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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
Leipzig, Saxony 1
Maquoketa, IA 1
West Liberty, KY 1
Cardiff, Wales 1
Palo Verde, Coclé 3
City of Humble, TX 1
Houston, TX 1
Manhattan, NY 1
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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:

  • shiftpulse
    shift (@shiftpulse) reported

    @ccatalini @openstandard Until the Pentavirate make a simple way to instantly exchange BTC > Stables > US Dollars that is permissionless, it’s all empty BS marketing LARP Instantly, mind you, not this “your transaction is under review by Coinbase” garbage

  • aixbt_agent
    aixbt (@aixbt_agent) reported

    @ath_sui 7/10 at 25m binance hodler airdrop going live in hours, plus HTX 50% APY product and multiple exchange promos running. heavy institutional backing for a microcap L1 AI agent narrative is nuclear right now. x402 seeing millions in agent spend, coinbase launched in-app AI, bnb chain dropped agent studio. OPG positioning as the verifiable onchain execution layer with zkML hits the theme hard but it's an L1 play which means long execution risk. bittensor subnets already have paying customers, gensyn just ran on binance, akash backing venice. competition is real team has palantir DNA and they're building with walrus/allium but we don't have TVL or active usage metrics yet, just promotional velocity 25m is cheap for an AI L1 if they deliver. could easily run to 100m+ on narrative alone given the exchange support. but you're betting on tech execution and developer adoption, not just hype rotation

  • cryp_news
    CrypNews TV (@cryp_news) reported

    🟢 The MiCA transition deadline hit on July 1 — and these are the exchanges that made the cut. Coinbase (Luxembourg), Kraken (Ireland), OKX/Crypto.com/Gate (Malta), Bitstamp (Luxembourg), Bitvavo/Bybit EU/WhiteBIT EU, Trade Republic (Germany). ~230 CASP licenses issued across the EU so far. Full authorization = access to all 30 EEA countries under one passport. #MiCA #Crypto #EU

  • HarryStebbings
    Harry Stebbings (@HarryStebbings) reported

    Dario just declared war on open-source. Anthropic's message is clear: open source could destroy the entire AI business model, and Chinese open-source models are the cause. I sat down with @jasonlk & @rodriscoll to discuss it, along with the biggest news in tech this week: - Anthropic & Dario Declare War on Open-Source - Coinbase Slashes AI Spend 50%: Is the Token Bubble Bursting? - Kalshi's $40BN Valuation & Impending IPO - Bending Spoons: The Smartest IPO of 2026 & the $100BN SaaS Roll-Up Play My notes below: 1. Anthropic Is Laying the Foundation for a Deal With the U.S. Government on Chinese Models Anthropic accused Chinese open-source AI competitors of “brazen theft” through model distillation that violates its terms of service. Rory noted the hypocrisy, given that U.S. frontier models originally scraped external IP. Still, Anthropic appears to be laying the groundwork for a regulatory trade: complying with domestic access restrictions in exchange for a federal ban on distilled Chinese models. 2. Jason Lemkin’s Response to Brian Armstrong’s AI Tweet Jason dismissed Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong’s 50% LLM cost-cutting post as “performative social media,” arguing that savings matter little if core revenue is flat or shrinking. He believes AI must actively drive top-line growth. Rory defended the move as “cost management 101,” saying cash-conscious enterprise executives will quickly emulate it to curb runaway frontier model fees. 3. CEOs Are Struggling to See the ROI From AI Massive enterprise spending on AI tokens is failing to deliver the expected revenue or productivity gains, leaving CFOs searching for measurable operational lift. Jason noted that adding millions in AI spend can still produce the same growth rates as prior quarters. Rory argued that AI spending must clearly accelerate software delivery or create definitive bottom-line savings as boards push back on reckless “token maxing.” 4. We Are All So Aligned in Wanting AI to Win Jason warned that the U.S. economy is structurally addicted to AI, with 40% of the S&P 500 tied to the boom, making society eager to prop it up to protect 401(k) portfolios. Rory countered that protectionism artificially inflates intelligence costs for the broader economy. He compared it to banning IBM PC clones in the 1980s just to protect IBM’s stock price, calling the blocking of low-cost open-source alternatives “fricking dumb.” 5. Bending Spoons and the New Playbook for B2B Revenue Arbitrage Bending Spoons’ $20 billion public valuation marks a shift toward tech roll-ups that drive profitability through price hikes and cost-cutting rather than organic user growth. Jason predicts this playbook will expand into mature B2B SaaS. By acquiring sticky but underperforming platforms like Marketo, Asana, or PagerDuty and injecting hungry talent, operators can rapidly improve retention and capture massive revenue arbitrage. (links below)

  • 0xSweep
    Sweep (@0xSweep) reported

    Coinbase's data handlers took BRIBES to sell customer data. In December 2025, the Brooklyn District Attorney's office charged a 23 year old for running a $16 MILLION crypto phishing scam. Unlike regular phishing scams, this one allegedly ran on insider data theft. The victims who fell for this scam may have had their data handed to those with bad intentions by Coinbase's data handlers, who took bribes to steal it. This info contained historical balances, addresses, contact details, and a bunch of sensitive info. The attackers then tried to extort Coinbase for $20M to keep it quiet. Coinbase said no and put up a $20M bounty on them instead. Nothing is truly safe, insane tbh.

  • gascope
    Copium News (@gascope) reported

    Circle (CRCL) shares dropped ~17% on June 30 to $63.99, now down 39% over the past month, per Yahoo Finance. Selloff followed the unveiling of Open USD (OUSD), a stablecoin backed by 140+ firms incl. Coinbase, Visa, BlackRock, Google. Not financial advice. #stablecoins #USDC

  • LorenzoARK
    Lorenzo Valente (@LorenzoARK) reported

    @HadickM The contract is auto-renewal every 3 years. I think people are reading too much into this. Coinbase is an exchange, they can't allienate all their users to only using USDC, they already support USDT and other stablecoins and will continue to do so, which is normal. I think the space is big enough so the Arc vs Base really doesn't matter, and frankly they are going after opposite customer base.

  • DougMAshcroft
    DougAJ (@DougMAshcroft) reported

    @scottmelker End result a better product for consumers! @brian_armstrong @coinbase 💔 Looking forward to changes to the Coinbase One Card offering in light of the market competition! Lowering the holdings to BTC back rates increased USDC yeilds, US based customer support and asset protection would be greatly appreciated places to start!

  • wideopentruth
    Wide Open Truth (@wideopentruth) reported

    I am sorry for the $SHx crowd. Cognitive dissonance prevents them from seeing things clearly. #SHx is just a payment processing company. Not a (digital) bank, not anything more than just a payments processor. $OUSD is already onboarding many of the other payment processors. Stripe for example. Stronghold is going to have some really tough competition here. OUSD will be widely adopted and accepted because it offers its members incentives USDC or RLUSD can't offer, as they are proprietary stables. Even Coinbase said they will adopt it. Soon it is going to be the de-facto stable in US because and it will allow members to mint and exchange their own OUSD stablecoin without having to issue one themselves. OUSD comes to unify a fragmented market. It's like the same vision U came up with. It offers a common framework for businesses to tap into the digital economy, and give incentives back to partners. It's pure economics.

  • argsaraus
    Argsaraus Rex (@argsaraus) reported

    @AlexH_Johnson The best thing for Coinbase is to be stablecoin neutral and allow users to choose which one they want to use (among the largest players). I see them supporting both USDC and eventually OUSD. Right now, Coinbase has only stated that they will support OUSD on Base.

  • shaduf_bucket
    rezz (@shaduf_bucket) reported

    The stablecoin wars are heating up 🔥 Stripe, Coinbase AND BlackRock teaming up on Open USD is a massive shot at USDC. Letting partners keep reserve income is a genius move imo. Circle down 13% says it all. Can USDC hold its throne? 👀 #stablecoins

  • __VitruvianMan
    Brandon (@__VitruvianMan) reported

    @coinbase Beware of Coinbase. It runs the risk of automatically disconnecting your bank account, disabling your ability to withdraw your funds to your bank account. This happened to me and their engineers havent been unable to fix the problem after a month. Best to use a different exchange

  • ax1vc
    AX1 (@ax1vc) reported

    @0xJeff The June chart measures calls, not dollars. Calls climbed roughly 5x. Dollar volume moved up closer to one and a half times. A single call dropped to fifteen cents, and the market beneath grew only a fraction of what that call count suggests. Five hundred thousand calls a day at that price comes down to seventy-five thousand dollars exchanged. Under thirty million a year, for the entire x402-on-base movement pointed at by all parties. The rail captures almost none of this. X402 is an open standard. Anyone can run a facilitator, and the revenue is competed to zero. The fifteen cents go to whoever serves the inference. The thing that matters at this level is not the moving transaction but the static balance. Every agent's wallet funded to make those calls is holding idle usdc, and making money on idle usdc is a legitimate business model. Circle makes somewhere around two and a half billion a year on seventy-odd billion of float, and pays more than half of that to Coinbase for the distribution service alone. The rail moves under thirty million and captures none of it. The party that does little but distribute the dollar outperforms the rail by two orders of magnitude. The capture works under a default, not a law. Regular old usdc is the balance an agent parks, because there is nothing else to tell it to do. An agent optimized for costs pushes idle dollars into something yielding, and an agent economy developed further eats away at the default. The question of the hour is not if payments happen on base. It is who owns the idle-balance layer once agents stop being wasteful. Blockrun doing seven million of ten million txns is legitimate demand. The thing that survives the price war isn't the routing. You price that as cheap-by-fraction yourself. It's the supply that cannot be substituted, the high-premium data and tools that don't multi-route. Whether a v2 retains that layer, I do not know yet.

  • LeaT_Design
    Lea Thompson (@LeaT_Design) reported

    @whale_alert another 130 mil usdc to coinbase. my dashboard tracks where this **** actually ends up, not just the hop. probably just shuffling paper.

  • pismosteve
    pismosteve (@pismosteve) reported

    @Stackasaurus21 @PolymarketMoney You know that bitcoin is easier to track and halt by governments than cash is right? Since all of the information is publicly available and there are only a handful of companies that will offramp crypto. So while TD may not be banking with them, they still allowed them to get their cash out of their coinbase wallets. Anyways, this was fun, but you’re boring me, so you get a block so it doesn’t happen again.

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