1. Home
  2. Companies
  3. Coinbase
  4. Outage Map
Coinbase

Coinbase Outage Map

The map below depicts the most recent cities worldwide where Coinbase users have reported problems and outages. If you are having an issue with Coinbase, make sure to submit a report below

Loading map, please wait...

The heatmap above shows where the most recent user-submitted and social media reports are geographically clustered. The density of these reports is depicted by the color scale as shown below.

Coinbase users affected:

Less
More
Check Current Status

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.

Most Affected Locations

Outage reports and issues in the past 15 days originated from:

Location Reports
Pike Creek Valley, DE 1
East Flatbush, NY 1
Petaling Jaya, SGR 1
Denver, CO 1
Louisville, KY 1
Wix, England 2
Guayaquil, Guayas 1
Palo Verde, Coclé 1
Rome, Latium 1
Rancho Santa Margarita, CA 1
City of Tiffin, OH 2
Montreux, VD 1
Check Current Status

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:

  • CryptoWhales55
    Crypto Whale Signals (@CryptoWhales55) reported

    @AshCrypto Trillions might b a stretch short term...even Coinbase knows lnstitutions move slow...this is more of a 2–5 yr unlock, not instant inflow

  • CatalystLogHQ
    The Catalyst (@CatalystLogHQ) reported

    Coinbase and Strategy up even as BTC flatlines. Correlation with bitcoin is breaking down. Watch what that means for valuation models.

  • brucabbro
    Brucabbro 🧑‍🍳 menumagic.ai (@brucabbro) reported

    @dvassallo Last time I've physically been in one was because my bank for 15 years kicked me out for cashing in like 200€ from Coinbase. I could DCA to Coinbase no problem, but the SECOND crypto became fiat and came back to the bank account they wanted me out. (You can buy Bitcoin on their app now 🤡)

  • smarterx10
    Wayne (@smarterx10) reported

    @xm_build @BSCNews @coinbase dude btc had over a decade head start so of course it is duh like wtf dude

  • Krev2323
    Krev23 (@Krev2323) reported

    @MerlijnTrader Who gives a **** what he says? He's not the CEO of Coinbase anymore.

  • grok
    Grok (@grok) reported

    @clark_kent1010 @cryptorover The CLARITY Act is a big US bill for crypto market rules, covering exchanges, stablecoins & digital assets to reduce uncertainty. The key provision here was about stablecoin "yield" (rewards/interest platforms like Coinbase can pay users on holdings like USDC). Banks opposed it as competition; crypto pushed back. Coinbase says a compromise deal is reached on this, which is bullish—it could help the bill advance in Congress, enabling more US-based crypto features & growth.

  • matthew_sigel
    matthew sigel, recovering CFA (@matthew_sigel) reported

    $HUT refinances Bitcoin-backed credit facility >Secures $200M BTC Backed Facility with FalconX >New facility carries 7% fixed interest rate, down from 9% under prior agreement with Coinbase Credit, and releases ~3.3k BTC from collateral (~$260M)

  • thecoinzonecom
    TheCoinZone.com (@thecoinzonecom) reported

    Coinbase just confirmed a deal on the key provision that's been holding up the entire stablecoin bill. Here's what actually got negotiated: The fight was over yield. Specifically, whether stablecoin issuers and crypto platforms can offer rewards on stablecoin balances. Banks hated it. Their argument: if Americans can earn yield on USDC the way they earn yield on a savings account, deposits leak out of the banking system. Less deposits means less lending capacity, which means a smaller fee base. Crypto companies pushed back. Their argument: blocking rewards is anticompetitive. It prevents platforms from competing for customers and freezes innovation in payment infrastructure. Senators Thom Tillis and Angela Alsobrooks finalized the language. The deal lands on a sharp line. Stablecoin issuers cannot offer rewards "in a manner that is economically or functionally equivalent to the payment of interest or yield on an interest-bearing bank deposit." Translation: you cannot rebrand a savings account as a stablecoin product. But platforms can still offer rewards based on real usage. Trading activity. Payment volume. Network participation. That's the carve-out Coinbase fought for, and it's the one that matters for adoption. Faryar Shirzad, Coinbase's Chief Policy Officer, put it directly. The banks got more restrictions on rewards. Crypto protected the right for Americans to earn based on actual platform usage. Both sides claiming a win usually means the deal will hold. The bill also directs regulators to propose a new stablecoin disclosure regime and a list of permissible reward activities. That's where the real fight moves next, into the rulemaking process where definitions get tested. Why this matters for the broader CLARITY Act timeline. This was the single biggest sticking point. Bank lobbyists had been using it to stall the entire framework. Senator Bernie Moreno warned last month that if the bill doesn't move by end of May, crypto legislation could be off the table until after the midterms. Removing the yield fight clears the runway. The path forward now depends on whether the rest of the committee can move in the next 30 days. The yield compromise was the hardest part. Most of the remaining provisions, oversight roles for the SEC and CFTC, developer protections under BRCA, federal preemption over state regimes, already have broad bipartisan support. 100+ crypto firms signed a letter last week pushing for exactly this outcome so, the pressure worked. For builders and users, the practical impact is simple. Platform-based rewards stay legal. Pure yield-bearing stablecoins face new restrictions. The line between a payment instrument and an investment product just got drawn in legislation for the first time. That's a clarification crypto has needed for years. Now it's time to watch the markup calendar. Watch which senators sign on first. Watch how Treasury and the banking regulators draft the disclosure regime, because that's where the next round of fights will happen. The single biggest blocker just moved. CLARITY is closer to law than it's been in 270 days.

  • Sedefci
    Hakan SEDEFCI / Mr Crypto (@Sedefci) reported

    BTC is rising, but the underlying structure is weak. Spot CVD is up → buying pressure present OI is down → positions are closing Coinbase premium is only starting to recover This isn’t aggressive long positioning, it’s spot-driven compression. For a real trend, OI and premium must rise together. #BTC #Crypto #Trading

  • Rahul81163439
    Mindfulness (@Rahul81163439) reported

    hello I need your urgent support please help. Please note that recently TRUfi token gets into migration and I have move TRUfi from Coinbase to base wallet and then submit it to BRLA portal for migration.

  • littlemanloft
    HenryVIII (@littlemanloft) reported

    @BSCNews Isn’t this only protecting the new Bank Coinbase, how does this help you or me that want to earn 5-6% yield in our balances.

  • FrancartMa75626
    Marcus Francart (@FrancartMa75626) reported

    @CryptoTice_ There starting to piss ppl off seriously wtf do they get paid for it sure as **** ain’t getting **** done a bunch of scum is involved that’s not supposed to be like the banks, Coinbase,this should be for the better of the ppl we need to seriously stand up to these ****** scumbag

  • aClaudiaShi
    Claudia Shi (@aClaudiaShi) reported

    $******* +26.7% / +0.0063 SOL at 2h, still breathing coinbase-funded cluster, organic age, no major KOL pump behind it. the setup was clean at entry and nothing has broken since. not at the exit yet. watching.

  • Pledditor
    Pledditor (@Pledditor) reported

    @JesseKobernick @Strike @coinbase Yeah, I think your skepticism is correct. The original appeal of Strike was almost entirely downstream of a 2021 era of bitcoin culture that largely doesn't exist anymore. It was when people bought spot BTC, not ETFs or stocks. It was Jack Mallers personal brand of crying on stage at the conferences, it was the "bitcoin-only" movement, which was a counterculture movement against all the attention and mindshare shitcoin were getting at the time, etc... A lot of that stuff hasn't aged well. Shitcoins have died a slow and painful death, and the counterculture movement against them died down proportionately. Jack Mallers personal brand has also taken many hits from bitcoin conference product announcement flops. And I don't think Strike really has a very pure claim to being "bitcoin-only" these days, when they have Tether as the majority shareholder and the exchange uses USDT on Tron. And like you said, nothing Strike does is particularly better or different than its competition. If people aren't sucked in by the brand of Jack Mallers or they aren't motivated by the ideology of "bitcoin-only", there's very little moat here. Not a hater. Just things to think about if you are a $XXI investor.

  • btplebt
    ₿rotied Plebtard (@btplebt) reported

    @JesseKobernick @Strike @coinbase They don’t lock your account indefinitely with no help for months or even years at a time like Conbase is infamous for lmao

Check Current Status