Instagram experienced a major global outage on Wednesday morning, leaving thousands of Nigerian users unable to send messages, post content, or access their feeds, disrupting businesses and content creators who rely on the platform for sales and customer communication.
The outage began around 8:45 am Nigerian time (7:45 am GMT), with over 12,000 users worldwide reporting issues on Downdetector, an outage-tracking website.
The disruption mainly affected Instagram’s direct messaging system, with users receiving “failed to send” errors when trying to communicate with customers or contacts.
Nigerian small businesses and content creators, who increasingly depend on Instagram for e-commerce, customer service, and brand building, were left scrambling to find alternative communication channels during the outage.
According to Downdetector, 81% of affected users reported problems with the app, while 12% faced difficulties accessing the website. The outage prevented users from sending or receiving direct messages, posting new content, or loading their feeds and timelines.
Users across Nigeria took to X (formerly Twitter) to confirm the disruption, with many initially thinking they had been blocked or hacked before realising the problem was platform-wide.
“Is Instagram down? I can’t reply to customers,” one Nigerian business owner posted on X.
Similar read: Meta’s $2bn bet on Manus AI may improve WhatsApp, Facebook and Instagram experience
“Instagram is down, and suddenly X feels like the old town square again. Everyone gathered here asking: ‘Is it just me or…?’”@ayooluwa4real, another user tweeted.
The United States saw the highest number of reports, with over 10,000 complaints, while India recorded around 1,300 reports, and the United Kingdom about 135. Nigeria-specific data was not immediately available, but Nigerian users reported experiencing the same issues on social media.
The outage hit particularly hard for Nigerian businesses that use Instagram DMs as their primary customer service channel. Many small and medium enterprises in Nigeria have built entire business models around Instagram, using the platform to showcase products, communicate with customers, and process orders through direct messages.
Content creators and influencers who rely on Instagram for brand partnerships and audience engagement also found themselves unable to work during the disruption. For many, Instagram DMs serve as the primary point of contact with brands, collaborators, and followers.
Meta, the app’s parent company, has not released an official statement about the cause of the outage. The company’s status page initially showed all services as working normally despite widespread user complaints.
Instagram has over 2 billion monthly active users globally, with Nigeria representing one of Africa’s largest markets for the platform. The country’s young, tech-savvy population has embraced Instagram for both personal use and business purposes, making outages like this increasingly disruptive to economic activity.
As of Wednesday afternoon Nigerian time, some users reported that services were being gradually restored, though Meta has not confirmed when full functionality will return.
The post Instagram suffers global outage, disrupting businesses in Nigeria first appeared on Technext.


