AWS vs DigitalOcean

Two cloud infrastructure services compared from 30 days of community outage reports and detected incidents. We don't probe aws.amazon.com or digitalocean.com continuously — this page reflects user-reported issues only.

AWS
AWS
aws.amazon.com
No active incident
vs
DigitalOcean
DigitalOcean
digitalocean.com
No active incident
Outage reports
0
Past 30 days · community submissions
Outage reports
0
Past 30 days · community submissions
Outage reports
0
Past 24 hours
Outage reports
0
Past 24 hours
Detected incidents
0
Past 30 days · spike-flagged
Detected incidents
0
Past 30 days · spike-flagged
Last incident
None recorded
Most recent resolved
Last incident
None recorded
Most recent resolved
Category
Cloud Infrastructure
Category
Cloud Infrastructure
AWS
Is AWS down?
aws.amazon.com
DigitalOcean
Is DigitalOcean down?
digitalocean.com

Frequently asked

Which is more reliable, AWS or DigitalOcean?
Both AWS and DigitalOcean have similar community-reported activity over the past 30 days (0 reports for AWS, 0 for DigitalOcean; 0 vs 0 detected incidents). We don't probe either site continuously, so we report what users tell us — not a synthetic uptime score.
How does WebsiteDown compare AWS and DigitalOcean?
We aggregate two real signals for each side: user-submitted "down" / "working" reports tracked in 24-hour, 7-day, and 30-day windows, and detected incidents (continuous spikes flagged by our snapshot pipeline when reports cross a 3× baseline threshold). We don't fabricate uptime percentages or response times for sites we don't continuously probe.
Has AWS or DigitalOcean had any major outages recently?
Neither AWS nor DigitalOcean has triggered a higher number of detected incidents than the other in the past 30 days. The status pages for aws.amazon.com and digitalocean.com list any current or recent incidents.
Where does this comparison data come from?
Two sources: (1) community reports submitted via the Report issue / Working buttons across our status pages, stored in our outage_reports table; (2) detected incidents from our snapshot pipeline, which flags anomalous spikes. We don't probe aws.amazon.com or digitalocean.com from multiple regions on a schedule — continuous monitoring is a paid product for sites you own. This page reflects user-perceived issues only.