Yesterday, Stripe’s API services went down twice, from 16:36–17:02 UTC and again from 21:14–22:47 UTC. Though the API services were recovered immediately after the disruptions, it caused elevated error rates and response times. Stripe has not yet specified the cause of the degradation, they have promised to share a root analysis of the issue later.
Stripe constantly updated users about the repeated degradation and recovery on Twitter. Meanwhile, Stripe users expressed their outrage on the social media platform.
The issue started at 16.36 UTC with some Stripe payouts to GBP bank accounts being delayed.
Next, Stripe informed users that they are investigating the issue with their UK banking partner which resulted in the delay of some GBP payouts. Later, Stripe confirmed that all the affected payouts have been processed and the issue has been resolved.
Stripe’s CEO Patrick Collison commented on one of the Hacker News threads, “Stripe CEO here. We’re very sorry about this. We work hard to maintain extreme reliability in our infrastructure, with a lot of redundancy at different levels. This morning, our API was heavily degraded (though not totally down) for 24 minutes. We’ll be conducting a thorough investigation and root-cause analysis.”
Later in the day, around 21.14 UTC, Stripe informed users that their error rates and response times have again increased. Finally their API services were restored at 22:47 UTC. Stripe assured users that all the delayed bank payments have been successfully deposited to the corresponding bank accounts.
Though many users were distraught over Stripe’s service degradation, some users came out in support of Stripe.
A user on Hacker News comments, “This is causing a big problem for my business right now, but I am not mad at Stripe because you earned that level of credibility and respect in my opinion. I understand these things happen and am glad to know a team as excellent as Stripe’s is on the job.”
Many users have asked Stripe to give a post mortem analysis about the issue.
This month, many other services like GitLab, Google Cloud, Cloudflare, Facebook, Instagram, Whatsapp and Apple’s iCloud also suffered major outages.
A comment on Hacker News reads, “Most services are going down from time to time, it’s just that the big one are widely used and so people notice quickly”
Another user comments, “Between Cloudflare, Google, and now Stripe, I feel like there’s been a huge cluster of services that never go down, going down. Curious to see Stripe’s post-mortem here.”
To know Stripe’s exact system status, head over to Stripe Status page.
Stripe updates its product stack to prepare European businesses for SCA-compliance
Former Google Cloud CEO joins Stripe board just as Stripe joins the global Unicorn Club
Stripe open sources ‘Skycfg’, configuration builder for Kubernetes
I remember deciding to pursue my first IT certification, the CompTIA A+. I had signed…
Key takeaways The transformer architecture has proved to be revolutionary in outperforming the classical RNN…
Once we learn how to deploy an Ubuntu server, how to manage users, and how…
Key-takeaways: Clean code isn’t just a nice thing to have or a luxury in software projects; it's a necessity. If we…
While developing a web application, or setting dynamic pages and meta tags we need to deal with…
Software architecture is one of the most discussed topics in the software industry today, and…