
Quick answer: “The authentication servers are currently not reachable” almost always means Minecraft’s client can’t confirm your login with Mojang/Microsoft’s authentication system — most often because those servers are briefly down, but sometimes because of your own DNS, firewall, or network settings. Check the official Xbox/Minecraft service status first; if it’s not a wider outage, flushing your DNS cache and restarting the launcher fixes it for most players.
TL;DR
- This error means the game couldn’t reach the login/authentication servers, not that your account or world is broken.
- Most common cause: a temporary outage on Mojang/Microsoft’s side — check the official status page first.
- Other common causes: a stale DNS cache, an over-aggressive firewall or antivirus, or a VPN interfering with the connection.
- Quick fixes that resolve most cases: flush DNS, restart the launcher/router, temporarily disable VPN, and re-check your system clock is accurate.
- If nothing works, a clean reinstall of the Minecraft Launcher is the reliable last resort.
- If you’ve ever used third-party “alt account” tools, be aware they’re a known way accounts get compromised — this error is also sometimes reported after account security issues.
On this page
What this error actually means
Minecraft accounts are verified through Mojang/Microsoft’s authentication system every time you launch the game or join a server. When your client sends that login request and gets no valid response back, it shows: “Failed to log in: The authentication servers are currently not reachable. Please try again.” This is a connection failure between your game and the login servers — it says nothing about whether your account, purchase, or saved worlds are safe.
Mojang Minecraft Authentication Server Status (Live Monitor & Troubleshooting Guide)
Step 1: Check if it’s a server-side outage
Since Minecraft accounts run through Microsoft/Xbox authentication, the fastest way to rule out a wider outage is:
- Check the official Xbox Live service status page for authentication or sign-in issues.
- Ask in Minecraft communities or check social media for other players reporting the same error at the same time.
- If many players are affected simultaneously, this is a server-side issue — the fix is simply to wait, since Mojang/Microsoft resolves these independently of anything on your end.
Good to know: the game’s own error message directly credits the servers, and in the majority of reported cases the root cause has genuinely been on Mojang/Microsoft’s side rather than the player’s device. Ruling out an outage first saves you from troubleshooting a problem that isn’t actually yours to fix.
Common causes, ranked by likelihood
| Cause | What it looks like |
|---|---|
| Server-side outage | Many players affected at once, regardless of network or device. |
| Stale or blocked DNS | Only you (or your household) affected; other apps work fine. |
| Firewall or antivirus blocking | Error appears consistently, often right after installing new security software. |
| VPN interference | Error only happens while a VPN is active; works fine with it off. |
| Incorrect system clock | Login tokens fail validation because your PC’s date/time is off. |
Fixes to try, in order
- Wait and retry if the official status page confirms a wider outage.
- Restart your router and PC to clear a stuck connection.
- Flush your DNS cache — on Windows, open Command Prompt and run
ipconfig /flushdns. - Check your system clock is set to the correct date, time, and time zone (ideally set to automatic).
- Temporarily disable your VPN and try logging in again.
- Whitelist Minecraft in your firewall or antivirus settings if you’ve recently changed security software.
- Reinstall the Minecraft Launcher as a last resort if none of the above work.
A few things worth remembering
- Repeatedly clicking login during a genuine server outage won’t help — it just adds unnecessary load.
- Reinstalling the launcher doesn’t affect your purchase or ownership, since that’s tied to your Microsoft account, not local files.
- If the issue only happens on one specific server (not the main menu), the problem may be with that server’s configuration rather than your account.
A security note worth reading
Some players report this error after their account was compromised through third-party “cracked” or “alt account” tools that promise free premium access. These tools frequently harvest login credentials. If you’ve ever used one, it’s worth changing your Microsoft account password and enabling two-factor authentication, in addition to fixing the connection issue itself.
If DNS and network issues are a recurring problem beyond just this one game, our broader guide on why apps and connections fail and how to fix them covers general device-level troubleshooting steps.
Frequently asked questions
Does this error mean my Minecraft account has been banned?
No. This is strictly a connection error between the game and the authentication servers. A ban or suspension would show a different, explicit message.
Will I lose my worlds or purchases if I reinstall the launcher?
No. Ownership is tied to your Microsoft account, not local launcher files. Back up your saves folder first as a precaution, but reinstalling the launcher itself won’t remove your purchase.
Why does flushing DNS sometimes fix this?
A stale or incorrect cached DNS record can point your game to the wrong server address. Flushing the cache forces your system to look up the correct address again.
Can a VPN really cause this error?
Yes. Some VPN configurations route traffic in a way that the authentication servers reject or time out on, especially with certain server locations or protocols. Disabling it temporarily helps confirm whether it’s the cause.
How long do Minecraft authentication outages usually last?
Reported outages typically clear up within minutes to a few hours, based on past incidents affecting Minecraft’s login and Realms services.
Source: This guide references the official Xbox Live service status page, which reflects Microsoft account authentication status used by Minecraft. Status changes constantly — check the live page rather than relying on any status mentioned here.