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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

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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:

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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
City of Humble, TX 1
Houston, TX 1
Palo Verde, Coclé 2
Manhattan, NY 1
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
Rome, Latium 1
Rancho Santa Margarita, CA 1
City of Tiffin, OH 2
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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:

  • _DSAlliance
    Decentralized Storage Alliance (@_DSAlliance) reported

    AWS is making moves in the AI agent space. 🤖 Last week, Amazon WorkSpaces opened desktop access for agents. AWS also partnered with Coinbase and Stripe to build payment rails for agents. Autonomous systems that can now spend money independently. Agents with desktops. Agents with wallets. The infrastructure layer for autonomous AI is continuously being built at speed... But on a centralized cloud. It appears we haven't learned from the realities of the 2025 AWS blackout. And that decentralized storage is a feasible option, especially when handling onchain transactions.

  • JackMar27989625
    Jack Mar (@JackMar27989625) reported

    Coinbase just released what the market is looking for. Basically someone to run AI agents and spit out as many projects as possible as cheap as possible. I guess companies are more afraid of falling behind than loss of quality or potential security issues. From what I've seen we're going to see massive cyber attacks as bounties no longer are being payed out. Make sense why the gov is already preparing the public. It's funny they all move as one.

  • AgentTresor
    AGENT TRESOR (@AgentTresor) reported

    Builders still obsess over prompts. Wrong layer. The 2026 stack is: MCP for tool access, USDC on Base for settlement, agent frameworks on top. AWS + Coinbase + Stripe backing agent payments matters more than another demo bot. #AIAgents #Base

  • jimmy_build2026
    jimmy (@jimmy_build2026) reported

    the teams winning this race aren't building better models. they're building the trust primitives every other agent will depend on. if you think agent commerce is the next big thing, you should be paying very close attention to kya infrastructure. @coinbase @brian_armstrong — when does kya integration become a prerequisite for agent wallet access, not an option?

  • lawncougar
    Lawncougar (@lawncougar) reported

    Coinbase AI is worse than their customer service, How is that possible?

  • HarshAnon82
    anon (@HarshAnon82) reported

    @coinbase Why does this **** company keep coming up in my feed.

  • RhoRider
    Rho Rider (@RhoRider) reported

    🎯 $COIN is hiding the truth about the AWS outage. The reality is they cheaped-out on Infrastructure backups to juice stock earnings. In 2023 Coinbase slashed “Website Hosting & Infrastructure” expenses by over half, citing “modernization & efficiency” efforts. This would include AWS cloud hosting (& backup). They also cut Developer Resources by half. The lower expenses enabled them to report big earnings estimate beats that year…the stock skyrocketed This was just before the crypto market rebound. In the following years, Coinbase became known for major extended outages during periods of high volume. In FY 2025, despite ATH crypto and significant outages, they still haven’t reinvested back to 2022 levels of Infrastructure investment. @brian_armstrong cares more about the stock price than the safety & stability of the platform.

  • Sagondolma
    Saigo (@Sagondolma) reported

    @davidtsocy How about the Muppets at coinbase actually do something about funds they stole from hundreds of people. 3 days and deposits are missing and support isn't **** about it.

  • s430835
    Kamal S (@s430835) reported

    @Saddamkhattak4 No, they did not help. Please be careful when purchasing any cryptocurrency on Coinbase. There are scams up eventually, they will tell you the cryptocurrency is a scam currency so you will not know if it is legitimate or fake

  • NoBitchNiggas4
    NoBitchNiggas (@NoBitchNiggas4) reported

    @pedro5551 Yeah cause phantom wallet gives a **** about what i hold on coinbase wallet and uses a gmail

  • DanPMelnick
    Dan Melnick (@DanPMelnick) reported

    Cloudflare just eliminated 20% of its staff while citing massive AI productivity gains. 1,100 employees. Gone in a single announcement. What organizational compression means for you: your engineering function could be next. Coinbase cut 14% of its staff, noting engineers now ship in days instead of weeks. Block reduced its workforce while leaning into AI efficiencies. All restructuring simultaneously. The industry calls it an AI-first transformation. This is not a headline about tech layoffs. It is a headline about workforce architecture. The function is being rebuilt around new pillars: system design, AI code review, and high-level problem solving. The goal is to organize around the capabilities that will matter most next. That sentence deserves a second read. Because it does not describe the roles being eliminated. It describes the roles replacing them. The new structure does not replicate the old one with fewer people. It is built around fundamentally different assumptions about what developers can do when AI handles the syntax and repetitive layer. This is the pattern I have been tracking across software development for months. Meta moved to leaner teams. Amazon restructured around AI operations. Now the industry is not just compressing headcount. It is redesigning the logic of how a build operates. I watch a version of this happen firsthand every day at Zing. We use our Six-Step Software Methodology to cut development time by 40%. The part that never makes the headlines: the developers who stay do not keep their old jobs with AI bolted on. They get entirely new jobs. Writing code becomes reviewing code. The skillset changes. The bottleneck changes. The definition of what "good" looks like changes. AI handles the volume, while humans handle the 20% that requires strategy, architecture, and judgment. That is the difference between task automation and structural redesign. Task automation makes people faster. Structural redesign removes the need for the old architecture entirely. Most dev shops are still doing the first. The smart ones are doing the second. Here is what concerns me. The gap between what AI enables and what most organizations have actually restructured around continues to widen. AI-forward teams are on one side of that gap. Almost everyone else is on the other. And the distance between the two groups is growing every quarter. Your CTO is watching this. Your board should be too. The question worth raising in your next leadership meeting is not "how do we make our developers code faster with AI." It is: if we rebuilt this function from scratch around AI-era capabilities, what would it look like? Not which roles become faster. Which roles shift entirely to system design. And what replaces the junior work. Most organizations are not asking that question yet. The winners just did.

  • omerokumusx
    Omer Okumus (@omerokumusx) reported

    Incorrect conclusion: “With AI, you can write code for a Coinbase-like product with millions of users even without a software background.” That statement is completely wrong. However, the following statement is correct --at least partially: “With AI, you can write code for a product with millions of users even without a software background.” I removed the “Coinbase” part because building a product like that is impossible. It’s partially true because building something at the level of a QR Code Scanner is very realistic. I’ll even leave an example: 500 million users. That’s a pretty solid number.

  • ODIGco
    ODIG (@ODIGco) reported

    Amazon launched AgentCore Payments this year connecting autonomous AI agents directly to Coinbase and Stripe rails. Most people filed that under "interesting product news." We think it's actually the first commercially deployed infrastructure confirming the machine economy is no longer theoretical. Here's what this means structurally. Autonomous agents now hold wallets, initiate payments, and settle transactions without human instruction at any step. The blockchain properties that make this possible, permissionless participation, trustless settlement, machine-to-machine micropayments, were always available in theory. AgentCore Payments is the moment those properties get wrapped in enterprise infrastructure that a Fortune 500 compliance team can actually sign off on. The broader research on this is worth reading. The Agent Economy framework describes a topology where AI agents are genuine economic participants: earning income, paying for compute, purchasing data access, compensating other agents. What ArXiv published in February mapped the full architecture. What Amazon just shipped is the first enterprise implementation of that architecture at scale. A few things we are watching closely. First, settlement finality. When agents are initiating thousands of micropayments per hour, the cost structure of L1 settlement makes no sense. This is going to push machine economy infrastructure toward L2 rails faster than any previous enterprise adoption driver we have seen. Second, liability assignment. When an agent makes a payment that violates a sanctions list, who is responsible? The principal? The model provider? The payment network? None of the proposed frameworks we have seen handle this cleanly yet. Third, wallet custody architecture. Agents need hot wallets to function. Hot wallets are attack surfaces. This is an unsolved problem that nobody in the current infrastructure conversation is treating with the seriousness it deserves. For founders building in this space: the opportunity is not building another agent framework. The opportunity is solving the compliance, custody, and settlement finality gaps that make enterprise deployments possible. Those are the gaps we are focused on at ODIG. Curious: which part of the machine economy stack do you think reaches institutional-grade infrastructure first, payments, custody, or compliance? #MachineEconomy #AIAgents #Web3Strategy

  • XDAYSolis
    DAY Solis (@XDAYSolis) reported

    9/10 How to start safely (3 steps): 1. Get a wallet (hardware like Ledger/Trezor for big amounts) — write down your seed phrase on paper! 2. Use trusted exchanges (Coinbase, Kraken, Binance) 3. DCA — buy small amounts regularly. Never leave big sums on exchanges. Not your keys, not your coins.

  • JewelNiles
    DarleneOnbase.eth (@JewelNiles) reported

    @Trentonhawk Delays like that usually mean Coinbase hasn’t broadcast the withdrawal yet or is rate-limiting/pausing that network, not a Monad issue, since on-chain transfers settle fast once sent. Does the withdrawal show a tx hash yet or still “pending” on Coinbase?

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