Twitter Outage hits X as U.S. users report sudden access problems

twitter outage reports surged Wednesday morning in the United States as users said they could not reliably access X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter. The disruption unfolded late morning, with complaints rising quickly on outage-tracking data. As of 11: 05 a. m. ET, Downdetector was showing more than 14, 000 reports tied to X in the U. S.
What happened and when
Downdetector, which compiles user-submitted status reports, showed a wave of complaints from U. S. users on Wednesday. One data point captured more than 14, 000 reports at 11: 05 a. m. ET, while another snapshot later in the morning showed the spike reaching tens of thousands in a short period.
Outage-tracking data also indicated the first reports began around 10: 43 a. m. ET, with complaints increasing through the morning. Users described problems loading posts, feeds, and notifications, affecting both the app and the website.
Even with the surge, the scale of impact remained hard to pin down in real time. Downdetector notes that its figures reflect user submissions, and the actual number of affected users may differ from what appears on the tracking site.
Twitter Outage numbers fluctuate as service appears to stabilize
The volume of complaints shifted quickly as the situation evolved. At one point Wednesday morning, Downdetector showed more than 34, 500 reports at the peak before dropping sharply to 845 reports as of 11: 39 a. m. ET, signaling that service may have been returning for many users.
Separately, another count showed more than 26, 000 outage reports as of 11: 28 a. m. ET, reinforcing the scale of the spike across the late-morning window. Such reports often fluctuate as users regain access and stop submitting complaints, and it can take time for a clear picture to settle.
In the middle of the disruption, the twitter outage remained difficult to assess for duration and reach, with users describing access issues while official explanations were not yet available.
Immediate reactions: No comment from X
X did not immediately respond to a request for comment as users continued reporting trouble accessing the service Wednesday morning. By late morning, there was still no public explanation for what triggered the disruption or how broadly it affected users.
Downdetector’s methodology was a key reference point in tracking the issue in real time: it collates status reports from a number of sources, but relies heavily on user-submitted reports. That means the numbers can move rapidly as reports flood in during a sudden disruption and then taper off as access returns.
Quick context
X is the platform formerly known as Twitter, and outage reports referenced issues across both mobile and web access. The cause of the disruption was not immediately clear Wednesday morning.
What’s next
Attention now shifts to whether X provides a public explanation for the disruption and whether users see renewed instability after late-morning fluctuations in reports. For now, the twitter outage story remains centered on the late-morning spike in user complaints, with Downdetector data showing a rapid rise and then a sharp decline as of 11: 39 a. m. ET.




