Is Twitter Down Now? X (Formerly Twitter) Experiences Intermittent Outages
X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter, is not experiencing a widespread outage as of Thursday, March 26, 2026, though users in some regions have reported intermittent issues with loading feeds, logging in and refreshing timelines over the past week, according to real-time monitoring sites and company statements.

Downdetector.com, a popular outage tracking service, showed relatively low levels of reported problems in the last 24 hours, with spikes limited to specific times rather than a sustained global disruption. Earlier in March, notably on March 18 and March 23, X faced brief but noticeable outages that affected thousands of users worldwide, with reports peaking at tens of thousands before service quickly recovered.
The platform, owned by Elon Musk since 2022, has faced periodic technical hiccups since its rebranding. Recent incidents have included difficulties accessing the website and mobile app, failed post loading and occasional login errors. On March 18, Downdetector recorded more than 34,500 user reports at peak, primarily involving the website and app, before service largely returned within an hour. A similar pattern occurred on March 23, with reports again dropping rapidly after a short period of disruption.
X has not issued an official statement on the latest minor reports as of Thursday afternoon. The company's developer status page and internal communications have typically attributed past outages to routine maintenance, high traffic volumes or isolated technical glitches rather than major infrastructure failures. Musk has previously blamed some disruptions on "massive cyberattacks," though no evidence has been publicly confirmed for the March incidents.
For users encountering problems Thursday, common fixes include refreshing the app or browser, checking internet connections, clearing cache or trying the platform via a VPN if regional restrictions or routing issues are suspected. Most reports appear scattered rather than concentrated in one country or device type.
X continues to serve hundreds of millions of users daily for real-time news, entertainment and public discourse. The platform has undergone significant changes since the 2022 acquisition, including adjustments to verification, content moderation policies and algorithm transparency. These shifts have sometimes coincided with periods of heightened technical scrutiny.
Analysts note that social media platforms of X's scale inevitably experience occasional downtime. Major competitors like Meta's Instagram and Facebook, as well as TikTok, have faced similar brief outages in recent years. X's engineering team has focused on scaling infrastructure to handle growing traffic from live events, breaking news and viral trends.
Users frustrated by intermittent issues can monitor status via Downdetector, the official X @Support account or third-party sites like IsItDownRightNow. In regions with reported problems, switching between Wi-Fi and mobile data or updating the app to the latest version often resolves temporary glitches.
The platform's resilience has improved in some areas thanks to investments in cloud infrastructure and redundancy, though critics argue that rapid feature rollouts and staff reductions following the acquisition have occasionally contributed to instability. Musk has emphasized a commitment to making X the "everything app," with expansions into payments, video and long-form content that add complexity to backend systems.
For businesses and creators reliant on X for real-time engagement, brief outages can disrupt campaigns and audience interaction. Most incidents in March resolved quickly enough to limit long-term impact, but frequent disruptions can erode user confidence over time.
As of Thursday evening, the majority of users reported normal access to feeds, posting and notifications. Those still experiencing problems are encouraged to report them directly through the app or website help sections to help engineers identify any localized issues.
X remains one of the primary platforms for breaking news and public conversation, particularly during major global events. Its real-time nature makes even short outages noticeable, often sparking immediate discussion on rival platforms when access is limited.
Looking ahead, the company is expected to continue refining its infrastructure to support ambitious growth plans. Users can stay informed by following official channels and outage trackers.
While minor connectivity hiccups persist for some on March 26, X is largely operational and not considered "down" in a broad sense. The platform's history of quick recoveries suggests any current issues will likely be short-lived.
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