In a frustrating turn for millions of users worldwide, OpenAI’s flagship AI chatbot, ChatGPT, appears to be experiencing a widespread outage as of early December 3, 2025. Reports of connectivity issues, slow response times, and complete service failures have surged across monitoring platforms and social media, leaving writers, coders, students, and casual users scrambling for alternatives.The Scale of the Disruption
This isn’t an isolated blip. Independent outage checker DownForEveryoneOrJustMe confirmed active problems with ChatGPT starting roughly 27 minutes before their latest update, following a brief 57-minute downtime on December 1.
Globally, the interruption has hit hard in major markets like the US, Europe, and Asia, with users describing symptoms ranging from “server errors” and “infinite loading spins” to messages like “ChatGPT is at capacity right now.”OpenAI’s official status page, however, paints a more optimistic picture, reporting an overall uptime of 99.20% for ChatGPT components from September to December 2025.
No active incident is listed as of this writing, suggesting the company may be monitoring behind-the-scenes fixes without a formal acknowledgment yet. In past events, OpenAI has been quick to post updates once the root cause is identified, often within an hour of widespread reports.
|
Date |
Duration |
Cause |
Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
|
June 10, 2025 |
12+ hours |
Undisclosed infrastructure failure |
Global blackout of ChatGPT, API, and Sora; millions affected |
|
December 1, 2025 |
57 minutes |
Server overload |
Widespread login and response delays |
|
September 3, 2025 |
~1.5 hours |
Response display bug |
Partial outage; users saw blank outputs
|
Data from outage trackers indicates 2025 has seen at least five major disruptions, up from a handful in 2024, with average monthly downtime hovering around five hours despite a 99.3% uptime claim.
Experts attribute this to surging demand from new features like advanced image generation and voice mode, compounded by reliance on Microsoft Azure’s cloud infrastructure—which itself faltered in a nine-hour outage last December.
Critics argue that OpenAI’s rapid scaling hasn’t kept pace with its ambitions, especially amid competition from Google’s Gemini and Anthropic’s Claude. “High demand” is the go-to explanation, but users paying for ChatGPT Plus ($20/month) or Pro ($200/month) tiers expect more resilience—yet outages hit everyone equally.