
San Francisco, United States — February 18, 2026
YouTube Outage Report
Video streaming platform YouTube experienced a widespread service disruption that affected hundreds of thousands of users, primarily in the United States, with additional reports emerging from India, United Kingdom, and Canada.
According to outage-tracking site Downdetector, more than 240,000 users in the U.S. reported problems accessing videos during the peak of the disruption.
When the Outage Happened
Reports indicate that the issue began Tuesday evening around 8:00 p.m. U.S. time, when thousands of users said videos would not load or the app failed to respond. Complaints quickly surged, signaling a widespread technical problem.
News agency Reuters also confirmed that Downdetector recorded hundreds of thousands of outage reports within hours.
Company Response
Parent company Google acknowledged the disruption, stating:
“Some users are experiencing difficulty accessing YouTube. Our teams are working to resolve the issue and will provide updates soon.”
Later updates indicated that most problems had been resolved and services were gradually returning to normal.
Possible Causes Under Investigation
The exact reason for the outage has not yet been officially disclosed. The company said it is continuing to investigate the cause of the technical disruption.
Some users on social media speculated about server issues and possible impacts on cloud infrastructure, including services linked to Amazon Web Services, though no confirmation has been issued regarding those claims.
Impact Beyond the U.S.
Although the highest number of complaints came from the United States, partial disruptions were reported in multiple countries. In India, users reported issues early Wednesday morning local time, suggesting the outage had global reach.
Current Status
Major functionality restored for most users
Investigation ongoing
No confirmed root cause yet
What This Means for Users
Short-term outages are not uncommon for large global platforms due to infrastructure complexity. Experts note that companies typically deploy rapid-response engineering teams to restore services quickly when disruptions occur.










