TikTok says it is still restoring core systems that support its U.S. app after a data center power incident disrupted key features across the region. The company reports “significant progress” but warns that U.S. users may continue to see glitches—especially when uploading—while work proceeds.
Status of the Outage and Current Service Recovery
In an update posted by the TikTok USDS Joint Venture on X, the company said it is recovering services with its U.S. data center partner and reiterated that full capacity has not yet returned. The message underscores that some creators might see unusual behavior, such as stalled posts or delayed metrics, during the stabilization window.
- Status of the Outage and Current Service Recovery
- What Users Are Seeing Across the U.S. TikTok App
- Data Center and Resilience Context for U.S. Services
- Timing and Trust Concerns Surrounding the Outage
- What Recovery Likely Involves for TikTok U.S. Services
- Guidance for Creators and Brands During Partial Outages

TikTok has not identified the partner involved in the power event. The disruption coincided with a severe winter storm that swept across the country and affected roughly 220 million people, straining power systems and logistics. Weather-linked power events are a known trigger for service instability across digital platforms, often leading to cascading recoveries rather than instant fixes.
What Users Are Seeing Across the U.S. TikTok App
Reports from users and creators include search errors, a jittery For You feed, slow or failed uploads, missing comments, and posts showing zero views or likes. TikTok has told U.S. users that these symptoms stem from server timeouts and degraded services rather than data loss, adding that underlying engagement data remains intact.
Why do counters sometimes read zero during incidents? Analytics and earnings rely on downstream pipelines that aggregate events from multiple systems. If the app front end recovers before those pipelines catch up, numbers can look wrong temporarily. As queues drain and caches repopulate, metrics typically reconcile without user action.
Data Center and Resilience Context for U.S. Services
TikTok has been localizing U.S. operations and data governance, including through a newly formed U.S. entity with American investors. Historically, the company has highlighted partnerships such as Oracle’s role in housing U.S. user data as part of its broader localization efforts. While the firm hasn’t tied this incident to any named partner, large-scale failovers can be complex even with multi-region redundancy, particularly when storage, compute, and content delivery networks recover at different speeds.
Industry research from organizations such as Uptime Institute has consistently found that power anomalies are a leading cause of major data center incidents, and that significant outages often carry six-figure remediation costs. Recovery typically requires coordinated restarts across databases, caches, streaming systems, and load balancers—work that is measured in stages rather than seconds.
Timing and Trust Concerns Surrounding the Outage
The outage’s timing—arriving just after the U.S. operational transition and amid heightened public tensions following the death of U.S. citizen Alex Pretti in an encounter with federal agents—has fueled speculation about cause and effect. TikTok has maintained that the disruption is the result of a data center power issue. The platform remains under ongoing scrutiny from policymakers and security experts, and the durability of its U.S. infrastructure will be a key measure of confidence in the new governance framework.

What Recovery Likely Involves for TikTok U.S. Services
Bringing a platform of TikTok’s scale back to steady state generally includes:
- Validating storage integrity
- Restoring compute clusters
- Rehydrating caches
- Rebuilding search and recommendation indexes
- Replaying event streams for analytics
- Reprocessing ad delivery, creator payouts, and trust-and-safety workflows
Expect a rolling normalization where uploads start to succeed more reliably ahead of fully accurate analytics and earnings dashboards.
Signs of stabilization typically include rising upload success rates, fewer server error codes, faster comment loads, and a For You feed that stops repeating stale or off-target clips. Analytics and monetization backfills are often last to complete because they must reconcile high volumes of delayed events with strict accuracy.
Guidance for Creators and Brands During Partial Outages
Practical steps can reduce frustration during partial outages:
- Draft captions offline
- Avoid rapid-fire reuploads of the same video
- Don’t delete posts that initially show zero views, as metrics may catch up
- Revisit Analytics or Creator Fund/Earnings dashboards after systems stabilize
Brands should:
- Monitor campaign delivery and pacing
- Set flexible KPIs for the affected period
- Keep backup channels ready for time-sensitive announcements
TikTok says it will continue to share updates via its U.S. joint venture channels until full capacity is restored. Advertisers, creators, and regulators will be looking for a clear root-cause analysis and post-incident hardening steps—especially around power resilience, failover testing, and communications—once the platform is back to normal.
