On Tuesday, November 18, 2025, a disruption occurred at Cloudflare, a major provider of internet infrastructure. The incident caused a widespread outage, taking down numerous high-profile platforms, including X, OpenAI’s ChatGPT, and others. The failure, which began around 11:00 UTC, impacted millions of users worldwide, exposing the fragility of the digital infrastructure many rely on daily.
Cloudflare plays a crucial role in the global internet ecosystem. It acts as a bridge between users and websites, speeding up page loads, providing security, and ensuring reliable connections. The company operates a content delivery network (CDN), stores cached copies of websites, and manages DNS services. Cloudflare also protects websites from cyberattacks, including DDoS, and uses load balancers to distribute traffic and avoid server overload.
These services, while essential, also mean that when Cloudflare experiences issues, the effects can be felt globally. On November 18, the company’s internal monitoring system failed, causing the load balancers to lose visibility into server health. This failure led to widespread 500 errors across websites and platforms, preventing users from accessing services.
Around 6:00 AM ET, users began reporting issues, as outage trackers showed spikes in problems related to Cloudflare. By 11:48 UTC, the company confirmed that multiple customers were affected. Cloudflare’s own dashboard and API were down, further complicating efforts to resolve the issue. Affected platforms included X, Facebook, OpenAI, and many others, with users experiencing difficulties in accessing them.
Cloudflare later explained that the problem stemmed from an internal subsystem monitoring the load balancers. The failure of this system caused the routing logic to break, leading to widespread service disruptions. While Cloudflare’s CDN and Anycast setup could typically help mitigate these issues, the problem was in the core control layer, not the servers themselves.
The disruption affected more than just social media platforms. Major financial websites, AI services, and even outage trackers like Downdetector were briefly inaccessible. Cloudflare engineers worked to disable certain tools temporarily in an attempt to resolve the issue. As of press time, access to Cloudflare-dependent services has been restored, and the global internet traffic is functioning normally again.
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