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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.

At the moment, we haven't detected any problems at Coinbase. Are you experiencing issues or an outage? 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 26 days ago
Maquoketa Website 1 month ago
West Liberty Login 1 month ago
Houston Mobile App 2 months ago
Louisville Mobile App 3 months ago
Guayaquil 3 months ago
Full Outage Map

Community Discussion

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Coinbase Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • 0x69420_algo
    0x69420❤️Spx6900💹🧲 (@0x69420_algo) reported

    @LukasMau__ Okx , free deposit and withdraw as they are instant. Coinbase and mexc are too slow.

  • 901Fin
    NISOK 🌎🪓 (@901Fin) reported

    @_logjam I think this is a shortsighted way to look at the memes on robinhood. Brett did over a billion on base with no interactions from the team. Robinhood has the potential to onboard more retail investors than any other company or platform in this space and they’re actively building their own crypto infrastructure while the ceo has talked multiple times now about how he loves memes. Whether or not they’re going to directly support memes doesn’t really matter. You have a company 2x the size of coinbase moving onchain There will always be liquidity there. Regardless I would think they do end up doing the right things to help push the floor of their memes upward

  • vbkotecha
    Vivek Kotecha (@vbkotecha) reported

    ERPC just integrated x402 into Solana's mainnet JSON-RPC access. This is the first real-world deployment of pay-per-query blockchain infrastructure for AI agents. Here is how it works. An AI agent or application sends a regular RPC request to Solana without payment information. The server responds with HTTP 402 Payment Required, including the amount and network details. The client adds USDC payment data on Solana. Once the payment is verified, the original RPC query result is delivered. Each Solana RPC method has a different computational weight that determines the price in US dollars. Simple status checks cost less. Data-heavy operations like getProgramAccounts cost more. Minimum payment: $0.001 per request. Replay attacks are prevented by rejecting duplicate transaction signatures. The target users are AI agents, analytics bots, and automated monitoring tools that consume large volumes of data in bursts but do not need continuous subscriptions. No account creation. No API keys. No monthly packages. This matters because it proves x402 works beyond theory. A real infrastructure provider on a major blockchain is now charging per query in stablecoins. The pattern is repeatable across every API on the internet. ERPC leverages Coinbase Developer Platform's x402 facilitator infrastructure for payment verification and reconciliation. The question is not whether pay-per-query becomes standard. It is how fast it spreads from Solana RPC to every other API endpoint agents consume.

  • Mr_Moonbags
    Mr. Moonbags 🌖💰 (@Mr_Moonbags) reported

    @WeedyHerralsun @CoinbaseMarkets The only legit working policy that Coinbase have is the one that makes Brian richer. I got into Crypto because of how easy Coinbase made it. I got out of Crypto because of how badly Coinbase treated customers. Absolute **** show 24/7. Scam market. $wLUNA

  • justinsmokess
    justin (@justinsmokess) reported

    $CRCL I took a scrape on this stock after holding it for almost a year (not a long time I know) but my thesis flipped (Coinbase joining Opencoin or whatever ******** it's called). This your reminder that Coinbase keeps 50% of the revenue Circle makes OFF of it's platform. I'm pretty sure that's getting renegotiated this year, but in my opinion, what leverage does Circle have? Coinbase is about to CREATE AND INTEGRATE A STABLECOIN DENOMINATED IN USD SPECIFICALLY FOR USAGE ON THEIR PLATFORM. COINBASE MAKES 50% OF WHAT CIRCLE MAKES OFF PLATFORM!!! Oh yea, then this story. Bearish in my humble opinion, nobody cares about DeFi *yet* en masse. TAM wise, payments is what you'll win at. OH YEA, and banks will never let a CRYPTO FIRST entity provide direct access to a higher percentage return via interest than their products. ok got it off my chest thanks.

  • scorpioman57
    I don't lie. (@scorpioman57) reported

    @getmerlincrypto I need to really see what I can do to sign up with you guys again because the first time I tried your 30-day trial and never even opened it because I thought coinbase was all I needed now I've learned the hard way I need more help than coinbase can provide🙏💪🇺🇲

  • AWOLDUCE84
    Hector Chavez (@AWOLDUCE84) reported

    @blknoiz06 I have the same question as @RIKO_THE_WHALE_ how does the airdrop work? I'm a eligible through Coinbase or do I need to use a different app/site?

  • cannonbill72
    CannonBill (@cannonbill72) reported

    @rorynotsorry PayPal? Coinbase? They must have a small business service.

  • martypartymusic
    MartyParty (@martypartymusic) reported

    Paul Grewal, Coinbase’s Chief Legal Officer since 2020, announced he’s stepping down from the full-time role after six years. He’ll transition to an advisory role at the end of July 2026 and will continue serving on the board of Coinbase National Trust Company. @iampaulgrewal would you come on a public Space and discuss the 6 year experience for the audience?

  • raremints_
    RAREMINTS (@raremints_) reported

    Market Updates - 07/10/2026 📻 Trending ​​• JPMorgan analysts state that Bitcoin's primary structural threat stems from traditional financial institutions bypassing public networks. • Goldman Sachs has ordered employees to limit their prediction market wagers strictly to sports and entertainment. • Robinhood’s new Ethereum Layer-2 network has dethroned Hyperliquid as the top decentralized exchange by 24-hour trading volume. 💼 Industry News • CryptoQuant says bitcoin rebound remains a bear-market recovery, not a trend reversal. • Coinbase Chief Legal Officer Paul Grewal steps down, remains in advisory role. • BitGo introduces quantum protection for institutional Bitcoin wallets. • Crypto hack losses fall below $1B in H1 2026 despite record attack volume. • Hong Kong SFC orders crypto platforms, online brokers to phase out OTP logins.

  • TinsAndToys
    Eduard Suarasan (@TinsAndToys) reported

    What Actually Happened Pre-Market Both marquee events fizzled into ambiguous reactions. Delta beat and got sold — adjusted EPS of $1.56 topped the $1.48 consensus and revenue beat at $17.67B, and management affirmed its 20% earnings-growth guidance, but the stock fell 2.8% to $86.60 as investors fixated on fuel costs (airlines' jet-fuel bill ran 84% higher year-over-year). Classic sell-the-beat. SK Hynix debuted firm but its complex got sold — SKHYV is trading around $158, up ~6% from the $149 ADR price, holding above the key line, but memory and chip peers (Marvell, Intel, SanDisk) were broadly lower pre-market. Money is rotating into the new name and out of the incumbents — which means the "buy the memory halo" thesis from my morning scan isn't working today. The action moved elsewhere. Two clean discrete catalysts: Vodafone +13% after Xavier Niel took a 16% stake (~$6B) to become its largest shareholder, and Circle +12.5% after the OCC approved it to establish a national trust bank — a real structural expansion for a stablecoin issuer. Crypto turned bid (Strategy +5.6%, Coinbase +3.9%, tracking bitcoin). And the oil-bear case hardened: the IEA now forecasts the first annual oil-demand decline since 2020. Futures are slipping into the open, consistent with the soft SPY bias I flagged (trend-up, but watch SPX 7,506 support / 7,547 breakout).

  • OnchainIns5699
    Onchain Insights (@OnchainIns5699) reported

    Bitcoin has rebounded approximately 11% from a recent low near $57,700 and is trading around $64,000, with $60,000 established as a key support level. Total derivatives demand has recovered from a -650k BTC contraction to neutral levels, spot selling pressure has weakened to its slowest pace since May, and US investor demand (measured by Coinbase Premium Index) has improved from deep negative to -0.062, suggesting early-stage demand recovery during a historically bullish July period; however, the Bull Score Index remains at 20, well below the 60+ threshold needed for sustainable uptrend confirmation, indicating the recovery is occurring within an still-extremely-bearish broader context. $BTC #BTC #ETF

  • web3_antivirus
    Web3 Antivirus (@web3_antivirus) reported

    A new malware framework called Avalon is being delivered through a multi-stage phishing chain built around a spoofed legal email and a password-protected archive. If the victim opens the doc shortcut inside, the infection can move from credential theft to remote access, recovery disruption and finally ransomware through its CrownX component. Avalon is designed to collect data from browser profiles and wallet apps, including MetaMask, Phantom, Coinbase Wallet, Exodus, Electrum, Atomic Wallet, Ledger Live and Bitcoin Core.

  • 0x_Davide
    0xDavide (@0x_Davide) reported

    🪂In this post, I provide my interpretations of $GRVT and how to make your choice (1x, 2x, 4x) before July 17th. Topics covered: - Nonlinear distribution method (what it usually means). - Meaning of boost (vesting). - How it impacts the price. NONLINEAR DISTRIBUTION What does "nonlinear distribution" mean? Let's start with the "linear" distribution, which means that 1 point is worth a certain number of $GRVT. If we assume that 1 point is worth 2 tokens, if you have 100 points, you have 200 $GRVT. If you have 200 points, you have 400 $GRVT. This is a linear distribution (it is mathematically proportional to the points). A NON-linear distribution means something like this: 1) Tier 1: from 1 point to 100 points = 50 $GRVT. 2) Tier 2: from 101 points to 1000 points = 300 $GRVT. 3) Tier 3: from 1001 points to 10,000 points = 4,000 $GRVT (the number of points and $GRVT for each tier is just a random example). What does this mean? It means that a user with 100 points gets 50 $GRVT, while a user with 101 points could get 300 $GRVT. Non-linear distributions are more decentralized but have the problem of multi-addresses (sybil). Technically, those who use multiple addresses have a huge advantage. Generally, these distributions reward small addresses to the detriment of whales (but this will be a team decision). Another advantage is that they have a maximum "hard cap" (this usually reduces large whale allocations. Essentially, if the final tier is 100k-500k points (example), if you have 1M points... you will be among those with 100k-500k tier points). ALLOCATION (BOOST/VESTING) Essentially, if the supply doesn't increase (28%), what happens is simply vesting. You can't produce tokens from scratch. Imagine your final allocation is 1,000 $GRVT (normally, without boosting, without this system). With this system (1x, 2x, 4x), it becomes: - 250 $GRVT (at TGE). - 500 $GRVT (after 4 months). - 1,000 $GRVT (after 8 months). You receive what you're entitled to, 100%, but only 8 months later (vesting). The tokens aren't actually increased/boosted. Why? Because the supply is always the same (if there are 280M $GRVT, the number is always the same. If everyone chose 2x or 4x, it would mean increasing the $GRVT supply). Other things to consider: 1) A system like this (vesting) reduces the supply at TGE (so the price/mcap could be higher than it would have been without vesting/boost). Essentially, a 2x allocation is fine if you believe $GRVT won't lose more than 50% in the four months following TGE. 2) Coinbase appears to be listing the token. 3) VCs will receive tokens at very low prices, so they could theoretically short the token.

  • sathaxe
    kartik (@sathaxe) reported

    Betting is to fintech as short-form video is to social media. It is a parasite that will keep spreading whether you like it or not. I have no problem with people betting on Kalshi because that’s what they download the app for. But I do take issue with Robinhood, Coinbase, or eventually Chase constantly notifying us that there’s a game on right now that we can bet on. Almost nobody has morals, or loses them once the competition gets hard enough, and we all pay the price. Our attention has been hijacked for a while but now seeing it through the lens of our kids and how everything from bastards like cocomelon who purposely build destructive content to rot the next generations’ brains for dollars to streaming video platforms that - even when you turn auto play off - forcefully suggest the next thing to watch instead of just letting you go about your day. I’m now comfortable calling it evil. If you work everyday on ruining peoples lives you should cash out, touch grass, and become a productive member of society. We will forgive you if you see the light.

  • bitcoinwell
    Bitcoin Well (@bitcoinwell) reported

    Bitcoin dropped about 20% last month. Wall Street's clients spent it handing their coins back to an exchange. We spent it onboarding people taking custody of their own. You see, the timeline this week is all outflows. Spot ETFs bleeding, BlackRock's clients moving Bitcoin into Coinbase, a billion dollars in leverage liquidated. That is the paper layer doing what paper does in a drawdown. It runs for the exit, because the exit is the whole reason it exists. Now look off the timeline. In that same down month, over 2,100 new people opened a non-custodial Bitcoin account with us, pushing total signups past 77,000, up roughly 58% year over year. Active customers grew 12%. Gross profit rose 32% to an estimated $364,000, while the price fell 20%. "Bear markets are for building," says our founder Adam O'Brien. Consider these numbers the receipt. A custodial holder can only sell. A key holder can keep stacking, keep transacting, keep owning, whatever the chart does. Tourists sell the paper. Owners keep the keys.

  • mindinpanic
    Volodymyr Pavlenko (@mindinpanic) reported

    @Reuters prediction markets on Coinbase going down is the last thing that sector needs right now. trust is fragile enough as is

  • equityledger
    Equity Ledger (@equityledger) reported

    Visa and Mastercard Did Not Miss the Stablecoin. They Convened It. A bank-and-card consortium launched Open USD on June 30 and the tape read the incumbents as disrupted. They are building the tollbooth on the road the AI agents have to drive. The card networks are priced on volume that runs across plastic, cards swiped and taps counted with an interchange take on the total. So when a stablecoin can move a dollar from payer to payee in seconds with the settlement fee rounding to zero, the reflex is that the token routes around the toll, and the networks shrink to whatever legacy volume has not yet migrated. That is the fear, and it is why the incumbents trade like the disrupted rather than the disruptor. That fear found its catalyst on June 30, when a 140-partner consortium launched Open USD, jointly governed rather than single-issuer, and the backers were not the crypto-native names you would expect to lead a stablecoin. They were Visa, Mastercard, Stripe, BlackRock, Coinbase, Ripple and Google (Fortune). Circle, the incumbent behind USDC, fell nearly 16% the same day to about $64 (Decrypt), and the story wrote itself as a token price war over reserve yield. A price war is the wrong contest to watch. Three weeks earlier, on June 10, Mastercard had launched Agent Pay for Machines, a rail built for AI agents and machines to pay one another at machine speed, settling across cards, bank accounts and stablecoins, with 30-plus partners credentialed on Polygon, Solana and Base (CoinDesk). Read those two moves together and the picture inverts. The network is not defending card volume against stablecoins. It is building the layer where autonomous agents authenticate, get spending rules enforced, and settle, on top of a compliant token it helped stand up. Price and fact part ways here. The market is pricing the networks on the card box while they position to tax the settlement layer of the agent economy, where the token that wins is the one distribution already stands behind, not the one with the most elegant protocol. Taxing that layer works because of what an agent actually needs to transact, which is not the cheapest ledger. It needs a merchant that will accept the payment, proof it is authorized to spend, and a counterparty that trusts the instrument. The merchant graph, the acceptance footprint, the credentialing and dispute machinery, that is the asset, and the card networks spent sixty years building it. A stablecoin is a settlement primitive; acceptance at scale is a distribution business. When Mastercard’s own service authenticates the agent, the token underneath becomes interchangeable plumbing, and the fee accrues to the layer that owns the routing, not the one that holds the reserve. For the network to put its name on that token, the compliant piece matters more than it looks. The GENIUS Act was signed on July 18, 2025, and its permitted-payment-stablecoin framework is in active rulemaking, with six federal agencies working to finalize implementing rules by the July 18, 2026 statutory deadline (OCC). That statute is why a regulated network could put its name on a stablecoin without vertigo, converting it from a thing incumbents must defend against into a product they are permitted to ship. Open USD is what a permitted payment stablecoin looks like when the permission finally exists, which is why the incumbents, not the disruptors, convened it. The permission is real, and so is the demand under it. Through the first week of July, US spot-Bitcoin ETFs took in about $221.7 million in a single day, the largest inflow in two months and the end of a ten-session outflow streak (CoinDesk). Price barely moved, so the institutional bid for regulated digital-asset exposure is showing up even on weak tape, the same appetite that will route agent settlement through a compliant, network-backed token rather than an unregulated one. That appetite proves the thesis right only through quiet accrual, so watch Open USD acceptance at merchants, and watch Agent Pay volumes and partner count climb past the initial thirty. The thesis is wrong if a 2027 agent-payment or stablecoin scheme routes real volume around interchange at scale, the way ACH once did for certain flows, or if Open USD launches and merchants do not take it. Neither has printed. The networks did not miss their disruption. They convened it, governed it, and built the tollbooth on the road the agents have to drive.

  • scottmelker
    The Wolf Of All Streets (@scottmelker) reported

    COINBASE $COIN CHIEF LEGAL OFFICER PAUL GREWAL TO STEP DOWN AFTER 6 YEARS, TRANSITION TO ADVISORY ROLE

  • Deetroit_Dave
    DAP (insert blue check here) (@Deetroit_Dave) reported

    I need someone @coinbase to call me ASAP!!! I don’t have time for A.I. or chat support!!! This is ridiculous!!!

  • UnknownUser4211
    xxxx (@UnknownUser4211) reported

    @AureaLibe You cannot buy monero in the EU, also buying Bitcoin (atleast in Germany) requires to hand over your full details to the site like Coinbase or Trade Republic. The only option for things like mullvad would be cash in a letter with no return address

  • Currycarrier1
    Currycarrier (@Currycarrier1) reported

    @BoringBiz_ @coinbase Illegal ****

  • flint_66
    FLINT (@flint_66) reported

    Let’s be brutally honest: @base is no longer the high-volume, high-hype network it used to be. And frankly, I don’t see much room left for new user growth. Let’s look at the hard data and trends: 1) Volume is in free fall: Check DeFiLlama or any on-chain analytics. Daily DEX volume on Base has dropped over 60% compared to just 3-4 months ago. Those massive buy walls for memecoins are gone. Most of the remaining volume is just bots and snipers trading amongst themselves—zero real value added to the ecosystem. Without organic volume, no L2 can survive. 2) Zero real new users: Filter out the bot wallets and look at the actual human-active addresses. The numbers are depressing. The first wave of users came purely from the early memecoin hype (Brett, Toshi, etc.). Now that the hype has died down, there’s absolutely no incentive for fresh retail to join. Even their much-hyped airdrops failed to retain users long-term. 3) The endless serial rug-pull factory: Unfortunately, Base has turned into a haven for scam launches. Dozens of useless tokens pop up daily with hollow promises, only to dump and drain retail liquidity. This isn't just eroding trust; it's actively pushing liquidity away to competitors like Solana or even Arbitrum. 4) The biggest issue: No new catalyst: Coinbase isn’t pushing Base aggressively anymore like they did in the beginning. There’s still no real "Killer App" that forces users to bridge over. Everything on Base right now is just the same repetitive DeFi/meme junk, wrapped in a pretty Coinbase-blue brand that has lost its novelty. 5) My personal take: For Base to revive, it needs a fundamental strategy overhaul. Just increasing blockspace and lowering fees won't cut it—every other chain is doing that. If Coinbase can't successfully onboard a massive wave of Web2 users through a simple, genuinely useful app, Base will soon become a ghost chain, echoing with the noise of a few bots trading scraps to each other. Bottom line: For both professional traders and retail newcomers, Base right now is neither safe nor profitable. Its volume is dead, its user growth has stalled, and its hype is a distant memory. Maybe it will bounce back, but with this current trajectory, I’m not holding my breath. 👀 What do you guys think? Is anyone still building productively on it, or has everyone already moved to fresher chains? #base

  • v1nce_base
    v1nce.base.eth (@v1nce_base) reported

    @MLeeJr Or coinbase should have tried to support their builders

  • SteIioKontos
    Stelio Kontos (@SteIioKontos) reported

    @LibertySwapFi @Kaka54553300 @coinbase One man's garbage is another man's treasure😌🚀

  • coltonmoore1029
    Daniel Brooks (@coltonmoore1029) reported

    I’ll only say this once. The stocks most likely to help you become a millionaire in the second half of the year. $ASTS — AST SpaceMobile — Don’t buy $RIVN — Rivian — Don’t buy $COIN — Coinbase — Don’t buy $MU — Micron Technology — Buy at $937-$946 $NVDA — NVIDIA — Buy at $189-$197 $VST — Vistra — Buy at $146-$154 $ORCL — Oracle — Buy at $133-$141 $SHOP — Shopify — Buy at $113-$121

  • GroyperXBT
    Fatman (@GroyperXBT) reported

    JUST IN: COINBASE CHIEF LEGAL OFFICER PAUL GREWAL STEPS DOWN AFTER 6 YEARS

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

    The best time to build is when nobody is watching. Slow markets shake out the noise. The projects that survive are the ones that used the quiet to build something real. That is what is happening with Beats on Base right now. Under the meme. Under the music. Under the koala. There is actual infrastructure. Three live product lanes are running today. BUDDIES is deploying white-label AI agents for crypto communities, replacing off-brand bots with branded, on-chain powered community engines. The Base App Agent is live inside the Coinbase Base App, letting users generate images, videos, and chat through a single AI agent at beats.base.eth, paid for with on-chain micropayments. Beats x402 is the payment middleware layer sitting underneath it all, routing payments across 1,400+ AI models without subscriptions, without API keys, and without asking a human to pull out a credit card. These are not promises. They are live. The $BEATS token threads through all of it. Discount mechanics, hold-to-unlock perks, B2B credit systems, and payment rails that make the whole thing self-sustaining instead of dependent on fiat subscriptions that disappear when markets go sideways. Creator Studio is still in progress, a roadmap-stage generative media suite being built on top of all this existing infrastructure. The foundation gets laid first. The studio comes after. That is the job right now. No moon talk. No made-up milestones. Just builders doing the unglamorous work of wiring infrastructure together before the next cycle makes everybody wish they had paid attention earlier. The market will get loud again. The question is whether something real is underneath the noise when it does.

  • coco__and__co
    Coco & Co. (@coco__and__co) reported

    9/ And here’s the part most people are missing: Stablecoin yield is becoming a customer acquisition channel. Banks spend billions on branches, credit card points, and deposit bonuses. @coinbase can use stablecoin economics.

  • Mister___Q
    Wormwood (@Mister___Q) reported

    @CoinbaseSupport Then you are still a terrible service company. This bad of an experience will get replaced by a competitor that doesn't block and lock your account. My account is moving. I will not have my funds held hostage again by coinbase. Canceled Coinbase One and my Credit Card Soon.