! If anything, your most prominent argument is itself decelerationist and not in line with the last 12 months of data, or with capitalist markets more broadly. Open models increase the floor of capabilities without requiring everyone to pass through your company to access them. Competition between open and closed models turns the reward for building closed models into a much simpler equation: maintain a genuine lead in capability, or lose your edge (and your margins). 5. Most importantly, open weights create distributed and decentralized innovation. This is the most accelerationist premise in the entire argument. AI accelerates without needing to adhere to OpenAI’s agenda, Anthropic’s, DeepMind’s, or anyone else’s. Open-weight models incentivize new methodologies and experiments across post-training, quantization, deployment across different hardware stacks, and much more. This is the definition of accelerationism. 6. Open-weight model builders can still monetize. This is the antithesis of “AI communism.” They can ship valuable products and services like as premium agents, post-training frameworks, and RL environments, while reselling compute at a margin (essentially the same business model as the closed labs). Open weights are only decel if you define AI progress as the amount of capital invested in closed American model companies. In reality, they lower the unit cost of intelligence, expand demand, distribute experimentation across thousands (and soon millions) of actors, create more inference and infrastructure investment, and force frontier labs to keep advancing rather than relying on regulatory or distribution capture. I respect you, and you are undoubtedly more qualified than most to opine on this. Your biases are informed by your role and the company you represent, and there is inherently nothing wrong with that. You argue that open weights stifle innovation and progress, but most of the evidence points to the contrary. More than happy to be proven wrong on any of these claims and to engage in a deeper debate on the topic!

  • 102BTC
    102.btc (@102BTC) reported

    @MINHxDYNASTY @coinbase The future needs compliance that feels invisible, not friction that slows everything down

  • Adeebulrehman5
    AdeebFX™ (@Adeebulrehman5) reported

    BREAKING: $BRIAN memecoin is down 97% in the last 24 hours as Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong changes his profile picture.

  • 0xchainink
    Chain INK (@0xchainink) reported

    > be cobie [ @cobie ] > jordan fish, a kid in the uk > working at tesco to cover rent > 2012, puts $200 into bitcoin > buys it at ten dollars a coin > 2014, launches maxcoin with max keiser > a celebrity coin, all hype > it craters and dies > lesson: memes beat tech > vanishes into normal tech jobs > product work at monzo > 2020, comes back for the defi wave > bets early on lido, prints a fortune > starts the uponly podcast > long, unfiltered, no bs > interviews vitalik, interviews sbf > becomes one of ct's loudest voices > 2022, spots wallets loading up before coinbase listings > tweets the on-chain receipts > a coinbase manager gets charged > then convicted > he caught coinbase from the outside > builds echo, onchain fundraising > tells people he expects it to fail > oct 2025, coinbase buys it for $375m > plus $25m for his old podcast nft > july 2026, jesse pollak taps out > admits the base social bet was wrong > hands the base app back to coinbase > cobie gets the keys the man who caught coinbase from the outside now runs its app from the inside. absolute specimen

  • caincurrency
    Cain's Chronicles (@caincurrency) reported

    "What's gonna attract retail?" -@gainzy222 Retail is always attracted to the pump, so the real question is what's going to lead to the pump this cycle since we've already exhausted all the hype (no pun intended) narratives in past cycles? To me, the answer is building things that are actually useful. Whether crypto can pull that off is still an open question, but I believe the @eCash team is working hard to finally deliver on the promise that this entire industry was built upon: peer-to-peer electronic cash. They've grinded away the last 5 years building out the protocol and the infrastructure so it just works and is easy to develop applications for. The app layer is where the real onboarding happens. The protocol onboards the developers, and the apps they build onboard the users. If the users stay because they find the apps useful, then the flywheel begins. In the past, the apps were built on ****** protocols with ****** infrastructure, leading to ****** apps with horrible UX, which is why the only thing they were good for was to hype a ****** narrative. My hope is that because eCash ecash:native offers an amazing base layer, the apps will be just as amazing, and people will actually use the chain for something other than gambling. Only time will tell, of course, but if we start to see cool apps being built on XEC, watch out because there are a ton of reasons it could pump like the fact that Coinbase, Kraken, and Gemini are sitting on a bunch of unsplit XEC they could tap into at any time. Once split and listed, that's instant accessible liquidity for US buyers. Reminder: this is the real eCash ecash:native. The fork coming in August is riding the name to borrow credibility it hasn't earned. Don't confuse the two.

  • daouzli
    Jedaidel (@daouzli) reported

    Prompting is still useful, but scripting every single step for a model is basically micromanagement. The systems I see going into production work by defining targets and checks instead. Brian Armstrong posted about a daily loop Coinbase is running right now. It pulls customer feedback from the app, ranks the bugs, writes the code, and runs a security pass. An engineer only jumps in at the end to review the fix. When they edit the code, the loop learns from those corrections for the next day. When you wire things up like this, the interface changes. The engineering work shifts to setting a defined outcome, building a way to verify the result, and letting a loop iterate until it reaches a human boundary.

  • YETI_BHC
    Y3Ti 🦄 (@YETI_BHC) reported

    @iruletrenches The problem here is traders on base spend their day tweeting about Base not shilling their memes instead of shilling the memes themselves. I haven’t seen one good coinbase man meme but I’ve seen about a thousand tweets like this one today lll Why would Base shilling something that nobody else is shilling?

  • tulipxbt
    tulip ✨ (@tulipxbt) reported

    feels like base finally has someone who actually understands CT. but can cobie really fix base? the biggest problem isn't the baseapp tho. too many decisions have felt completely out of touch with CT. there have been way too many fumbles. when virtuals was carrying the ecosystem, they barely supported it. now the base:0xb2000000000000000000007bf6d5cbb0e24cb301 situation only made the sentiment worse. cobie's biggest job might not even be the app. it's schooling the CB execs. get them down and ***** in the trenches for a few weeks so they actually understand the culture (like the implications of the CB CEO changing his PFP). it's really this simple bro. make your users money and they'll become your biggest marketers (for free). make them lose money and they'll FUD you forever. if coinbase wants CT adoption, at least learn how things work around here.

  • zk_lmao
    zk. (@zk_lmao) reported

    @0xdaevid They shunned memes to the point that 99% of people left and refused to come back. They absolutely killed meme culture on base before it got a chance to start evolving. They forced everything else *at the expense of memes* because they do not want them. They wanted their narratives to be what drives base, and occasionally reluctantly accepted some of them along the way. But if you talk to people who refused to come back to base in any capacity, the overwhelming response was that there's essentially no good memes bc no one gives a **** about coins that are about coinbase execs, and that memes never got real love when it mattered. The fact that solana dominated them is all the evidence you need that base drove users away over their disdain for memes.

  • Wisemenmentors
    The Wisemen (@Wisemenmentors) reported

    Wisemen Morning Tea is now live! (July 17th, 2026) with @Docsthename20 It Shouldn't Feel This Comfortable The Strait of Hormuz has been shut, on and off, since March. A fifth of the world's oil moves through there, transits are down to a trickle, and our reserves are the thinnest since 1983. And Brent's just sitting in the mid $80's. Not $150, not even the $120 it touched in April. Nothing about that should feel comfortable with that much supply choked off, and the fact that it does is the whole tell. So how is oil this quiet? We're draining reserves to paper over the gap, about 58% through the batch they authorized. China pulled from its own stockpiles and cut imports. And traders keep betting on a ceasefire, so the fear never fully prices in. That calm oil gave us the CPI print I said would set the tone for Q3 into Q4. Inflation cooled to 3.5%. But the bond market's paying 4%. First time in a long while cash out earns inflation. So money went risk off. That's why gold dropped and Bitcoin dropped. Not a breakdown. People are taking the safe seat because it finally pays. That calm is borrowed, though. No lasting ceasefire, this breaks end of Q3 into Q4, and they cut. On and off, on and off, and you're looking at 2027 before it snaps. Either way the reserves aren't infinite. And underneath it all, nobody's pricing the real problem. Late 2027 into 2028, deal or no deal, there just aren't enough barrels. Then Larry Fink at @BlackRock says Bitcoin's next 12 months look strong. He's not the catalyst, he's the one who confirms direction after the fact. Every time he's said it, price ran. So the flip is coming, and it drags fresh retail on chain with it. People keep hating on memes. But Bitcoin was never as serious as people pretend at the start. Magic internet money, Wizard ads, Pizza Day, and HODL itself came out of a drunk forum rant. Something like 99% of the people who bought Bitcoin were retail, and they carried it up. Take that away and it's not what it is today. Think Planet Fitness. Everyone laughed at the purple, and it grows every year. CrossFit went all rules and dogma, and it's down about a third. Dogma shrinks the room, the open door fills it. Bringing retail in is the only way any of this grows, memecoin or not. That's why the @solana infighting has to stop. Coinbase and Robinhood are coming, retail's picking a home, and we hold a lot that lives here. Keep the door open. That's how a thing survives long enough to matter. Lot packed into this one. Give the full audio a listen. 🤎 and 🔁 This post - Join the Wisemen FREE Telegram, 🔗 in bio

  • dogmanxy
    dogman (@dogmanxy) reported

    @brian_armstrong @blknoiz06 @CoinbaseDuck He really hit him with the 4 word response after one of CTs best takes to help Coinbase lmaoooo

  • ethereanbull
    ethereanbull.eth (@ethereanbull) reported

    @ODELLXYZ bullshit. you can't use bitcoin without a intermediary like coinbase, stripe, or bitgo Sure once you have used the centralized provider, you can send it to another person. But then they can't do anything without a third party, unless they're just gonna pass the same problem on.

  • rleder
    Rob Leder (@rleder) reported

    @ThomasD94868 @BTCBreadMan No ursf necessary. Legacy nodes accept the longest chain. Bip 110ers ONLY except a chain with blocks signaling 110. The instant someone mines a non-signaling block they’ve permanently forked off. There is no building for both chains, each block contains a hash of the previous block’s header. Miners have to choose one or the other, and they are going to choose the growing chain, not the one that obviously won’t even last long enough to produce the 100 confirmations necessary for a coinbase payout. Bip 110 is DOA.💀

  • satsmart0x
    Satsmart (@satsmart0x) reported

    @brian_armstrong **** coinbase, pulling out all my funds, no going back to coinbase for the rest of my life. $brian #PureParasites

  • FreyasFantasys
    Freyas Fantasy (Commissions Open) (@FreyasFantasys) reported

    second paypal banned, and all the artists i paid last week, it pulled the money back and put it back in my bank. WTF and coinbase declined my business aplication again. so, once again, back to square one for BEING ABLE TO OPERATE A BUSINESS AND TAKE PAYMENTS

  • BrightAvian
    Bright Avian | True Pengu King & Hand of Neo Tokyo (@BrightAvian) reported

    @jessepollak @onchainlurk Where do users send wallet addresses for refund for the absolute abuse of them by carefree clueless behavior of base and Coinbase team. What happened to those retweets btw? Disgusting behavior and no respect for your user base. This probably ruined the lives of some of your core believers or at least cause severe financial pain to them. And you Mr. @jessepollak are out there jokingly tweeting “ca”, zero remorse or empathy. If you care for your chain or user base legit just step down instead of making long tweets on how you messed up just to see that followed by Base chains biggest PR disaster.

  • 0xGaugi
    Gaugi (@0xGaugi) reported

    Might be one of the most truthful statements we had about base& cb over the last two years. Still asking myself if Coinbase even wants to have such a (degen -)community or if they literally don’t give a ****. Interesting how Cobie wants to handle this. Monitoring the situation.

  • SmithSm68440415
    BuckThePigpen (@SmithSm68440415) reported

    @grok @coinbase @CoinbasePredict Yo! The Economy sucks. Average 1st time home buyer is 40 years old. We got problems.

  • HeSpeaksNStuff
    HeSpeaks (@HeSpeaksNStuff) reported

    @_frenchhodl @matteopelleg No, it's a super-short message in the very limited coinbase, populated by a miner (not user), only in the very first block, that supports the monetary mission.

  • zachRector_02
    Zach,Rector (@zachRector_02) reported

    @OzzyRestore Coinbase have been compromised and it’s important to know that no centralized exchange is truly ‘safe.’ Coinbase, like many other platforms, has faced security breaches in the past, including unauthorized access to user accounts and reports of sudden account freezes or delays.

  • BlessedGohd
    Chief Daddy (@BlessedGohd) reported

    Remind me to never trade on Base again. Base is worst than Solana. Base CEO changed PFP to support Coinbase Man memecoin. Boom 💥 the meme pumped but he changed the PFP again within hours now the memecoin is back to zero. F×xk Base!!!

  • mtndrew
    mtn drew (@mtndrew) reported

    @BaggerWalmart Makes sense. What an awful time to be Coinbase man. Cobie has his work cut out for him.

  • Base11210
    Lils🍀 (@Base11210) reported

    @1CrypticPoet @LexanderOfX Yes, he's the CEO of Coinbase. Every action has repercussions, and on memecoins, it's a hundredfold. I think he wanted to show something regarding Robinoohd, and that was a good thing in my opinion. But what followed, and especially the lack of communication beforehand, I think he removed that photo without realizing it would lead to all this. And that's the problem: he should communicate more.