9 min read
This post is also available in Français Nederlands and Español
In mid-May 2025, Cloudflare blocked the largest DDoS attack ever recorded: a staggering 7.3 terabits per second (Tbps). This comes shortly after the publication of our DDoS threat report for 2025 Q1 on April 27, 2025, where we highlighted attacks reaching 6.5 Tbps and 4.8 billion packets per second (pps). The 7.3 Tbps attack is 12% larger than our previous record and 1 Tbps greater than a recent attack reported by cyber security reporter Brian Krebs at KrebsOnSecurity .
New world record: 7.3 Tbps DDoS attack autonomously blocked by Cloudflare
The attack targeted a Cloudflare customer, a hosting provider, that uses Magic Transit to defend their IP network. Hosting providers and critical Internet infrastructure have increasingly become targets of DDoS attacks, as we reported in our latest DDoS threat report . Pictured below is an attack campaign from January and February 2025 that blasted over 13.5 million DDoS attacks against Cloudflare’s infrastructure and hosting providers protected by Cloudflare.
DDoS attack campaign target Cloudflare infrastructure and hosting providers protected by Cloudflare
Let's start with some stats, and then we’ll dive into how our systems detected and mitigated this attack.
The 7.3 Tbps attack delivered 37.4 terabytes in 45 seconds
37.4 terabytes is not a staggering figure in today’s scales, but blasting 37.4 terabytes in just 45 seconds is. It’s the equivalent to flooding your network with over 9,350 full-length HD movies, or streaming 7,480 hours of high-definition video nonstop (that’s nearly a year of back-to-back binge-watching) in just 45 seconds. If it were music, you’d be downloading about 9.35 million songs in under a minute, enough to keep a listener busy for 57 years straight. Think of snapping 12.5 million high-resolution photos on your smartphone and never running out of storage—even if you took one shot every day, you’d be clicking away for 4,000 years — but in 45 seconds.
The record-breaking 7.3 Tbps DDoS attack delivered 37.4 TB in 45 seconds
... continue reading