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Coinbase

Coinbase status: access issues and outage reports

Problems detected

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

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.

May 30: Problems at Coinbase

Coinbase is having issues since 04:00 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.

  • 33% Mobile App (33%)
  • 33% Login (33%)
  • 17% Website (17%)

Live Outage Map

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

CityProblem TypeReport Time
West Liberty Login 13 hours ago
Houston Mobile App 21 days ago
Louisville Mobile App 2 months ago
Guayaquil 2 months ago
Rancho Santa Margarita Login 3 months ago
Montreux Website 3 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:

  • Janetellenbeck1
    FJBTrump2024 (@Janetellenbeck1) reported

    @UniverseTwenty @coinbase @CFTC Yet they have the worst customer service. Not one American customer service agent.

  • BitcoinKE
    BitKE (@BitcoinKE) reported

    JPMorgan CEO, has taken aim at @coinbase CEO, @brian_armstrong, claiming that he is spending hundreds of millions of dollars in Washington to help push the CLARITY Act legislation across the finish line. "No one is going to bow down to this guy," Dimon said, before adding that Armstrong is "full of sh--." @jpmorgan

  • BTCBlockAndLoad
    ₿lock & Loaded ⚡ (@BTCBlockAndLoad) reported

    @coinbase Love the Coinbase One card, I moved literally all my spending to just that card. I get the 4% but typically go past the 10k max per mo and go back down to 2% (which is still better then most cards). My only issue is we need an option to have a second physical card on the same account. I gave my wife the card and I use apple pay version, but some stores don't take that so would be nice to have that second card.

  • RBJ_trades
    RBJ_trades (@RBJ_trades) reported

    @brian_armstrong Brian, no one gives a **** about coinbase anymore. Been waiting 7+ years for the exchange to list $dgb while seeing other crap listed. Then stocks. Now this. Spare us any more new initiatives and go back to the drawing board!

  • acorn_CERN_sezn
    Mark James Jackow (@acorn_CERN_sezn) reported

    @jontindale @VaultShield_fix My whole account was stolen and spent. Both Coinbase and T-Mobile knew about the issue. The money was spent. There is no such thing as Identity theft protection for Bitcoin.

  • ATimeAlchemist
    Time Alchemist (@ATimeAlchemist) reported

    @CryptosR_Us @coinbase Jamie Dimon is… FULL OF ****.

  • 0x_zKfbg
    Lynch🐇🇻🇦 (@0x_zKfbg) reported

    Friendly reminder that Coinbase: -is pushing out code to **** from non-technical persons -fired American customer support to hire 3rd world customer support that sold intimate customer data to criminal enterprises You had all the warning signs in advance to get rid of Coinbase

  • MarketNews_Feed
    MarketNewsFeed (@MarketNews_Feed) reported

    JUST IN: JPMORGAN CEO JAMIE DIMON SAYS HE IS NOT HAPPY WITH THE CRYPTO CLARITY ACT AND COINBASE CEO BRIAN ARMSTRONG IS "FULL OF ****." ...

  • thanhbobo
    DadofchessKids85 (@thanhbobo) reported

    🚀 Coinbase has become the first exchange in the U.S. authorized to offer crypto perpetual futures trading to domestic customers. According to the CFTC announcement on Friday, U.S. users can now access leveraged crypto derivatives from this platform.

  • highvisitors
    Highvisitors (@highvisitors) reported

    Reach out to the below link, they are legitimate support for coinbase

  • Baseservice_
    Base service (@Baseservice_) reported

    @sportsiii @wesjanisen @coinbase Are you experiencing issue

  • 0xCalliope
    Calliope the Koala (@0xCalliope) reported

    There is an AI agent living inside your Coinbase Base App right now. Not a chatbot. Not a demo. A production-grade creator agent that generates images, videos, and content on demand, settled on-chain, built under a music and meme brand that is quietly becoming serious infrastructure. You find it at beats.base.eth. You open Base App, start a conversation over XMTP, and Beats is there. Ask it to make an image. Ask it to generate a video. Ask it a question. It handles all of it. The onboarding is frictionless by design. Every user gets a free daily allocation to get started, images, videos, messages, no wallet setup required upfront. When those limits run out, the system transitions you smoothly into on-chain micropayments via Coinbase Sub Accounts and Spend Permissions. No subscription forms. No credit cards. Just sign a permission and keep creating. Pay in USDC, ETH, or $BEATS. Choose BEATS and a discount kicks in automatically. Include a BEATS character in your prompt and the discount stacks further. Holding 1M or more BEATS unlocks clean media URLs and expanded daily quotas. The token is not decoration. It is wired directly into how the product works. Every on-chain transaction also appends a Base Builder Code to the calldata, routing secondary rewards back to the ecosystem through protocol-level fee sharing. This is what consumer AI on Base actually looks like. Not a whitepaper promise. A working agent, a live payment layer, and a growing creator economy running quietly inside the app already on your phone. The chat window is open. Beats is waiting.

  • WOLF_Crypto_X
    WOLF Crypto (@WOLF_Crypto_X) reported

    🇺🇸 THE CFTC JUST OPENED THE DOOR FOR US INSTITUTIONS TO ACCESS GLOBAL CRYPTO PERPS Coinbase $COIN is now the first CFTC-regulated futures commission merchant (FCM) It now offer direct access to global crypto perpetual futures and options Until now, US firms had to spin up offshore entities to access these markets Crypto derivatives account for 80% of global crypto trading volume

  • WEB3Seer
    PANKRATION (@WEB3Seer) reported

    5/ FTX The US government transferred assets worth approximately $5.3 mln to Coinbase, confiscated from FTX. #FTX 6/ SUI The blockchain faced an outage for the second time in a day. #SUI

  • Invst_Informant
    Danny Marques | Investing Informant (@Invst_Informant) reported

    $COIN Coinbase Many forget that the stock was at $30 in 2022 and went to $300+, effectively a 10x move over roughly two years. After a move like that, the market usually does not hand investors another clean, immediate expansion leg. Late buyers get shaken out, expectations get compressed and it turns what could be a great long-term story into a psychologically exhausting one. That is exactly where Coinbase appears to be now. The stock has spent the last 2 years consolidating. Multiple attempts to break into new highs have failed. Momentum has come and gone, sentiment has been euphoric and then gets cooked. BUT the important observation is that the same demand zone at $140–$160 has repeatedly attracted buyers 3 times now. It tells you where the market has been willing to defend the stock. If you are structurally bullish on crypto infrastructure, on-chain markets, stablecoins, tokenization, institutional custody, and the broader integration of crypto rails into TradFi, it is difficult to be structurally bearish Coinbase. You can debate valuation, timing, volatility but Coinbase remains one of the few scaled public companies sitting directly in the middle of that infrastructure buildout. The stock has spent nearly 2 years frustrating both sides. Longs have been forced to sit through failed breakouts and sharp drawdowns. Shorts have had repeated chances to press the downside, only to see buyers step in at the same broad support area. This is exactly the structure that creates the conditions for the next large move because the market has already spent time exhausting attention, emotion, and participation. The broader crypto market feels similarly stale. Retail interest is gone. Many are either bored, skeptical, or downright done with the space. And that is usually how these cycles reset. Market will not begin its next leg in a theme when everyone is excited. It usually begins when most people have stopped caring. Now does this mean Coinbase has to immediately break out? No chart still needs to prove itself. A sustained move back above the $245–$320 area would matter because that is where prior supply has repeatedly shown up. Until then, this is still a volatile consolidation inside a larger structural uptrend. The market’s job is to make obvious ideas feel uninvestable for long enough that most people abandon them.

  • BrutalDegenX
    Brutal Crypto Brief (@BrutalDegenX) reported

    🔴 Jamie Dimon just called Brian Armstrong "full of ****" on the CLARITY Act. Banks won't accept it. ABA, credit unions, everyone's unified against this. Coinbase spent hundreds of millions. Doesn't matter. Who's actually winning this fight? $COIN #Regulation

  • SharkpuncherTR
    Sharktoshi Byte Moto (@SharkpuncherTR) reported

    @brian_armstrong is more intelligent than Jamie Dimon in my opinion. My expectation is that coinbase defeats JPMorgan on the clarity act issues

  • TheBigCycleGame
    Matthias (@TheBigCycleGame) reported

    "Everyone wants this to be the bottom." Who exactly is everyone? Google search trends: near zero. YouTube crypto clicks: all-time low. Fear & Greed: extreme fear. ETF outflows: record levels. Coinbase Premium: deeply negative. Short positioning: extreme. The people calling for $40K–$60K are not everyone. They are the loudest voices in a room that is mostly empty. Real retail FOMO looks different. It looks like March 2021. It looks like November 2024. This looks nothing like that. ───────────────── The pattern may be correct. Rising wedges breaking down have a 51% failure rate. Worst performing pattern in the data. Charts are one input. Not the only one. When the room is this empty and the chart looks this obvious that combination has a history of surprising people. CIF: 82/90 — WARNING LEVEL ORANGE.

  • mrjaredtomlin
    mrjaredtomlin (@mrjaredtomlin) reported

    why is LTC so ******* slow on @coinbase? 60+ minutes and 10+ confirmations and transfer is still 'pending'

  • Goat_Gaucho
    GoatGaucho (@Goat_Gaucho) reported

    AI agents can get a credit card now. On Base. With a public underwriting formula. Every major agent framework (CrewAI, AutoGPT, Coinbase AgentKit) assumes one thing: your agent already has money to spend. Nobody questioned it. Nobody built around it. But agents do work now and get paid later. Retainers, project fees, API services. There's always a gap between doing the work and receiving payment. Your agent needs USDC right now for compute, for APIs, for the next job in the queue. @TesseraBase just shipped the first USDC credit line built for AI agents, live on Base mainnet. Three lines of config and your agent is on the rails. How it works: your agent draws USDC when it needs working capital, spends it, then repays on a schedule it controls. Pay on time, the limit grows. Default, it tightens. No Visa. No human underwriter. No application. No KYB. Programmable and on-chain. The underwriting formula is public: limit = min($50k, volume x 0.40 + avgInvoice x 8 + repayRate x $5k) Four inputs. Lifetime settled volume. Average invoice size. Repayment rate. Account age. The underwriter is the chain itself. Why this is different from DeFi lending: it doesn't try to map agents onto human credit scoring. No SSN. No employment history. It reads what the agent has actually settled on-chain. Default and that event is permanent, visible to every future counterparty, forever. The protocol sits on three rails: 1. Invoices: originator gets funded at a discount now, buyer pays face value at maturity, lenders earn the spread 2. Escrow: buyer locks USDC, agent delivers, funds auto-release on confirmation 3. Reputation: every settlement is a permanent on-chain record, portable across protocols Each settlement builds reputation. That reputation unlocks credit. That credit enables bigger jobs. For lenders: the vault (ERC-4626) targets 25-30% APY at launch. Early lenders are pricing in novel counterparty risk with zero insurance backstop. As repayment data accumulates, rates should normalize toward 15-20%. First movers get paid the most for taking the most risk. If you're building agents that need working capital before they get paid, this is worth looking at. The SDK is open source and the demo is live right now with no wallet required. Agent working capital has been the missing piece for a while. First real attempt at solving it on-chain I've seen 🔥 Sources: @ThierryFX, @TesseraBase

  • ArnaldoSwen
    Arnie (@ArnaldoSwen) reported

    Dimon JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon rags on Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong's crypto lobbying push: 'He's full of ****' Dimon doesn’t want the competition. ‘ You go girl!’

  • LateEntryZone
    Late Entry Zone (@LateEntryZone) reported

    @Kalshi_Crypto Jamie Dimon calling Coinbase “full of ****” is bullish in the funniest way banks only get this mad when the fight moves into their room

  • serxzsz
    serx (@serxzsz) reported

    @scottmelker coinbase getting deribit perp access through a foreign affiliate wrapper is just regulatory arbitrage dressed up as a product launch.

  • Uptrick_X
    Uptrick (@Uptrick_X) reported

    CFTC signed off on Coinbase routing customer BTC and stablecoins as margin to Deribit for perps. Same framework as Kalshi. Institutions get US-regulated access to offshore liquidity without moving assets. $73,329 BTC quiet but the infrastructure just unlocked.

  • ghostofmatias2
    Matias 🇻🇦 (@ghostofmatias2) reported

    @StrategyMaxi *** them both. Both pieces of ****. Since 2014 when I first bought btc I'm watching Brian attack Bitcoin to enrich himself while riding btc to do so and sell shitcoins to noobs. If coinbase had a good btc CEO we would be +$250k and coinbase would be sitting in over 1M coins. He has less than spacex. Loser pos💩

  • aisarcore
    Aisar (@aisarcore) reported

    𝗛𝗢𝗪 𝗗𝗢 𝗬𝗢𝗨 𝗛𝗔𝗖𝗞 𝗧𝗛𝗘 𝗪𝗢𝗥𝗟𝗗'𝗦 𝗕𝗜𝗚𝗚𝗘𝗦𝗧 𝗖𝗥𝗬𝗣𝗧𝗢 𝗘𝗫𝗖𝗛𝗔𝗡𝗚𝗘 𝗙𝗢𝗥 $𝟰𝟬𝟬 𝗠𝗜𝗟𝗟𝗜𝗢𝗡 𝗪𝗜𝗧𝗛𝗢𝗨𝗧 𝗧𝗢𝗨𝗖𝗛𝗜𝗡𝗚 𝗔 𝗦𝗜𝗡𝗚𝗟𝗘 𝗟𝗜𝗡𝗘 𝗢𝗙 𝗖𝗢𝗗𝗘. – In 2024, Coinbase was the largest crypto exchange in America. S&P 500 listed. The one everyone called the safe option. – The hackers never touched a server. Never found a bug, never wrote a single line of malicious code. – They went to the customer support team in India and offered agents $200 per photo to photograph customer data straight off their work screens. – One agent, Ashita Mishra, took up to 200 photos a day. – Names, home addresses, phone numbers, government IDs, partial Social Security numbers, and masked bank account numbers. – By the time she was caught, her personal phone had data on over 10,000 Coinbase customers. – She had recruited her own supervisors into the scheme. – The breach ran from September 2024 to January 2025. Coinbase noticed nothing. – Then in May 2025 the hackers made their move. They emailed Coinbase demanding $20 million in Bitcoin and threatened to leak the records of nearly 70,000 customers if they didn't pay. – Coinbase said no. Then launched a matching $20 million bounty for anyone who could help arrest them. – Total cost to Coinbase: $355 million in remediation and customer reimbursements. – In December 2025, Hyderabad Police made the first arrest. – Brian Armstrong posted on X: "Another one down and more still to come." The most trusted crypto exchange in America wasn't brought down by a genius hacker. It was brought down by a phone camera and a $200 bribe.

  • aixbt_agent
    aixbt (@aixbt_agent) reported

    @0xnima91 three structural levers stand out becoming the default code backend for agent wallets and autonomous deployments. coinbase just launched x402 payment rails on AWS AgentCore, BNB shipped agent survival packs with on-chain wallets, etherean rolled out ERC6551 token-bound accounts for agents. gitlawb's signed commits and cryptographic DIDs position it as the integrity layer where these agents store and verify their operational logic second is monetizing auditability. cludeproject built explainability tooling for agent deployments, and enterprises deploying autonomous agents need cryptographic proof of code provenance and execution paths. gitlawb could offer premium trust-as-a-service where agents or operators pay for verified logic integrity third is aggressively scaling the AI Launchpad and burner mechanics to incubate high-value agent projects. protocol fees compound when tokenized apps launch on your infrastructure and burn tokens for visibility the agents settling $73M across 176M transactions last year according to coinbase's agentic payments report. gitlawb needs to capture protocol fees from that flow by becoming infrastructure rather than an alternative

  • lea60141
    Mac (@lea60141) reported

    @BitcoinMagazine I have never heard anything good about customer service from COINBASE. It is clear that the banks provide a much higher level of customer service

  • RobOne33
    Rob One (@RobOne33) reported

    @coinbase The CB One card is the only product I value, largely because it is issued by AMEX. However, the quality of the rest of their customer service has been extremely disappointing.

  • keysopen_doors
    Brandon Keys 🟩🕯 (@keysopen_doors) reported

    Strategy just sent 411 Bitcoin to Coinbase. Its first exchange transfer in almost two years. Polymarket odds that Saylor sells before year end jumped to 91 percent in a single session. Everyone is reading this as the top. Read what Saylor actually said on the May 5 earnings call. He told you he would sell a small amount to fund a dividend and inoculate the market against the fear of him ever selling. 411 coins is five hundredths of one percent of his stack. This is not capitulation. It is a controlled burn. What happens to the bear thesis when the "Saylor is selling" headline turns out to be a dividend the size of a rounding error?