Check if vultr.com is down for everyone or just you
We'll ping you the next time Vultr's status flips. One-shot subscription, no account required.
Webhook receives a JSON payload on every status transition. Fire-and-forget — no auth from us; the URL is its own secret.
Vultr outages are usually caused by server overloads, failed deployments, CDN or DNS problems, DDoS attacks, or regional internet routing issues. isitdown.io checks Vultr from 4 regions (US East, US West, Europe, Asia) simultaneously. If all 4 fail, Vultr is down for everyone. If only some fail, the outage may be regional. If all pass but you still can't connect, the issue is on your local network, VPN, or DNS.
Click "Check Vultr now" above. isitdown.io pings vultr.com from four global regions in parallel and reports which ones succeeded. If all four pass, the issue is local — try flushing your DNS cache, switching networks, disabling your VPN, or using a different browser. If two or more regions fail, the outage is on Vultr's side.
The live response-time graph above shows the last 24 hours of real checks against vultr.com. Each data point is an actual HTTP request from our monitoring system — not a third-party feed. Green means up, red means down. Spikes indicate slow responses. Bookmark this page to check back during future outages.