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Is X (Twitter) down?

Website status is based solely on the number of user reports submitted, and is updated every 30 minutes using data from the past 24 hours. The status you see depends on the baseline — the average number of reports received for that time period over the past 24 hours. Learn more about how our tool works.

X (Twitter) issues reported over the last 24 hours

This graph shows the service status of the X website and apps as reported by users over the last 24 hours.

Want to see the status of other popular services? Visit our “is it down?” page!

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User comments about X (Twitter) outages

Is X not working for you? Let other users know what problems you’re facing.

Major X (Twitter) outages and their causes

X has been unavailable to users from time to time — here are some of the most notable reported incidents to date:

April 2, 2026

Duration: unknown

According to AOL, X stopped working and users were greeted by empty timelines and a “Welcome to X” message on both the mobile app and website, making it impossible to see new posts or follow trending news.

March 24, 2026

Duration: ~1 hour

According to Tom’s Guide, X experienced an issue that disrupted the website. While the mobile app stayed fairly stable, people trying to log in or browse from their computers ran into constant errors and connection loops.

March 10, 2025

Duration: 15 hours

Digitaltrends reported that X suffered intermittent outages throughout the day that, according to Elon Musk (the website’s owner), were caused by a massive cyberattack.

Please note that this is public information from external sources, not our own. We cannot modify its content or guarantee its accuracy.

How does the status checker work?

We recalculate the status of the service every 30 minutes based on user reports submitted within the last 24 hours. This allows us to provide firsthand information on outages and helps to better understand the extent of the problem.

To do this, we first calculate a baseline — the average number of reports received in 30-minute time blocks over the past 24 hours. This helps us understand what “normal” activity looks like at any given time.

A mobile screen showing user outage reports used to determine website availability for the “Is it down?” page.

Once we have the baseline, we set thresholds to determine the status of the service:

Online: If the number of reports falls below 50% of the baseline, the service’s status is shown as “Online,” meaning everything is functioning normally.

Partial outage: If the reports fall between 50% and 75% of the baseline, the service might be facing some issues. We label this status as “Partial outage.”

Down: If the number of reports exceeds 75% of the baseline, the service is considered “Down,” indicating significant issues or an outage.

Frequently asked questions