On October 20, 2025, a significant technical outage at Amazon Web Services (AWS), the world’s largest cloud computing provider, caused widespread disruption across several key UK government departments and numerous other platforms globally. The Home Office, HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC), the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP), and the Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency (DVLA) were among those impacted by the incident, as revealed by Labour frontbencher Lord Leong during a parliamentary discussion. While the disruption was extensive, Lord Leong emphasised that there is no evidence to suggest the outage was due to malicious activity, attributing the issue instead to technical errors within AWS’s infrastructure.
The root cause of the outage was traced to a malfunction in AWS's domain name system (DNS) configuration, particularly affecting the US-EAST-1 region, where the health monitoring system of their network load balancers encountered failures. This led to interruptions not only in UK government services but also disrupted major banks such as Halifax and Lloyds, as well as popular digital platforms including Snapchat, Roblox, Fortnite, Reddit, Zoom, and Venmo. Over four million users worldwide faced service interruptions during this event, which also impacted other tech-dependent services like Coinbase, Robinhood, and Amazon's internal systems such as Prime Video and Alexa.
The breadth of disruption, from financial services and government portals to entertainment and communication apps, underscored the vulnerabilities embedded within today's interconnected digital infrastructure that heavily relies on a limited number of cloud providers. Following the incident, significant concern has been raised regarding the concentration of digital services and the risk of overdependence on major US-based cloud providers. Speaking in the House of Lords, Labour peer Lord Harris of Haringey questioned whether the UK government should diversify its cloud service suppliers and increase sovereign capabilities to bolster resilience against similar future outages.
In response, Lord Leong acknowledged that departments independently choose their cloud providers based on several factors, including cost, capability, and staff expertise. He noted that efforts are underway to diversify the UK's cloud ecosystem by encouraging greater participation from UK-based and European providers. The government’s Department for Science, Innovation and Technology is leading the response and liaising with AWS to mitigate the risk of similar disruptions. Additionally, the National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) continues to provide guidance aimed at enhancing organisational cyber resilience.
The outage also sparked broader conversations in the UK Parliament about digital infrastructure security and procurement policies. Liberal Democrat Lord Clement-Jones criticised the government’s apparent overreliance on two dominant US cloud providers, which, according to the Competition and Markets Authority, command between 70% and 90% of the market. He urged the government to adjust procurement strategies to support domestic cloud providers, which could also accelerate sovereign innovations such as artificial intelligence. In related parliamentary scrutiny, the Treasury Committee questioned the lack of designation of AWS as a Critical Third Party under recently implemented regulatory frameworks, raising concerns about the dependence on foreign-hosted IT infrastructure for critical national services.
Customer service disruptions were not limited to government departments. HMRC reported difficulties in accessing online services and saw a surge in helpline calls during the outage. Meanwhile, affected users across sectors were cautioned to remain vigilant against potential phishing attacks, which often spike during such technical failures. Downdetector, a platform tracking service downtimes, recorded sharp increases in outage complaints not only for AWS but also for HMRC, Halifax, Lloyds, Snapchat, Slack, and Ring.
While most services began returning to normal by the afternoon following AWS’s mitigation efforts, the incident served as a stark reminder of the fragility inherent in depending on a few central providers for essential digital operations. Industry experts stressed the need for enhanced fault tolerance strategies and greater redundancy in cloud infrastructures to prevent single points of failure from cascading into widespread disruption.
This extensive AWS outage has underlined the urgency for the UK government and the wider business community to rethink their reliance on cloud service giants, enhance digital sovereignty, and invest in diverse, resilient infrastructure solutions that can withstand such unforeseen technical faults.
📌 Reference Map:
- Paragraph 1 – [1] Liverpool Echo
- Paragraph 2 – [2] Reuters, [3] Cambridge Independent
- Paragraph 3 – [2] Reuters, [4] ITV
- Paragraph 4 – [1] Liverpool Echo
- Paragraph 5 – [1] Liverpool Echo
- Paragraph 6 – [1] Liverpool Echo, [5] Upday
- Paragraph 7 – [6] Accountancy Today, [3] Cambridge Independent
- Paragraph 8 – [2] Reuters, [4] ITV
Source: Noah Wire Services