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GitHub status: access issues and outage reports

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Full Outage Map

GitHub is a company that provides hosting for software development and version control using Git. It offers the distributed version control and source code management functionality of Git, plus its own features.

Problems in the last 24 hours

The graph below depicts the number of GitHub 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 GitHub. 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 GitHub users through our website.

  • 58% Website Down (58%)
  • 30% Errors (30%)
  • 12% Sign in (12%)

Live Outage Map

The most recent GitHub outage reports came from the following cities:

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Montataire Sign in 11 hours ago
Colima Website Down 2 days ago
Poblete Website Down 3 days ago
Ronda Website Down 3 days ago
Montataire Errors 4 days ago
Montataire Website Down 5 days ago
Full Outage Map

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.

GitHub Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • Jmoon_174
    JMoon (@Jmoon_174) reported

    @peer_rich github has too many network effects compounding at once: issues, PRs, actions, packages, pages. a better product isn't enough when switching means abandoning 10 years of workflow integrations.

  • ndrewpignanelli
    andrew pignanelli (@ndrewpignanelli) reported

    @m_newhaus a github outage, evidently

  • ChronCode
    CodeChron (@ChronCode) reported

    💡 Developer Intent The intent behind this change was to establish an automated process for building and publishing Docker container images. This new GitHub Actions workflow specifically targets the backend and frontend services, addressing the requirement to publish their respective container images. The motivation for this automation stems directly from issue #2708, which called for a mechanism to "Publish container" images, a goal explicitly reflected in the pull request title: "feat(github): Added container push workflow". This automation aims to streamline the release pipeline for containerized applications.

  • kbanta11
    Kyle Banta (@kbanta11) reported

    Github is struggling under the load that agentic coding is putting on it. But we have agentic coding, so why do orgs need to rely on github for the *** UI. Just have AI build a self-hosted *** server and remove the dependency on github if you're strugging with their stability.

  • JaypaulGrinds
    Jaypaul (@JaypaulGrinds) reported

    Today is Points Distribution Day on @quipnetwork. If you are in the top 1K for the past weekend then you'll receive your points for showing up. Talking about points, most people don't know that GitHub contributors can farm Quip points. I didn't know until a few days ago. This is how it is done…👍 Developers can farm Quip Points for @quipnetwork by actively contributing to their open-source GitHub repositories like quip-protocol and the SDKs. You can earn points by submitting pull requests, fixing issues, or building projects on their quantum classical testnet. These real code contributions are rewarded with $QUIP token incentives. If you're bullish on Quip Network, do this. gQuip 🤟

  • emanueledpt
    Emanuele Di Pietro (@emanueledpt) reported

    @AllenCao1997 @xingbugengming nothing atm there is only github issues haha

  • BhartiAnsh2007
    Ansh Bharti (@BhartiAnsh2007) reported

    @Ankit_Sisodya @codeforces @github hello bro if you have tried codeforces how is like if i am beginner and think of practicing problem should i use leetcode, codewars, codeforces, etc which one should i choose or any specific order currently i am using hackerrank beacuse i found it quite beginner friendly

  • M2Fauzaan
    Fauzaan (@M2Fauzaan) reported

    @juanlopezm94 Not in the pipeline, but do you mind creating a GitHub issue so I can get to it later?

  • freeconlon
    Jeff Conlon (@freeconlon) reported

    The team rebuilt our landing page workflow this week. We moved off WordPress for new campaign tests and onto a static stack with GitHub and Netlify. Here's what that means in practice. A new landing page used to take four to seven days to ship. Login to a CMS, fight with a theme, wait on a developer, deploy, debug. Now it's hours. Most agencies treat the landing page as a CMS problem. It isn't. A campaign LP is a one-page test. You need to ship five versions in two weeks to learn anything. WordPress was designed for a thousand pages, not five tests. The fix wasn't a new template. It was changing the underlying system so the page is just a file in a repo. If the bottleneck is your tool, the answer isn't more tool. It's a different one.

  • shd96556
    Shahid (@shd96556) reported

    > Claude = coding. ($20/mo) > Supabase = backend. (Free) > Vercel = deploying. (Free) > Namecheap = domain. ($12/yr) > Stripe = payments. (2.9%/transaction) > GitHub = version control. (Free) > Resend = emails. (Free) > Clerk = auth. (Free) > Cloudflare = DNS. (Free) > PostHog = analytics. (Free) > Sentry = error tracking. (Free) > Upstash = Redis. (Free) > Pinecone = vector DB. (Free) Total monthly cost to run a startup: ~$20 There has never been a cheaper time to build.

  • tugmoat
    Jacob (@tugmoat) reported

    @esrtweet While I'm not disagreeing with you, I do still feel some sympathy for the original redditor that started all this. I've seen some projects target non-technical users and host on GitHub, and people who don't know what a compiler is need to download one just to install an addon or something. That's the really terrible UX in all of this. There may not be a better way unfortunately.

  • noahreeveshq
    Noah (@noahreeveshq) reported

    i see why everyone was complaining about github now. a customer told me about a bug and i quickly fixed it and pushed to production. CI/CD is setup so i assumed it worked fine. it didn’t. i told the customer i fixed it and when he tried a couple days later, it was still broken! so embarrassing! can’t imagine if it were more than one user! i guess now i have to check my deploy status every time i deploy?? no way we gotta do that @github right?!?!

  • tiburciogabriel
    Gabriel Tiburcio (@tiburciogabriel) reported

    Just realized I have not opened VSCode a single time today. Pushed 2 PRs, debugged a bunch of API issues. Validated a bunch of stuff e2e. Every code I look at is now through GitHub. Didn’t miss it. Sign of the times.

  • hirschibar
    Jody Hirschi 🍫 (@hirschibar) reported

    @ibuildthecloud Hard just means it's an opportunity. The right team could pull it off. Some really good design and really good niche execution could do it. I actually thought Linear was going for it when they took a big share of github issues. Sadly they haven't

  • fullBased
    JJJ (@fullBased) reported

    @haha_girrrl You can but you will likely get an email from GitHub asking wth you uploading? If you don’t justify it they just shut you down :)

  • newfoundceo
    newfoundceo (@newfoundceo) reported

    Microsoft has kick started more people to turn to local AI with their recent GitHub Copilot billing changes. Less than a dozen interactions with Claude via Copilot about an issue I had with a docker stack used up 85% of my premium tokens for the month. Not worth the money.

  • byte_guard_blog
    ByteGuard (@byte_guard_blog) reported

    GitHub is scaling at a rate that should make any sysadmin nervous. Vlad Fedorov admitted they had to scrap a 10X capacity plan for a 30X one by February 2026. The cause is the AI agent code explosion. We are seeing a huge gap between code volume and actual throughput. Writing code is now the easy part. The bottleneck is validation. If your pipeline relies on hour-long test suites or a human reviewer to catch contract drift in a distributed system, you are the bottleneck. Adding more CI runners is a tactical band-aid for a structural failure. The only way out is pushing validation into the inner loop. Agents need to verify their own work against the real system before a pull request even exists. Otherwise, we are just automating the creation of a bloated, unmanageable backlog of broken staging environments. #DevOps #GitHub

  • AlexPaz0X
    Alex Paz (@AlexPaz0X) reported

    Surprise, @HyperliquidX S3 rumors are back and stronger than ever Several elements have reignited this theory, I believe it's happening Let me break it down: 1. The GitHub line confirming the final date for points distribution has disappeared Why modify it now if nothing is coming? 2. HIP-4 just launched, perfect momentum to cook up the next campaign for a second airdrop 3. The points section is still active two years later, you don't maintain infrastructure you're not planning to use again All three signs point in the same direction: second airdrop is coming

  • heyhve_
    hve 🍁 (@heyhve_) reported

    @mnrcst @sudobunni @github Flaky + slow is the worst combo.

  • BeauJohnson89
    Beau Johnson (@BeauJohnson89) reported

    your coding agent should not be trapped on your laptop browser-use/bux > 298 stars on github > 24/7 claude code agent on any ubuntu box > real chromium session through browser-harness > telegram bot included > persistent cookies, skills, and chat history this is the right direction not another chat window a cheap box with a real browser, live handoff for login walls, and an agent you can text from anywhere

  • garyfung
    gary IH fung (@garyfung) reported

    @Teknium That takes care of GitHub issues Replace GitHub next? 🙏🏼

  • CoderVed
    Rugved (@CoderVed) reported

    @Anaya_sharma876 ofc Claude 4.7 because ... refactoration of existing code its so good at reviewing PR's it can fix bugs in complex repos of github better handling of edge cases and constraint and most imp high-precision edits

  • LukeParkerDev
    Luke Parker (@LukeParkerDev) reported

    @StefanTMD @Iamkingsleyf Can you please file a GitHub issue with more details? TUI/Desktop? Still happens with opencode —pure

  • tuirkhere
    tuirk (@tuirkhere) reported

    community has been reporting it for over a year. forum threads, github issues, the lot. no fix from Google. the bug also jumped up to 2.5 Pro in January. 3 series came with it already. it's not shrinking, it's spreading.

  • samhuckaby
    Sam Huckaby (@samhuckaby) reported

    @elijahmcom You’ll always just have people ask “if this is just the same as GitHub, why would I not use GitHub?”. No matter how bad or unreliable GitHub becomes, it will always be “the GitHub” that people default to. I think in order to fix it, we need a complete shift of what people want in terms of functionality

  • ryanzip
    Ryan Oksenhorn (@ryanzip) reported

    I posted 7 minutes too early...GitHub is down.

  • grok
    Grok (@grok) reported

    @GioGigiX @thdxr GitHub had a major meltdown on April 23—merge queue bug corrupted PRs, reverted changes across hundreds of repos. They've had repeated outages and reliability issues lately, plus backlash over Copilot data training policies. Frustrated devs (including some big names) are eyeing the exits, so yeah, AI labs are racing to build alternatives.

  • PsudoMike
    PsudoMike 🇨🇦 (@PsudoMike) reported

    @thdxr Replacing GitHub means replacing Issues, Actions, OAuth federation, and seven years of enterprise legal sign off. The product part is two months. The trust and integration part is a decade. Same reason banks still run COBOL.

  • IamRealManish
    Manish Kukreja (@IamRealManish) reported

    @peer_rich Correct. The real issue isn’t code leakage; it’s that models trained on platforms like GitHub make code increasingly reproducible. Security and advantage both get weaker.

  • GEOTrackerAI
    Petr Vlček | GEO Tracker AI (@GEOTrackerAI) reported

    The "fix more SEO" advice doesn't work because: Google rankings ≠ AI citations. Perplexity cites Reddit threads, GitHub repos, podcast transcripts, niche listicles. If those sources don't mention you, no SEO budget will save you.