7th Annual Report analyzes data on IT and data center outages including causes, costs and consequences
June 9, 2025 – Uptime Institute recently announced the release of its 7th Annual Outage Analysis 2025 keynote report. The prevention of data center outages continues to be a strategic priority for data center owners and operators. Infrastructure equipment has improved, but the complexity of modern architectures and evolving external threats present new risks that operators must actively manage.
For the fourth consecutive year, Uptime Intelligence Research suggests that overall outage frequency and the general level of reported severity continue to decline. However, cyber security incidents are on the rise and often have severe, lasting impacts.
Outages overall have slowed down. Data center operators are facing a growing number of external risks beyond their control, including power grid constraints, extreme weather, network provider failures and third-party software issues. And despite a more volatile risk landscape, improvements are occurring.
Andy Lawrence, founding member and executive director of Uptime Intelligence
Uptime’s annual outage analysis is unique in the industry, and draws on multiple surveys, information supplied by Uptime Institute members and partners, and its database of publicly reported outages.
Key findings include:
For 2025, the proportion of human error-related outages caused by failure to follow procedures rose by ten percentage points compared with 2024. The failure of staff to follow procedures has become an even greater cause of outages than in the previous year, suggesting a major opportunity to reduce incidents through training and process review. The overwhelming majority of human error-related outages involve ignored or inadequate procedures. Nearly 40% of organizations have suffered a major outage caused by human error over the past three years. Of these incidents, 85% stem from staff failing to follow procedures or from flaws in the processes and procedures themselves. The reason for this rise is unclear but may be a consequence of the rapid growth of industry and the resulting staff shortages in many regions. While improving documentation and processes remains important, greater focus on staff training and real-time operational support may reduce risks more effectively, notes Uptime.
Over the nine years that Uptime has been tracking publicly reported outages, third-party IT and data center service providers — including cloud and internet giants, telecommunications, and colocation companies — have accounted for about two-thirds of those reported.
For 2024, outages attributed to digital service providers increased, while those from cloud/internet giants declined, possibly due to hyperscalers’ investments in distributed resiliency and regional failover. For the third consecutive year, the financial sector saw a decline in outage frequency compared with the long-term average since 2020. This improvement may reflect the impact of stricter regulations and heightened oversight following several major, high-profile outages prior to 2021.
For further insight into Uptime’s latest research on digital infrastructure failures, view the Annual Data Center Outage Analysis 2025 webinar on demand. A nine-page Executive Summary, an excerpt of a much more detailed, 26-page report, is available for download from Uptime.
To access the entire Annual Outage Analysis 2025 Report and Uptime Intelligence on an evaluation basis, visit Intelligence Uptime Institute. The full report is available to Uptime Network members and Uptime Intelligence subscribers.