Home » topics » Did AWS stop we...
+ Start a Thread

Did AWS stop web hosting server within the UAE due to the ongoing middle east war crisis?

2026-06-16 04:33:37 5 replies

Many people reported that AWS stopped hosting services in the UAE, and many websites hosted within the UAE on AWS went down. The AWS team stopped giving regular updates regarding when they would restore the servers that were affected. 

Can anyone explain whether AWS is still offering hosting services within the UAE?

5 Replies

  1. L
    lintomdevasiya

    From what I have observed, AWS has not permanently stopped its web hosting services within the UAE due to the Middle East conflict. However, certain AWS infrastructure and data center operations in the region have experienced disruptions as a result of the crisis, leading to temporary service interruptions and recovery efforts for affected customers.

    If my website is hosted in an AWS UAE region, I may notice performance issues or downtime during periods of infrastructure disruption. In such situations, AWS typically works to restore services and may recommend that customers use alternative regions or implement disaster recovery strategies to maintain business continuity.

    Rather than shutting down web hosting services entirely, AWS continues to operate while addressing the challenges caused by regional instability. For businesses that depend on uninterrupted website availability, I would consider using multi region hosting, backups, and failover solutions to reduce the impact of any unexpected outages.

    The best way for me to verify the status of a specific AWS hosted website is to review AWS service health updates and check whether the hosting environment is located in an affected region.

    2026-06-17 07:06:36
  2. A
    abrahampjohn80

    AWS has not officially ended its presence in the United Arab Emirates, but the region is effectively unusable for most hosting needs due to significant physical damage caused by the regional conflict.

    In March 2026, drone and missile strikes hit several AWS data center facilities in both the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain. These attacks caused severe structural damage, destroyed critical power systems, and triggered fire suppression systems that led to additional water damage. Because of this, two of the three availability zones in the UAE region (ME-CENTRAL-1) were crippled.

    Here is the current status as of June 2026:

    • Service Availability: The region remains largely offline and unstable. Amazon has categorized this as a "prolonged" recovery situation, noting that restoration is a complex process that will take several months.

    • Official Guidance: Amazon has strongly advised all customers to move their workloads to other AWS regions outside the Middle East—specifically recommending regions in the United States, Europe, or the Asia Pacific.

    • Action Required: If you still have data or resources in the UAE region, you should immediately check your personal AWS Health Dashboard. This will provide the most specific status updates for your account and offer guidance on how to recover your resources from remote backups.

    • Billing: Amazon has suspended billing operations for the affected regions while they work on their long-term recovery plans.

    This is a historic event for the cloud industry, as it marks the first time that physical military action has successfully disabled large-scale data center infrastructure. Because the operating environment in the region remains unpredictable, Amazon is not currently providing a firm date for when services will return to normal operation.

    2026-06-16 06:28:24
  3. A
    arnav

    To answer this directly, no. AWS has not stopped hosting in the UAE. I can confirm the region is up and running fine right now.

    What happened back in March was a one off incident, not AWS shutting things down. I followed it closely since a few of our hosted projects sit in this region. Two of their data center facilities here got hit by drone strikes during the conflict, and a nearby Bahrain facility took some damage too. This knocked out power and caused fires at the affected sites, which is why so many UAE hosted websites and apps went dark for a stretch. Local fire crews had to cut power to the facilities just to deal with the fire, which made things worse before AWS could even start fixing it.

    Working in this market, I know how much of Dubai's digital backbone leans on AWS, so when two of the three zones went down, I saw the impact firsthand across multiple sites I manage. Recovery took close to a day for some services, since it involved actual physical repair work on top of the usual technical fixes. AWS did keep their status page updated through it, even if it did not feel like enough at the time for those of us trying to explain the downtime to clients.

    That said, I want to be clear this was tied to a specific event, not an exit from the market. AWS has invested heavily in this region and I do not see any indication they are stepping back from the UAE.

    2026-06-16 06:17:40
  4. A
    aswathy.mohan

    AWS hasn't stopped offering hosting services in the UAE. What people are referring to is a real outage that happened back in March 2026, not a shutdown.

    During the regional conflict, AWS's UAE data centre (ME-CENTRAL-1) was actually hit by drone strikes. This caused sparks, a fire, and local authorities had to cut power to the facility while it was being contained. Two of the three availability zones in that region went down as a result, which is why a lot of UAE-hosted websites and apps went offline for several hours.

    There was also a second, completely separate outage in mid-March affecting AWS's Bahrain region, caused by a network misconfiguration - unrelated to the conflict, just normal technical failure.

    Since then, both regions have been stable and fully operational. No outages reported in weeks. So to directly answer the question, no, AWS did not withdraw or stop hosting in the UAE. It was a temporary, conflict-related infrastructure issue, and they've fully recovered.

    2026-06-16 06:08:34
  5. D
    drupad
    Having worked as an SEO analyst in Dubai for several years and managing websites hosted across different cloud environments, I looked into this issue in detail when reports of widespread outages began circulating.

    To clarify, AWS has not stopped offering hosting services in the UAE, nor has it announced any withdrawal from the region. The disruption was linked to the March 2026 drone strikes that reportedly damaged multiple AWS data center facilities in the UAE and Bahrain during the escalation of the Middle East conflict. As a result, several AWS services experienced outages, affecting websites, applications, databases, and cloud-hosted platforms that depended on the impacted infrastructure.

    Many website owners interpreted the downtime as AWS shutting down its UAE hosting operations, but that was not the case. AWS continued operating in the region while working to restore affected systems. The company also advised customers to activate disaster recovery plans and, where possible, migrate workloads to alternative AWS regions to reduce service interruptions.

    From what I observed, one of the biggest lessons from this incident was that many businesses had concentrated their infrastructure within a single AWS region. When the disruption occurred, organizations without cross-region backups, redundancy, or failover mechanisms faced prolonged downtime. Businesses that had adopted multi-region deployment strategies generally recovered much faster.

    Regarding whether this has happened before, AWS has experienced major outages in the past, including incidents caused by networking issues, software failures, power disruptions, and configuration errors. However, this event stands out because it was linked to physical damage associated with an active regional conflict rather than a technical fault inside AWS infrastructure. That makes it one of the most unusual service disruptions AWS customers have faced in the region.

    As of now, AWS continues to provide cloud and hosting services in the UAE. The incident should be viewed as a temporary infrastructure disruption caused by extraordinary geopolitical circumstances rather than an indication that AWS has stopped supporting customers in the country.
    2026-06-16 05:51:44

Your Reply