Robinhood users report service disruptions as platform’s status page shows all clear

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Robinhood users flooded Downdetector with complaints on the evening of June 10, reporting problems accessing the popular trading platform. The spike in reports peaked at approximately 8:43 PM ET, a time when after-hours traders and crypto users would have been actively managing positions.

Here’s the thing: Robinhood’s own status page told a completely different story. According to the company’s operational dashboard, zero incidents were recorded between June 1 and June 12. That gap between what users experienced and what the company officially acknowledged is worth paying attention to.

What happened, and what didn’t

Downdetector aggregates user-submitted reports to track real-time outages across major platforms. When enough people report problems simultaneously, the site flags a likely service disruption. On the evening of June 10, enough Robinhood users hit that threshold to register a noticeable spike.

By June 12, Downdetector showed the storm had passed, with no ongoing issues reported.

Robinhood hasn’t confirmed any major service disruptions tied to the reported issues. That could mean the problems were localized, affecting certain users or certain features without triggering the platform’s internal monitoring thresholds.

Robinhood’s broader momentum

In May 2026, crypto notional trading volume on the platform hit $12.2 billion. That figure represented a 3% increase compared to April, suggesting month-over-month momentum was intact.

The year-over-year picture was slightly less flattering. May’s crypto volume was down 4% compared to the same month in 2025.

Robinhood ended May 2026 with approximately 27.7 million funded customers.

The platform has history here. In October 2025, Robinhood experienced a notable disruption that affected trading on both its own platform and Coinbase. Past outages at Robinhood have frequently coincided with periods of heightened market volatility, or stemmed from issues with third-party infrastructure providers like AWS. The scope of this latest round of complaints appears more limited than those previous events.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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