All Service Status Pages
Every service we monitor, with a live check and 24-hour uptime history for each.
These are all the services SiteDownForMe checks automatically every 15 minutes. Open any service for its live status, response time, uptime history, an embeddable status badge, and what to do when it’s down. Larger categories also have their own overview page showing the whole group at a glance.
Social Media Status
Twitter (now X) is a real-time microblogging network where outages tend to be highly visible: timelines stop refreshing, tweets fail to post, or the site returns error pages during traffic spikes.
Instagram is Meta’s photo and video sharing platform. Because it shares infrastructure with Facebook and WhatsApp, Instagram outages often hit several Meta apps at once, with feeds, stories, and DMs failing together.
Facebook is the world’s largest social network. Full outages are rare but far-reaching — when Facebook goes down it usually takes Messenger and the Facebook login button used by thousands of other sites with it.
TikTok is a short-form video platform serving content from regional CDN edges around the world, so problems are often local: videos may fail to load in one country while the app works perfectly elsewhere.
Reddit is a community discussion platform known for its distinctive error mascots — when Reddit is overloaded you’ll often see the "Ow!" snoo or CDN errors instead of a clean failure.
Snapchat is a mobile-first messaging app, so most "is Snapchat down" moments show up as snaps stuck on "sending" or stories that will not load, rather than a website error you can see in a browser.
LinkedIn is Microsoft’s professional networking platform. Outages are less frequent than on consumer social networks, but feed loading errors and messaging delays do occur during deployments and traffic peaks.
Pinterest is a visual discovery and bookmarking platform. Its image-heavy pages depend on CDN performance, so slow pins or endlessly loading boards are more common symptoms than a full site outage.
Threads is Meta’s text-based conversation app built on Instagram’s account system, which means an Instagram identity outage can prevent Threads logins even when Threads itself is healthy.
Messaging App Status
Discord is a voice, video, and text chat platform organized around servers. Its real-time nature makes outages obvious immediately — messages stop delivering, voice channels drop, and the app shows endless "connecting" spinners.
WhatsApp is Meta’s end-to-end encrypted messaging app used by over two billion people. During outages, messages sit on a single grey check mark and never reach the second one — the clearest signal that delivery is failing platform-wide.
Telegram is a cloud-based messenger with distributed data centers by region, so outages are often geographic: European users may be offline while other regions chat normally.
Slack is a workplace messaging platform, and because entire companies depend on it, even short incidents are disruptive. Slack publishes detailed component-level status — messaging, huddles, and file uploads can fail independently.
Zoom is a video conferencing service whose failures are felt instantly in meetings: participants can’t join, audio drops, or the classic error code 5003 appears when clients cannot reach Zoom’s servers.
Streaming Service Status
YouTube is Google’s video platform and one of the most visited sites on the internet. Complete outages are rare; more common are partial failures where the site loads but playback, comments, or live streams break.
Netflix is the largest subscription streaming service and runs its own CDN (Open Connect) inside many ISPs, which means playback problems are sometimes specific to your internet provider rather than Netflix globally.
Twitch is Amazon’s live-streaming platform. Its outages have distinct flavors: error 2000 on playback, streams dropping for broadcasters, or chat disconnecting while video keeps playing.
Spotify is the world’s largest music streaming service. Outages typically manifest as search failing, playlists refusing to load, or playback stopping between tracks — often while previously cached music keeps playing offline.
Disney+ is Disney’s streaming platform. Login storms around big premieres are its best-known failure mode — error code 83 and login failures spike whenever a major series episode drops.
Hulu is a US streaming service for shows, movies, and live TV. Its live TV product makes outages time-critical — error 94 or endless loading during a live game is the typical complaint pattern.
Gaming Server Status
Steam is Valve’s PC gaming platform and storefront. It has a famous weekly quirk: brief routine maintenance most Tuesdays, plus store slowdowns during major sales when traffic multiplies.
Roblox is a user-generated gaming platform with tens of millions of daily players. Its worst outages are memorable multi-day events, but routine incidents look like error code 279 or games failing to join.
Epic Games runs the Epic Games Store, Epic Online Services, and Fortnite’s backend. Because many third-party games use Epic’s login and multiplayer services, an Epic outage can break games that seem unrelated.
Xbox Live (Xbox network) is Microsoft’s console gaming service covering sign-in, multiplayer, cloud saves, and the store. Microsoft reports its health per feature, so "Xbox is down" often means one subsystem, not everything.
PlayStation Network (PSN) is Sony’s online service for PlayStation consoles — sign-in, the store, multiplayer, and cloud saves. Sony’s status page reports each service separately, and store issues are the most common partial failure.
Minecraft’s online side spans Microsoft account login, Realms hosting, and multiplayer session services — single-player keeps working in any outage, but Realms and server logins depend on Mojang and Xbox services.
Fortnite is Epic’s battle royale, and it goes down on purpose regularly: every season-ending live event and major patch involves planned downtime, on top of ordinary matchmaking incidents.
Tech Platform Status
Google Search is the backbone of the web for most users — genuine google.com outages are so rare that when search fails, the cause is almost always local: DNS, browser, or network trouble on the user’s side.
Gmail is Google’s email service with billions of accounts. Its outages tend to be partial and specific — attachments failing to send, messages delayed for hours, or the web app stuck loading — and are logged on Google’s Workspace dashboard.
OpenAI operates the API platform behind GPT models plus consumer products like ChatGPT. API incidents ripple outward: apps and tools built on OpenAI’s models start erroring together whenever the platform degrades.
ChatGPT is OpenAI’s conversational AI assistant with hundreds of millions of users. Under peak demand it degrades in recognizable ways: responses stall mid-sentence, conversations fail to load, or you’re asked to retry.
Microsoft’s cloud estate spans Microsoft 365, Teams, Outlook, and Azure. Because one identity system (Entra ID) signs into all of them, authentication incidents can lock users out of email, chat, and files simultaneously.
Apple’s online services — iCloud, the App Store, iMessage, and Apple ID — are tracked individually on Apple’s official System Status grid, and they fail individually too: iMessage can be down while everything else is green.
Claude is Anthropic's AI assistant. Like other high-demand AI services it can slow down or return errors during traffic surges, and because its API powers many third-party apps, a Claude outage often shows up as failures in tools built on top of it.
Google Gemini is Google's AI assistant, available on the web and across Google apps. Like other large AI services it can slow down or return errors during peak demand, and features can fail independently — chat may work while image generation or a specific model does not.
Cloud Service Status
GitHub is the world’s largest code hosting platform, and its outages stall software teams globally — pushes fail, pull requests will not merge, and CI pipelines that fetch from GitHub break in cascade.
Cloudflare fronts a huge share of the web with CDN, DNS, and security services — which is why a single Cloudflare incident can make thousands of unrelated websites show 5xx errors simultaneously.
AWS is the largest cloud provider, hosting a substantial fraction of the internet. Its regional incidents — especially in us-east-1 — are infamous for taking down apps, smart devices, and websites that users never associated with Amazon.
Microsoft Azure is one of the largest cloud platforms, hosting a huge share of business apps and services. Its regional incidents can cascade into outages across many companies at once, and it shares an identity layer (Entra ID) with Microsoft 365, so sign-in problems sometimes span both.
Shopping
Amazon.com is the world’s largest online retailer. Full storefront outages are extremely rare; when they happen — often during Prime Day load — shoppers see the famous "Dogs of Amazon" error page instead of listings.
eBay is a global marketplace for auctions and fixed-price sales. Because listings are time-sensitive, even short eBay outages have real consequences — bids can fail in an auction’s final minutes.
Etsy is a marketplace for handmade and vintage goods where millions of small sellers depend on uptime. Outages hit hardest around holiday shopping peaks, when checkout errors translate directly into lost orders.
Finance
PayPal is a global payments platform used both directly and as the checkout button on countless other stores — so a PayPal incident often surfaces as "payment failed" errors on merchant sites rather than on paypal.com itself.
Coinbase is a major cryptocurrency exchange with a well-known failure pattern: it has historically struggled precisely during extreme market volatility, when trading demand spikes hardest and users most want access.
Reference
Wikipedia is the free encyclopedia run by the Wikimedia Foundation on donation-funded infrastructure. It is remarkably reliable for its scale; brief read-only periods during maintenance are more common than true outages.