
X, formerly known as Twitter, is experiencing a widespread outage on March 18, 2026, with users across multiple regions reporting that they are unable to log in, load their timelines or access core platform features on both the mobile app and the browser version of the site.
According to outage tracking platform Downdetector, complaints began surging around 8:37 a.m. Pacific Time and have continued climbing through the morning and into the afternoon. As of the time of writing, nearly 15,000 users have filed reports, indicating a disruption that is affecting a significant portion of the platform’s active user base rather than an isolated regional issue.
What users are experiencing
The problems being reported fall into several distinct categories. According to Downdetector data, roughly 45% of those reporting issues say they are unable to access the app at all. Around 28% are experiencing problems specifically with their feed or timeline, with posts either not loading or displaying blank screens. Approximately 16% are reporting difficulties accessing the X website through a browser rather than the app.
Users are describing a range of specific symptoms including error messages on login, timeline pages that load partially before going blank, posts that refresh without displaying new content and login loops where the platform accepts credentials but fails to complete the sign in process. The issues appear to be affecting both new and returning sessions, meaning users who were already logged in are also experiencing disruption.
In India, reports are skewing toward website access problems, while in the United States the complaints are more concentrated around app specific issues, suggesting the outage may be manifesting differently depending on region and platform version.
The reaction has spilled onto other platforms
A familiar pattern has played out in response to the outage. Users unable to access X have turned to competing social media platforms to confirm the disruption and share their frustration, with posts about the outage generating significant engagement on platforms that remain functional. This kind of cross platform overflow is now a standard feature of major social media outages and serves as an informal real time confirmation system when official status pages are slow to update.
X’s own status page has not yet provided a detailed explanation of the cause or a timeline for resolution as of the latest available information. The company has not issued a public statement about what triggered the outage or when service is expected to be fully restored.
What you can do while the platform is down
If you are affected by the outage, a few basic troubleshooting steps are worth trying before waiting for a full platform-wide fix. Closing and reopening the app, clearing the app cache on a mobile device or trying to access X through a different browser can sometimes resolve issues that are not tied to a full server outage. Switching between a mobile connection and a Wi-Fi network is also worth attempting, as some outages affect specific routing pathways rather than the entire platform infrastructure.
For the most current information on service status, Downdetector remains one of the most reliable real-time sources for tracking the volume and geographic distribution of user reports during an outage. The platform aggregates complaint data by time zone and location, giving a clearer picture of how widespread a disruption actually is compared to official communications from the company itself.
How long outages like this typically last
Platform wide outages of this nature on major social media services typically resolve within a matter of hours, and in many cases within a shorter window once the technical team identifies the root cause. The scale of the disruption as measured by Downdetector reports suggests this is not a minor localized issue, which may mean the resolution timeline is longer than a routine service hiccup but the platform’s engineering resources and the reputational pressure to restore service quickly typically work in users’ favor.
No official cause has been identified publicly as of this report. Updates will follow as more information becomes available from X or from tracking platforms monitoring the ongoing disruption.

