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Tens of Thousands of Microsoft Users Hit by Outlook and 365 Outage

The disruption, which has been resolved at the time of writing, was mainly contained to the New York, Chicago, and Los Angeles areas.

March 2, 2025
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Microsoft Sign (Credit: Adam Gray/Getty Images)

Microsoft services were hit by an outage this weekend, locking many users out of their Outlook, Exchange, Teams, Microsoft 365, and Azure accounts.

Web monitoring service Downdetector reported that 37,000 individuals reported an Outlook outage yesterday, while roughly 24,000 reported an outage in Microsoft 365. Other Microsoft services, like Teams, recorded smaller but still notable disturbances.

The downtime was mainly concentrated in the US, with most cases reported in the New York, Chicago, and Los Angeles areas. The issue seems to have been resolved at the time of writing, according to Microsoft’s official Service Health page.

Microsoft didn’t provide a great deal of detail about what caused the outage, but its social media accounts attributed the issue to a “problematic code change,” which it has now reverted.

According to Downdetector, outage reports for Microsoft 365 and Outlook peaked around 4 p.m. ET on Saturday, March 1, before declining.

But Microsoft’s cloud services weren’t the only major networking tools to get hit by a serious outage this week. Messaging platform Slack was hit by a major outage on Wednesday, locking out some users and disrupting "workflows, threads, sending messages, and API-related features" for others.

Though many users flocked to social media to express their anger at the latest Microsoft outage, Microsoft's users have experienced vastly more disastrous outages in recent history. The global CrowdStrike outage in July 2024 took down 8.5 million Windows computers.

(Disclosure: Downdetector owner Ookla is owned by PCMag parent company Ziff Davis.)

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About Will McCurdy

Contributor

I’m a reporter covering weekend news. Before joining PCMag in 2024, I picked up bylines in BBC News, The Guardian, The Times of London, The Daily Beast, Vice, Slate, Fast Company, The Evening Standard, The i, TechRadar, and Decrypt Media.

I’ve been a PC gamer since you had to install games from multiple CD-ROMs by hand. As a reporter, I’m passionate about the intersection of tech and human lives. I’ve covered everything from crypto scandals to the art world, as well as conspiracy theories, UK politics, and Russia and foreign affairs.

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