Current Status
Response Time
reports this hour
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About AT&T
AT&T is one of the largest telecommunications companies in the United States, providing wireless service to over 200 million subscribers, fiber internet (AT&T Fiber), DSL broadband, and enterprise network solutions. AT&T Fiber is the company's fastest-growing product, expanding to millions of additional homes annually. AT&T also operates FirstNet, the dedicated network for first responders. Service outages affect voice calls, data connectivity, home internet, and business VPN connections for tens of millions of customers simultaneously.
Common Issues
- No cellular signal or calls going straight to voicemail
- Home internet or AT&T Fiber connection dropping repeatedly
- myAT&T app not loading account or bill information
- SMS/MMS messages not sending or receiving
- AT&T TV or DIRECTV STREAM buffering or failing to authenticate
Troubleshooting Tips
- 1.Check downdetector.com/status/att or att.com/outages for current network issues
- 2.Restart your phone and toggle Airplane Mode on/off to re-register on the network
- 3.Unplug your AT&T gateway/router for 30 seconds and reconnect
- 4.Contact AT&T at 1-800-288-2020 for home internet or at 611 from your AT&T phone for wireless
- 5.Check if the outage is localized by asking neighbors with AT&T service
Status History
Response Time (ms)
Incident History
No incidents recorded — all clear!
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Monitored via HTTP health probe
Data refreshed every 2 minutes. Response times measured from our server.
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How to Check if AT&T is Down
- 1
Check the live status indicator
Look at the status badge at the top of this page. It shows the real-time status of AT&T — operational, degraded, partial outage, or full outage.
- 2
Review the response time graph
Scroll down to the response time chart. A sudden spike or flat line may indicate AT&T is having performance issues or is completely unreachable.
- 3
Check community reports
Look at the user report count and problem breakdown. If many users are reporting issues simultaneously, the problem is likely on AT&T's end, not yours.
- 4
Review the incident timeline
Check the incident history section for any active or recently resolved incidents affecting AT&T. This shows severity, duration, and status transitions.
- 5
Visit the official status page
Go to https://www.att.com or AT&T's official status page for announcements directly from the service provider.
- 6
Try alternative access methods
If AT&T appears down, try clearing your browser cache and DNS cache, switching to a different network (mobile data vs WiFi), or using a VPN to rule out local network issues.
About AT&T Status
This page provides real-time status monitoring for AT&T. We check availability every 2 minutes using automated probes and official status page integrations, giving you an accurate picture of current service health.
AT&T is an infrastructure service. We monitor its endpoints, DNS resolution, and API to detect connectivity issues, routing problems, and service degradation.
Common AT&T Issues
Infrastructure services like AT&T can experience issues that affect downstream services. Common problems include:
- DNS resolution failures
- SSL/TLS certificate errors
- CDN edge server connectivity issues
- API gateway timeouts
- Network routing problems
- Service configuration propagation delays
- Authentication service disruptions
What to Do When AT&T Is Down
- 1Check our status page to confirm AT&T is experiencing issues
- 2Try clearing your browser cache and cookies
- 3Switch to a different network (e.g. mobile data instead of WiFi)
- 4Restart your router or modem
- 5Try using a VPN to bypass regional issues
- 6Check AT&T's official social media channels for updates
- 7Wait 5–10 minutes and try again — most outages resolve quickly
How We Monitor AT&T
Our monitoring system continuously checks AT&T from multiple global locations to ensure accurate, real-time status detection.
- Automated checks every 2 minutes from distributed probe servers
- Response time measurement and latency trend analysis
- Incident detection with severity classification and timeline tracking
- Community-powered problem reports for additional signal
About AT&T Status
This page provides real-time status monitoring for AT&T. We check availability every 2 minutes using automated probes and official status page integrations, giving you an accurate picture of current service health.
AT&T is an infrastructure service. We monitor its endpoints, DNS resolution, and API to detect connectivity issues, routing problems, and service degradation.
Common AT&T Issues
Infrastructure services like AT&T can experience issues that affect downstream services. Common problems include:
- DNS resolution failures
- SSL/TLS certificate errors
- CDN edge server connectivity issues
- API gateway timeouts
- Network routing problems
- Service configuration propagation delays
How to Check AT&T Status
- 1Check our status page to confirm AT&T is experiencing issues
- 2Try clearing your browser cache and cookies
- 3Switch to a different network (e.g. mobile data instead of WiFi)
- 4Restart your router or modem
- 5Try using a VPN to bypass regional issues
Why Use Akousa Status Checker
Akousa provides fast, reliable, and independent service monitoring so you always know when a service is down.
- Automated checks every 2 minutes from distributed probe servers
- Response time measurement and latency trend analysis
- Incident detection with severity classification and timeline tracking
- Community-powered problem reports for additional signal
Common AT&T Problems
When AT&T experiences issues, users typically encounter one or more of the following problems. Knowing what to look for helps you determine whether the issue is on your end or a widespread outage.
- Connection timeouts — The service takes too long to respond, often caused by server overload or network congestion between you and AT&T.
- Slow loading or degraded performance — Pages, feeds, or content load partially or much slower than usual, indicating AT&T servers are under heavy load.
- Login and authentication failures — Unable to sign in, getting "invalid credentials" errors, or being logged out repeatedly even with correct details.
- Error pages (500, 502, 503) — AT&T returns server error codes, meaning backend services are failing or undergoing maintenance.
- Regional or partial outages — AT&T works in some locations but not others, often due to CDN issues or localized infrastructure problems.
What to Do When AT&T Is Down
If AT&T appears to be down, follow these steps before assuming a widespread outage. Many issues can be resolved on your end in just a few minutes.
- 1Verify the outageCheck this status page to confirm AT&T is actually experiencing issues. If our monitors show "operational," the problem may be local to your device or network.
- 2Check your internet connectionTry loading other websites. If nothing loads, restart your router or switch from WiFi to mobile data. A quick speed test can confirm whether your connection is the issue.
- 3Clear cache and cookiesOutdated cached data can cause AT&T to display errors or fail to load. Clear your browser cache, or try opening AT&T in an incognito/private window.
- 4Try a different device or networkIf AT&T works on your phone but not your computer (or vice versa), the issue is likely device-specific. Trying a different network (VPN, mobile hotspot) can bypass ISP-level blocks.
- 5Wait and check backMost AT&T outages are resolved within 15-60 minutes. Bookmark this page to check back for real-time updates, or enable browser notifications for instant alerts when AT&T recovers.