Reddit maintains an official status page at redditstatus.com, which provides real-time and historical data on system performance across its core services. The page organizes Reddit's infrastructure into components such as the website, API, feeds, search, and media uploads, and marks each with a status indicator showing whether it is operational, experiencing a partial outage, or fully down. When an incident is active, the page usually includes timestamped updates that explain what is affected, what the engineering team is investigating, and when a fix is expected. This should be your first stop any time Reddit behaves unexpectedly at a platform-wide level. For a broader community perspective, third-party monitoring sites like Downdetector aggregate user-submitted reports of problems and display them as a time-based chart. A sudden spike in reports from users in different regions strongly suggests a real outage rather than a localized account or network issue. Downdetector has recorded major Reddit outages such as the one on November 18, 2025, and its historical data can give you a sense of whether Reddit's current behavior matches a known pattern. You can also simply search "Is Reddit down?" on Google or check discussions on social platforms like Twitter or Bluesky, where users typically report widespread platform failures within minutes of onset. If Reddit itself is down, affected users often move to these alternative spaces to discuss the outage. One practical way to distinguish between a local network problem and a true Reddit outage is to use a tool like downforeveryoneorjustme.com, which pings a URL from an external server and reports whether the site is reachable globally. If Reddit is reachable from external servers but inaccessible from your device, the problem may be your internet service provider, a local DNS issue, or a VPN conflict rather than Reddit's infrastructure.
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How do you check whether Reddit itself is experiencing an outage?
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