A major Cloudflare outage on Tuesday caused widespread disruptions across crypto platforms and several major websites. Service interruptions spread quickly as users struggled to load exchange portals, block explorers, and analytics tools. Early reports from affected firms indicated that Cloudflare error messages were appearing across front-end interfaces.
Cloudflare, which provides global network infrastructure for security and traffic routing, reported what it called an “internal service degradation” across parts of its network. Coinbase , Kraken, Etherscan, Aave, DeFiLlama, Toncoin, and Arbiscan were among the crypto services showing intermittent “500 Internal Server Error” pages.
Users on Elon Musk’s platform X also faced access issues, showing that the outage extended far beyond the crypto sector.
The company acknowledged the incident on its status page around 11:48 a.m. UTC and later said engineers had identified the cause and were rolling out a fix. Signs of recovery began to appear, although Cloudflare cautioned that elevated error rates could persist during remediation.
As per reports, the outage occurred while several of its data centers were undergoing scheduled maintenance. However, the company has not confirmed whether the two events are connected. Crypto exchange BitMEX also reported that its own service disruption was linked to the broader Cloudflare problem.
Cloudflare’s stock dropped 3.5% in pre-market trading following the news, reflecting swift market concern about the interruption. Service failures of this scale affect a wide range of users, including developers, traders, and institutions.
Key context for the outage includes :
Past incidents show that outages linked to infrastructure providers often ripple through the crypto industry. Cloudflare faced similar events in 2019 and 2022 that temporarily shut down several exchanges and data platforms.
Amazon Web Services outages in October disrupted Base, MetaMask, and major exchanges. In 2023, a faulty software update from cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike caused widespread crashes of Windows systems worldwide, again affecting some crypto front-ends. While none of these incidents affected underlying blockchains, they revealed how dependent most platforms are on centralized service layers.
Industry leaders continue to warn companies about the risks of relying too heavily on a single vendor for uptime. SovereignAI COO David Schwed said organizations must assume outages will occur and build infrastructure that can withstand failures rather than wait passively for a vendor fix.
Many firms are reviewing their setups in light of today’s event, as continued disruptions threaten user trust and market stability. Cloudflare reports that services are steadily recovering, though some platforms may still experience delays as work continues.