A widespread outage at Amazon Web Services (AWS) disrupted numerous websites and applications, highlighting the dependence of modern businesses on a single cloud provider. The disruption began early Monday morning at AWS’s Northern Virginia facility, one of the largest data center clusters in the United States.
The outage affected popular platforms including Roblox, Fortnite, Reddit, Venmo, Duolingo, United Airlines, Canva, and Amazon’s own site. Financial services such as Coinbase, Robinhood, and Lloyds Bank also reported interruptions. In total, more than 1,000 websites and services experienced varying degrees of downtime. Even connected devices, such as Eight Sleep’s internet-enabled mattresses, were impacted, with some units overheating or locking in an elevated position.
Amazon traced the problem to errors within its internal systems, which prevented some websites from connecting to the correct IP addresses. The company explained that a latent bug in its automated processes triggered a chain reaction that disrupted its Domain Name System (DNS) records and DynamoDB database, essential components for routing traffic and managing data online. “We know how critical our services are to our customers, their applications and end users, and their businesses,” AWS stated. “We know this event impacted many customers in significant ways.”
The outage illustrated both the scale of Amazon’s role in cloud computing and the vulnerabilities inherent in relying on a single provider. AWS holds roughly 30% of the global cloud market, with Microsoft and Google as its main competitors.
By Monday evening, Amazon reported progress in restoring full functionality across affected services. The company pledged to review the incident thoroughly and implement measures to reduce the likelihood of similar disruptions in the future.






