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
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:
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 |
|---|---|
| West Liberty, KY | 1 |
| Cardiff, Wales | 1 |
| Palo Verde, Coclé | 3 |
| City of Humble, TX | 1 |
| Houston, TX | 1 |
| Manhattan, NY | 1 |
| Pike Creek Valley, DE | 1 |
| East Flatbush, NY | 1 |
| Petaling Jaya, SGR | 1 |
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:
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Thrillhouse (@BoyGatorade) reported@0xkrishb I think he gave up trading to work Coinbase customer support We're doomed 😭
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Rauly (@rauly_ap) reportedcoinbase is ******* awful why the ******* does my account keep going under review *****
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Sogle.HL (@thesogle_) reported- Depositing into open public vaults How to grow your crypto by letting Hyperliquid's top traders do the heavy lifting for you Think of public vaults like a community money pool managed by an expert trader. Instead of sitting at your screen all day staring at charts and stressing over numbers, you find a trader who actually knows what they are doing and put your money into their pool. Whenever they make a winning trade, your balance goes up automatically. You don't have to copy their trades manually or click any buttons, the system does it for you in the background. Here is exactly how to get started from scratch. Step 1: Fuel your account Before you can copy anyone, you need some digital dollars in your wallet. - Get yourself a crypto wallet like MetaMask or Coinbase Wallet. - Log into the Hyperliquid platform and connect your wallet. - Deposit some USDC (which is just a digital dollar that stays pegged to $1) into your Hyperliquid account. Step 2: Head over to the vaults section Once your dollars are sitting in your account, look at the top menu on your screen. - Click on the tab that says 'Vaults' - You will see a long list of different pools. Some are run by automated trading bots, and others are run by real, high-performing traders. Step 3: Pick a winning manager This is the most important part. You want to pick someone who makes steady money, not a reckless gambler who doubles their money one day and loses it all the next. Click on different vaults and look at three simple things: - The Profit Chart: Look for a line that goes steadily from the bottom left to the top right. You want consistency, not wild roller coaster spikes. - Total Value Locked (TVL): This tells you how much total money other people have trusted this specific manager with. A higher number usually means the community trusts them. - The Manager's Cut: Look at the profit share percentage. Most top managers take a 10% cut of the 'profits' they make for you. If they don't make you money, they don't get paid. Step 4: Deposit your funds Once you find a trader you like, it takes two clicks to get your money working. - Click the 'Deposit' button inside that specific vault. - Type in how many dollars you want to allocate to them. You don't have to put everything in, you can start with a small test amount. - Confirm the transaction. Step 5: Sit back and monitor Your job is officially done. The protocol takes your dollars and automatically mirrors every single move that trader makes. - You can log in whenever you want to see your total balance change in real-time. - If the trader goes on a massive winning streak, your balance grows. - How to leave: If you ever change your mind or want your cash back, just hit the 'Withdraw' button inside that same vault. Your money pops right back into your main account balance instantly. Hyperliquid.
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nbonga (@nbonga1) reportedlol wtf happening with Zcash huge coinbase spot buyer or some ****?
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Groetjes (@LennSmit) reported@krakenfx anyone can help me? I switch from Coinbase thru kraken and did a low deposit to check. But for now I will definitely stay on Coinbase… I wait already 24 hours for a payment in ETH on kraken.
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RogueDeadGuy (@BartolomeoGuy1) reported@brian_armstrong @coinbase @HyperliquidX Your company stock is down over 50%. Buybacks? Announcements with AI? Anything to overcome the horrible sentiment that makes this tied at the mercy of Bitcoin?
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Kilo-Whiskey-Bravo Eagle-One (@EagleOneWhiskey) reported@coinbase Wow, outside of U.S.? WTF man!??
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Coinbase Markets 🛡️ (@CoinbaseMarkets) reportedToday, Coinbase has added support for ETH-INR and SOL-INR for our users based in India. ETH-INR and SOL-INR will be available on Coinbase Exchange at launch and support will be rolled out gradually across Coinbase․com, the Coinbase app, and Coinbase Advanced.
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Gene Paradis (@geneparadis) reported@USA_WTH @coinbase I have had a lot of difficulty to logging in to coin base. Just recently I took my time and was able to log in. I will be soon try logging in and out often to see if that helps making it easier to log in.
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SonOfaRichard (@heythereRich) reportedWhere Did All Coinbase’s XRP Go? Most likely: Coinbase Prime institutional custody restructuring, not retail outflows, although a lot of people were pissed at Brian Armstrong over the last several months. The reduction from 970M XRP across 60 cold wallets down to 165M in 10 wallets is likely institutional outflows, possibly via Coinbase’s partnership connected with BlackRock’s Aladdin platform, redirecting XRP to liquidity corridors, ETFs, or trust structures.  Coinbase Custody and Prime together support 420+ assets for institutional cold-storage custody.  $XRP moving off the exchange’s visible on-chain wallets into Prime custody structures wouldn’t show up as publicly trackable reserves. it disappears from the rich list but doesn’t leave Coinbase’s ecosystem. institutions taking self-custody through Prime is the most likely explanation, not Coinbase selling or abandoning XRP. More supply is getting ******* long term.
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Jeff Swanson (@theswansjr) reportedOne question tells you whether you actually own Bitcoin: If you died tonight, could someone you love access it in without asking Coinbase, without passing a KYC check, without a government order, without anyone's permission? If the answer involves a company still existing, a login still working, a government still allowing it, that's not ownership. That's access. Property you can't pass on isn't property. It's a subscription that expires when they decide. The key is the deed to the house. Everything else is a rental agreement. Your Bitcoin has a secret KEY. Do you know it?
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LIGHTWERK™️ (@lightw3rk) reported@grok @Bitcoin According to @coinbase BTC is down 5.70% — trading at $63K
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Bitfunded (@bitfunded) reported⚡Some alts are showing surprising strength ENA is one of them. Coinbase Ventures recently announced an open-market purchase and reaffirmed support for the protocol. Currently attempting to reclaim the 0.105 resistance zone. If buyers break through, the next major target sits around 0.12.
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L H Joshua (@LHJoshuaWrites) reportedThe "IPO pop" goes to insiders, not retail. The returns above measure from the IPO offering price. The first-day pop (often 20 to 100 percent for hot names like Snowflake +112%, $ABNB +113%, $DASH +86%) is captured almost entirely by allocated institutional investors. Retail typically enters at the post-pop price, so the relevant question for most buyers is not "what did the IPO do" but "what did the stock do from day 1 close, going forward." That number is usually 15 to 40 percentage points worse than what the chart shows. Mega-cap IPOs are bimodal, not average. The "+41% average" for $50B+ IPOs is misleading. The actual distribution is barbell-shaped: three big winners ($SNOW , Airbnb, $ARM at +150% to +190%) and five sharp losers ($META , Alibaba, Uber, Coinbase, Rivian at -10% to -62%). The median outcome is negative. There is no smooth middle ground; mega IPOs either ride a thematic tailwind hard or they grind down through lockup expirations. Lockup expiration is the single biggest risk window. Facebook hit its low of $19.69 (down 48%) when the first lockup expired in August 2012. $RIVN , $COIN , and $UBER all saw their worst drawdowns in the 6 to 9 month window after IPO. For SpaceX, sources suggest a 90 to 180-day lockup, with Musk controlling roughly 85% of votes. The post-lockup window in late 2026 could be a significant supply event. The macro/thematic environment dominates. The 2020-2021 winners ($SNOW , $ABNB ) rode pandemic tailwinds; the 2023-2024 winners ($ARM , $RDDT ) rode AI. The losers either IPO'd into a deteriorating macro ($META 2012, Rivian late 2021) or had business model concerns surface fast (Uber, $LYFT , Coinbase). For SpaceX, the relevant question is whether the Starlink growth narrative holds through the first lockup. Comparable scale risk. The four largest tech IPOs by capital raised before SpaceX ($BABA $21.7B, Facebook $16B, Rivian $11.9B, Uber $8.1B) returned -10%, -32%, -62%, and -33% in year one respectively. The pattern of "bigger IPO equals worse first-year return" is striking and consistent with the supply-overhang argument. SpaceX is targeting $25 billion-plus in proceeds, which would be the largest tech IPO in history by a wide margin. A note on data: first-year returns are calculated as price change from IPO offer price to the close approximately 12 months later, ignoring dividends (which are negligible for tech IPOs). A handful of returns are reconstructed from secondary sources rather than tick-level data, so figures are approximate to within a few percentage points.
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The Enigma Trader (@EnigmaTrader369) reported@WhaleInsider This is IBIT's custodian. BlackRock's spot ETF holds its coins at Coinbase Prime, so a transfer "to Coinbase" is internal custody plumbing, not a market sell. BTC is down ~3% today on positioning, but pinning that on this transfer is the wrong read. Net ETF flows tell the real story.