LIVE · July 10, 2026

Is Gmail Down Right Now?

User reports are within normal ranges. Gmail appears to be working for most people. Live Gmail status for July 10, 2026.

Operational

No Problems at Gmail

80 reports today
23:18 UTC last checked · July 10, 2026

Community-reported & estimated figures. These numbers are based on user reports and automated signals, not official statistics.

Having trouble with Gmail? Let others know.

Is Gmail Down Right Now?

Welcome to the live status tracker for Gmail. Whenever a popular service like Gmail stops working, the internet immediately fills with people asking the same thing: "is it just me, or is Gmail down for everyone?" This page is designed to answer that question in seconds. We monitor incoming outage reports and translate them into an easy-to-read status meter, so you do not have to interpret raw data yourself. If the indicator is green, the vast majority of users can access Gmail normally. If it turns yellow or red, a growing number of people are reporting issues. Scroll down for a deeper look at common Gmail problems and the fastes ways to get back online.

Gmail Live Outage Map & Current Status Today

The live indicator for Gmail distills a lot of noisy information into one simple reading. Behind the scenes, every report adds a small data point, and when enough of them accumulate the meter shifts toward yellow and then red. This approach mirrors how large outages actually unfold in the real world, where the first sign of trouble is a rapid increase in people complaining at once. If the meter for Gmail is calm, you can be fairly confident the platform itself is fine. If it is elevated, you are seeing the collective experience of many users who are struggling with Gmail at the same time as you, which usually points to a genuine service-side problem.

What Causes Gmail Outages?

Every large platform, Gmail included, is a complex system where many components must work in harmony. Outages happen when one of those components falters, whether it is a database that runs out of resources, an API that starts returning errors, or a network path that suddenly goes dark. Software updates are a particularly common trigger, since even carefully tested changes can behave unexpectedly at full scale. External events such as fiber cuts, cloud region failures, and malicious traffic floods can also bring Gmail to its knees. The good news is that most modern services are designed with redundancy in mind, so many potential outages are absorbed before users ever notice. When one does slip through, the reports gathered here help confirm it quickly.

Common Gmail Problems Reported Today

During a typical Gmail incident, users describe a predictable set of issues. The most severe is a complete inability to access Gmail, where every attempt ends in an error. Less dramatic but equally annoying are partial failures, in which some parts of Gmail load while others break, leaving you with a half-working service. Reports of lag and timeouts are extremely common, especially in the early minutes of an outage before things fully collapse or recover. People also frequently mention problems specific to one platform, such as Gmail working in a web browser but not in the mobile app, or vice versa. Paying attention to these distinctions helps you gauge how widespread the current Gmail problem really is.

How to Fix Gmail When It Is Not Working

If Gmail is not working for you, a few quick checks can rule out problems on your end before you assume it is a full outage. Start by refreshing the page or restarting the Gmail app, since a simple reload clears many temporary glitches. Next, test your internet connection by opening another website or service; if nothing loads, the issue is your network rather than Gmail. Clearing the app cache or your browser cache resolves a surprising number of loading problems. It is also worth toggling between Wi-Fi and mobile data, restarting your router, and making sure the Gmail app is fully updated. If none of that helps and the meter above is elevated, the fault almost certainly lies with Gmail itself, and waiting is your best option.

What Gmail Users Are Saying

Community reports are the heartbeat of this Gmail status page. Each time someone taps the report button, they add a small but meaningful signal about the current state of Gmail. Taken individually these signals are just anecdotes, but taken together they form a reliable picture of whether Gmail is healthy or struggling. During a real outage, the reports pour in quickly and the meter climbs, confirming that the problem is shared by many. When things settle down, the reports taper off and the indicator returns to green. This crowd-sourced feedback loop makes it easy to trust that the status you see reflects what actual Gmail users are experiencing at this very moment.

Frequently Asked Questions about Gmail

Is Gmail down right now?

You can see the current situation reflected in the meter above. Low report volume means Gmail is operating normally, while a sharp increase confirms that Gmail is likely down for a significant number of users at the moment.

Why is Gmail not working for me?

When Gmail works for others but not for you, the cause is usually on your end. Restart the app, test your connection, clear cached data, and make sure Gmail is fully updated to rule out a device-specific issue.

How long do Gmail outages usually last?

Most Gmail disruptions are short-lived, resolving in minutes once the underlying issue is patched. Serious outages, especially those involving infrastructure or failed updates, may keep Gmail unstable for an hour or more before full recovery.

What should I do while Gmail is down?

If Gmail is genuinely down, there is little you can do except wait for the service to recover. Avoid repeatedly reinstalling the app or changing settings, since that will not help and may cause new problems once Gmail returns.