
Kicked Out of Steam for Maintenance? Here's How to Anticipate When It Might Happen
In a support article for how it plans its routine scheduled maintenance, Valve offered guidance that it prioritizes uptime during business hours in the Pacific time zone (on the US West Coast) when as many of its staff are available to help with issues as possible.
While Steam has a global user base that plays games on the platform around the clock, the company noted that the number of players peaks around 12 p.m. (noon) PT, and it bottoms out around 11 p.m. PT. Thus, when Valve needs to do planned maintenance, it's scheduled for early mornings or late afternoon Pacific time to avoid peak time while still having staff around to address issues, the company noted in the support article.
When is Steam's weekly maintenance?
Valve doesn't announce when its platform goes dark for planned maintenance, nor does it have guidance on any of its social media accounts. But from various posts on the Steam support forum and Reddit, Valve tends to take Steam down for less than an hour for weekly maintenance on Tuesdays starting sometime between 12 p.m. and 3 p.m. PT.
However, there's no notification system to warn you in-game when Steam's servers go down, so be careful when playing in that window.
How do I check whether Steam is down?
Aside from booting up Steam yourself, you can check a third-party service to see if they've reported that the platform is down. The most robust is SteamDB, which monitors access within cities around the world to indicate potential regional outages.

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