Is Xfinity Down? How to Check in Under a Minute
Before assuming an outage, rule out the two most common false positives: a local equipment issue (modem/router needs a reboot) and a device-specific problem (one device can't connect while others can). If multiple devices on your network all lose connection simultaneously, it's more likely a real outage.
Three Ways to Confirm an Xfinity Outage
- Xfinity Status Center (via the My Account app or xfinity.com/support/status) — shows confirmed outages in your specific service area, not just your account.
- Xfinity Assistant via text — text "Outage" to 266278 from your registered phone number for an automated status check tied to your address.
- Third-party outage trackers like Downdetector aggregate user reports, useful for spotting a wider regional issue before Xfinity's own status page updates.
What to Do During a Confirmed Outage
- Report it through the app even if it's already listed — this feeds the repair-priority queue for your specific node.
- Ask about a service credit if the outage exceeds 4 hours. Comcast doesn't apply this automatically in most states; you generally have to request it.
- Check for a scheduled maintenance notice first — planned maintenance outages (usually 1-4 AM) don't qualify for credits.
When It's Not a Real Outage
If the status page shows no outage but you're still down, the most common causes are a dead cable modem (check for a solid vs blinking power light), a loose coax connection, or — less commonly — a corroded splitter outside the home after storms. A quick reboot (unplug 30 seconds, replug) resolves roughly 40% of the "false outage" cases we've logged from user reports.