Crypto exchange giant Coinbase experienced a major service outage that disrupted trading, transfers, and exchange operations after a critical failure inside Amazon Web Services (AWS) infrastructure triggered widespread system instability. The outage lasted several hours and temporarily prevented users from executing trades, moving funds, or accessing normal platform functionality.
AWS Data Center Overheating Triggered the Outage
According to Coinbase and AWS, the incident originated from an overheating event at an AWS data center located in Northern Virginia inside the heavily used US-EAST-1 cloud region. AWS said a sudden temperature spike and cooling system failures caused infrastructure disruptions across multiple availability zones.
Coinbase later confirmed that parts of its infrastructure failed during the AWS outage, leading to degraded performance across trading systems and transfer functionality. CEO Brian Armstrong publicly acknowledged the issue, calling the outage “never acceptable” while explaining that not all Coinbase systems successfully handled the availability zone failure as intended. The outage once again exposed how dependent many crypto platforms remain on centralized cloud infrastructure providers despite the broader industry promoting decentralization.
Coinbase Temporarily Halted Trading Activity
As the disruption escalated, Coinbase moved portions of its exchange into “Cancel Only” mode, allowing users to cancel existing orders but preventing new market and limit orders from being placed. The exchange later transitioned into auction mode before gradually restoring normal trading operations.
During the outage, many users reported being unable to:
- Execute trades
- Transfer crypto assets
- Access exchange services
- Process withdrawals
- Use mobile and web trading functions
Coinbase repeatedly assured customers that funds remained safe throughout the disruption despite the temporary loss of functionality. Trading services were eventually restored after roughly five to seven hours depending on the affected service region.
AI Infrastructure and Cloud Reliance Face New Scrutiny
The outage also reignited broader concerns about the growing concentration of cloud infrastructure powering modern financial systems. AWS currently hosts major portions of internet infrastructure for exchanges, fintech platforms, trading firms, and AI services globally.
Analysts noted that increasingly power-hungry AI workloads and expanding cloud infrastructure demands are creating new operational risks for hyperscale data centers. AWS reportedly said the outage involved failures tied to cooling systems managing high-temperature conditions inside the facility. The incident has sparked renewed debate about whether critical financial infrastructure — including crypto exchanges — should rely so heavily on centralized cloud providers concentrated in a small number of geographic regions.
Coinbase Faces Pressure During Difficult Week
The outage arrived during an already challenging week for Coinbase. Just days earlier, the company announced layoffs impacting roughly 14% of its workforce as part of a broader restructuring initiative centered around AI automation and cost reductions.
Coinbase also reported weaker-than-expected quarterly earnings amid declining crypto trading volumes and broader market weakness. Shares of Coinbase fell following the earnings report and continued facing pressure as the outage unfolded. The combination of operational disruption, layoffs, and declining trading activity has intensified investor concerns around how crypto exchanges will navigate the next stage of market competition and infrastructure scaling.
Crypto Markets Continue Depending on Centralized Infrastructure
While blockchain networks themselves largely remained operational during the outage, centralized exchange infrastructure became the primary point of failure. The event highlighted a major contradiction inside the crypto industry: many “decentralized” financial ecosystems still depend heavily on centralized internet, cloud, and data center infrastructure.
Coinbase’s outage follows several other high-profile AWS disruptions over the past two years that impacted trading firms, fintech companies, gaming platforms, and financial institutions. The situation also raised questions about how resilient crypto trading infrastructure will need to become as institutional adoption, AI-driven trading systems, and tokenized financial markets continue scaling globally.
- Shiba Inu Partners with Chainlink to Strengthen DeFi Strategy
- TON Resumes Operations After Traffic Surge From $550M DOGS Airdrop Disrupts Network
- Memecoin Launcher Pump.Fun Claims Ex-Employee Behind $1.9M Exploit
- Chainlink CCIP, Data Streams, and Data Feeds Are Now Live on Soneium Mainnet
- Binance is Working with Banking Giant BBVA to Enable its Customers to Hold Assets Off-Exchange
- Karate Combat to Host Fights at Miami Stadium Named After Bonk Meme Coin











































































































![Omni Network [Old]](https://assets.coingecko.com/coins/images/36465/large/Symbol-Color.png)




















