Google Meet Outage Resolved After Widespread Disruption in India
Google Meet experienced a significant service disruption on November 26, primarily affecting thousands of users across India. The outage, which caused login failures and connection issues, has now been fully resolved according to Google’s official status dashboard and social media reports.
Key Takeaways
- Google Meet outage primarily impacted users in Asia on November 26
- Peak reports reached nearly 1,700 users in India via Downdetector
- Users encountered “502 Bad Gateway” errors during login attempts
- Service was fully restored by November 26, 02:30 PST
Outage Timeline and User Impact
Reports began surging around noon IST, with users unable to access Google Meet through PCs and receiving “502 error” messages. The disruption prevented participation in scheduled calls, virtual events, and online classes.
According to Downdetector data collected during the outage:
- 65% of users reported being unable to access the Google Meet website
- 33% cited server connection problems
- 2% experienced issues with video quality
Google confirmed the issue specifically affected Google Meet traffic in Asia, while other regions remained unaffected.
Understanding the 502 Bad Gateway Error
The “502 Bad Gateway” error indicates a temporary server communication failure. In this case, the problem originated from Google’s infrastructure rather than users’ internet connections or devices.
Official Response and Resolution
Google’s Workspace Status Dashboard confirmed the disruption and subsequent resolution. “The issue with Google Meet has been resolved for all affected users as of Wednesday, 2025-11-26 02:30 PST,” the company stated.
Google acknowledged they will publish a detailed analysis once their internal investigation is complete. During the outage, the company suggested using the mobile version as a workaround for accessing Meet services.
Recent Cloud Service Disruptions
This incident follows recent outages affecting other major cloud infrastructure providers:
- Cloudflare experienced disruption due to a “latent software flaw” affecting platforms including X, ChatGPT, and e-commerce sites
- AWS faced widespread disruption from a routine DNS error
- Microsoft Azure suffered a major outage impacting Microsoft 365 and airline check-in systems
These consecutive incidents highlight the growing dependency on cloud services and their potential impact on digital operations worldwide.



