Strava, the widely used fitness tracking app for runners, cyclists, and swimmers around the globe, experienced an outage on June 10, 2026. This left many users unable to log in, sync workouts, or access the service altogether. If you’ve been staring at an error message, you’re definitely not alone.
What’s Actually Happening
Users have reported outages across various platforms, with complaints flooding social media and outage-tracking websites. Both the app and website were affected, indicating that the issue wasn’t limited to just one device or operating system. Strava acknowledged the problem and is currently investigating, but they haven’t disclosed the root cause yet.
These outages usually come from server-side issues. So, the problem is on Strava’s end, not yours. Think of it like a restaurant kitchen that’s caught fire. No matter how hungry you are or how nicely set your table is, you won’t get your meal until the kitchen is fixed.
Android Authority was one of the first to report the widespread disruption, mentioning that a growing number of users faced errors while trying to access the service.
Who’s Affected
The outage impacted users on both iOS and Android devices, along with the Strava website on desktop browsers. This rules out a platform-specific bug and points to Strava’s own infrastructure, which includes the servers and systems that run the app, as the likely source of the issue.
| Metric | Detail |
|---|---|
| Strava Monthly Active Users | Over 150 million |
| Countries Affected | Global (multi-region reports) |
| Platforms Impacted | iOS, Android, and web |
| Outage First Reported | June 10, 2026, around 8 PM UTC |
What This Means
For casual users, a Strava outage is just a hassle. But for serious athletes, the stakes are higher. Strava isn’t merely a log; it’s a community. Segment records, training history, and social feeds all reside there. If you completed a long run or race during the outage, your GPS data might not have uploaded, making it feel like your effort didn’t count.
Here’s some practical advice: Most fitness devices and phones keep workout data locally before syncing it to Strava. Your Garmin, Apple Watch, or Wahoo should have your workout saved on the device itself. Once Strava is back up, those workouts will usually sync automatically. So, don’t worry — your miles are likely safe.
If you depend on Strava for real-time route navigation while running or cycling, you’ll need a backup plan during the outage. Apple Maps, Google Maps, or a dedicated GPS device can help fill that gap temporarily.
Community Reactions
“Strava is down and I just finished my best 10K ever. I need witnesses. This is a crisis.”
“Strava being down hits different when you just did a 60-mile ride and need to brag about it immediately.”
What You Can Do Right Now
While Strava works on a fix, here are some practical steps you can take:
- Check your device: Your GPS watch or phone should have the workout saved locally. Don’t try to export anything manually yet — wait for Strava to recover and handle the sync.
- Check Strava’s status page: Strava has a system status page where they share updates during outages. Just search “Strava status” to find it.
- Check social media: Searching “Strava down” on X (formerly Twitter) will show real-time reports from other users and sometimes official updates from Strava’s support account.
- Be patient: Most app outages of this scale get resolved within a few hours. Strava’s engineering team is on it.
It’s good to know that Android Authority confirmed Strava was actively investigating the issue shortly after reports began to surface, which indicates that fixes were already in the works.
What To Watch
- Strava’s status page should post an official postmortem (a clear explanation of what went wrong and how they fixed it) within 24 to 48 hours after service restoration.
- Automatic sync should kick in for most users once the service is back online — keep an eye on your app’s notification feed.
- If your workout still doesn’t appear after 24 hours of normal service, Strava’s support team can often manually trigger a sync from connected devices like Garmin or Apple Health.
- Outages like this often prompt fitness apps to reassess their infrastructure — watch for any Strava engineering blog posts or announcements about reliability improvements in the coming weeks.
Maya Torres
Maya Torres is the Consumer Tech Editor at Explosion.com with 7 years covering product launches for major technology publications. She has reviewed over 300 devices across smartphones, laptops, wearables, and smart home products. Maya specializes in translating spec sheets into real-world buying advice and attends CES, MWC, and Apple keynotes as press. Her reviews focus on helping readers decide what to buy, not just what specs look good on paper.


