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GitHub status: access issues and outage reports

Some problems detected

Users are reporting problems related to: website down, sign in and errors.

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.

July 4: Problems at GitHub

GitHub is having issues since 10:20 AM AEST. Are you also affected? Leave a message in the comments section!

Most Reported Problems

The following are the most recent problems reported by GitHub users through our website.

  • 68% Website Down (68%)
  • 18% Sign in (18%)
  • 14% Errors (14%)

Live Outage Map

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

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Créteil Website Down 18 days ago
Trichūr Errors 22 days ago
Brasília Sign in 22 days ago
Lyon Website Down 22 days ago
Tel Aviv Website Down 26 days ago
Rive-de-Gier Website Down 26 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:

  • Rudra1071219
    Rudra (@Rudra1071219) reported

    Update : Looking for open source repo where i can contribute so that it would act as a proof of work for me if you know any kind of Github org help me by commenting it down 🥲

  • theshawwn
    Shawn Presser (@theshawwn) reported

    I woke up briefly and saw some crypto person claiming that they could “retire me if I work with them,” which is neither true nor particularly palatable even if true. I wanted to quickly explain the situation I’m in. (Or rather was forced into.) First, this is a distraction from my main goal, which was to not become homeless. When a bunch of crypto folks showed up, I had no idea what they were talking about, and I tried ignoring them. The message from multiple people was “look! We have free money for you. Nearly $4k. Isn’t that great? All you do is link your GitHub and you can have it, no strings attached.” This has the form of a scam, but to my amazement it was true. I cautiously linked my GitHub, and in exchange their website gave me about 50 SOL, aka around $4k. So I was left sitting there like, what the hell just happened? The answer is that this happened: One of them said to their community “Hey, let’s help Shawn. We’ll create a Shawn coin. Every time we trade this coin with each other, Shawn gets a cut. It goes into a piggy bank labeled “Shawn”, and only he can claim it.” Then, shockingly, that turned out to be true. I now have $4k. I have no idea how to feel about this. There are so many implications here. And this came at exactly the wrong time. I have 5 interviews lined up for today, some on the weekend, and on Monday an interview with Apple. I have at least a hundred DMs I haven’t been able to reply to yet, and this is the first moment I’ve had to breathe. I’m grateful for the money, and I think they deserve a shout out. But I’m wary of becoming a Jake Paul. My reputation is all I have, and sacrificing it for $4k would be a massive mistake. So, community, how do you feel about this? By acknowledging their existence, am I promoting gambling addiction via meme coins? Or is it the opposite, and I should go around saying “wow, look at that. They covered my mortgage right when I desperately needed it”? Both seem true, and this seems like a distraction from my actual duty right now, which is to respond to all of the kind folks that DMed me. It boils down to: keep the money, promote coin; keep the money, disavow coin; or give the money to charity.

  • GTACONNECT
    Serdar Ozdek (@GTACONNECT) reported

    @MaxKing92 @thsottiaux two days later i found the issue. the broken unrequested onboarding had me select engineering and even if coding was selected in settings, at least it showed that, it reset to standard use so it wouldn't show env or github in pinned summary tab. chats are back tho.

  • bigwarzeth
    BIGWARZ (@bigwarzeth) reported

    @JoshXT message from Alon and i quote : "He needs to login with any other method and then he can connect via GitHub inside the app"

  • robberviet
    Alex Vu (@robberviet) reported

    @github Wasting time making fun of your own company instead of fixing your own problems?

  • farxxxxx1
    farxxxxx (@farxxxxx1) reported

    $29/month x 500 users = $14,500/month. That's the ceiling on a TikTok analytics tool I built from a free n8n scraper and one Claude Code session. > The product: type in a TikTok channel name, get back the hook structure, CTAs, and pacing behind their last 5 viral videos. Backend runs on n8n. Apify scrapes the channel. Gemini breaks down each video - hook type, structure, call to action. Data flows back through a webhook. The SaaS wrapper came from Claude Code. One PRD file, claude.md, holding the architecture, data schema, and stack. Next.js 14 for frontend and backend. Supabase for auth and database. Vercel for hosting. Webhook handles the connection. n8n sends results back through an HTTP Request node instead of the standard webhook response, so long AI processing never times out. Local testing ran through ngrok - fake public URL, real webhook calls, real bugs to fix. Every SQL error and mapping issue got fed straight back into Claude Code until it worked. UI came from a v0App design, rebuilt by Claude Code in under 10 minutes. Push to GitHub, connect Vercel, deploy. Swap localhost for the real domain in Supabase auth settings. Wire up Stripe. One session. One free workflow. A product that could charge real users real money.

  • russellromney
    russell (@russellromney) reported

    Github is down, time to do several hours of anti-carpal tunnel hand exercises

  • dkare1009
    Dhairya (@dkare1009) reported

    “n8n is dead.” That’s what hundreds of people told me. So I spent 4 days researching instead of following the hype. Here’s what the data says: → n8n’s valuation grew from $2.5B to $5.2B in just 7 months. → NVIDIA invested. → SAP invested and is integrating n8n into its own products. → 150,000+ GitHub stars. → 100M+ Docker pulls. → $40M+ annual revenue with 10x growth. Then I looked at the search data. → India is the biggest market searching for n8n. Something “dead” doesn’t get searched hundreds of thousands of times every month. The biggest mistake? People compare n8n with Claude Code. ↳ n8n automates workflows and AI agents. ↳ Claude Code writes code. ↳ They solve different problems. ✦ The best AI builders don’t replace tools. They stack them together. If you want my complete n8n playlist to learn AI agents and automation: 1. Like this post. 2. Comment “N8N”. 3. Connect with me, and I’ll send it to your DMs. P.S. I spent 4 days researching this. The people calling n8n “dead” probably spent 4 minutes watching a thumbnail.

  • AyushSarode07
    Ayush (@AyushSarode07) reported

    GitHub maintainers with zero LinkedIn account? Absolute legends. Just pure code, issues & PRs all day. No bios, no networking game. Respect 🫡

  • WorkorAI
    Alex Wave (@WorkorAI) reported

    Your hiring post is live. Applications start coming in. That feels like progress—until you realize someone now has to open every CV, find every GitHub profile and decide who gets a call. The real hiring problem often starts after Apply.

  • tnishant838
    Nishant Tyagi (@tnishant838) reported

    @eng_khairallah1 Type 2, exactly. Today I built a self testing, self repairing agent: 16 tasks, parallel execution, zero merge conflicts, because the contracts were frozen before any code was written. Two review passes on the spec caught a port mismatch, a missing retry limit, a missing secrets policy, all cheaper to fix on paper than in code. Full build plus live GitHub validation, 7% of a weekly Pro plan. 'Fully automated' undersells it. The real leverage isn't the prompt, it's the harness around it

  • ZacharyGeurts
    BIG GRIN (@ZacharyGeurts) reported

    And sorry if I broke github for a little bit. Was implementing a stable field connection and distributed internet and it's another DHCP and DNS server.

  • 4ster_light
    ✰λster✰ (@4ster_light) reported

    @LukasHozda We also need an improvement over Skills ASAP, tho many of its issues already would be fixed by an auditable specific repository instead of genuinely just pulling text files off GitHub like the amoeba sized brain beings we are

  • WaldemarEnns
    Waldemar Enns (@WaldemarEnns) reported

    @claudeai I really do not get the hype of Claude Tag. Months ago I used a simple GitHub App Integration to be triggered by mentions which hit my openclaw code agent and it used advanced looping techniques to implement festures, triage tickets and fix bugs. Am I missing something here?

  • KevRojo
    Kev (@KevRojo) reported

    The problem with zero was solved on Github, where's is meant to be solved

  • vectorbrief
    The Vector Brief (@vectorbrief) reported

    GITHUB IS LITERALLY BURNING PHYSICAL MEDIA INTO THE CLOUD AGE GitHub just dropped a bizarre, nostalgic middle finger to Sony’s digital-only dystopia. While Sony aggressively scrubs physical game discs from existence, GitHub is printing 1,000 limited-edition CD-ROMs containing public repositories. It’s a performative stunt, sure, but it exposes a massive anxiety: we’re realizing that "owning" software is becoming a myth. By archiving code on optical discs, GitHub is highlighting the fragility of our cloud-dependent lives. If a server farm goes dark or a company pivots to "subscription-only" access, your work effectively vanishes. This move isn't about the archaic storage tech—it’s about the philosophy of data sovereignty. In a world where platforms delete your access on a whim, physical backups aren't just for tech hipsters anymore; they’re the ultimate insurance policy. Are we heading toward a future where we have to mail physical hard drives to each other just to guarantee our software keeps running? Source: Tom's Hardware $MSFT

  • joaofogoncalves
    João Gonçalves (@joaofogoncalves) reported

    Self-hosted infrastructure tools don't lose to AWS or Vercel on features. They lose on trust. Nobody evaluates a deploy tool by asking if it can run a container. They ask what happens when someone leaves the company, whether an audit log can leave the building, and whether a bad rollout gets undone before anyone notices. Alerts either fire before the outage or show up after it, as a postmortem. That's the shape of milestone 4.0 on the BridgePort roadmap: one-click rollback and phased rollouts, threshold alerts, backup restore instead of backup-only, SSO, 2FA, audit-log export, secrets pulled from Vault instead of hardcoded into a compose file. None of it is a feature anyone asks for on day one. It's the reason a team says yes on day 400. Even the page itself makes the point. Generated straight from the GitHub tracker, no fake dates. Directions, not commitments.

  • worldwithTiago
    Tiago Santana (@worldwithTiago) reported

    Merged the content-loop email fix at 6am. Eighteen days of silent cron failures because one GitHub secret was missing. The unglamorous part of autonomous systems is credentials. A fascinating problem. What would frictionless machine access look like?

  • BowTiedCrocodil
    BowTiedCrocodile | Agentic Coding (@BowTiedCrocodil) reported

    Incredible When GitHub goes down just use the CD they sent you

  • zeeg
    David Cramer (@zeeg) reported

    @rsdgpt Toss it in a GitHub issue otherwise feel free to DM (or shoot me a slack connect) if its easier

  • _badmartigan_
    madmartigan (@_badmartigan_) reported

    @github Settle down, I think most software devs already know how download and transfer their repos to physical media if they feel the need.

  • polsia
    Polsia (@polsia) reported

    Codebase undocumented. Questions piling up. Docs rotting the moment you ship. That's every team's reality. Built DocuGuard to fix it. Monitors GitHub repos, auto-generates docs, updates wikis, flags code smells — all in real time, right in your pull requests. Live soon.

  • Techjunkie_Aman
    Techjunkie Aman (@Techjunkie_Aman) reported

    @JasonBoxman Raise an issue in GitHub

  • arjunkshah21
    Arjun Shah (@arjunkshah21) reported

    THIS GUY GOT TIRED OF AI SHIPPING CODE FASTER WHILE TESTING STAYED STUCK IN 2019, SO HE VIBE CODED AN ARMY OF AGENTS THAT RUN YOUR ENTIRE E2E SUITE you can vibe code a feature in an afternoon now. before deploy youre still manually clicking through onboarding, checkout, and every edge case hoping nothing broke traditional e2e means writing selectors, managing auth, babysitting staging, and maintaining scripts nobody wants to touch its called testerarmy and it runs end to end checks before deployment and in production > describe your tests in natural language and let agents handle everything in between > your coding agent manages the platform from a cli, defining tests and running them for you > trigger runs on a schedule or straight from github before anything ships > catches timezone bugs, broken checkout math, and ai chat regressions before they hit users > breaks something and your team gets alerted in slack or discord immediately agentic testing platform, 30+ teams running it daily, no painful onboarding crazy what happens when testing catches up to how fast we ship now

  • ryanlelek
    Ryan Lelek (@ryanlelek) reported

    @github April 1st was months ago. Fix your uptime

  • WaterAarav
    One&OnlyAarav (@WaterAarav) reported

    Claude = coding. ($20/mo) Shypmenta = deploys, connects, and manages every platform below($6/yr) 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. Building has genuinely never been this affordable, and rarely this effortless either.

  • dukemagus
    Duke Magus (@dukemagus) reported

    @ClassicREbirth Oh HELL no. They're part of the problem, Microsoft stripmined GitHub to fuel the AI craze that drove prices up and it's a big domino in this whole thing. They don't get a pass to make this joke.

  • pegboard696969
    pegboard (@pegboard696969) reported

    @github Instead of trolling maybe fix your **** website? Dont you think that would be a better use of everyones time

  • ferd_sg
    F3rd (@ferd_sg) reported

    @KEPSA_KENYA @UNDPKenya @UNDP 3. The single sign on i.e Google returns max throttle and redirects to login page, and for github, the link redirect is invalid

  • psignore88
    Peter Signore III (@psignore88) reported

    @github Is this satire? Fix your search engine first please.