Finbold
2026-01-07 11:53:07

Crypto hacks drained $2.78 billion in 2025 – Finbold report

Crypto hacks resulted in $2.78 billion in stolen funds in 2025, according to Finbold’s 2025 Cryptocurrency Market Report , based on incident data tracked by blockchain security firm SlowMist. While the headline figure places 2025 among the costliest years for crypto security breaches, a closer look at the data reveals that losses were heavily concentrated in the early part of the year, with a clear slowdown emerging as the year progressed. !function(e,n,i,s){var d="InfogramEmbeds";var o=e.getElementsByTagName(n)[0];if(window[d]&&window[d].initialized)window[d].process&&window[d].process();else if(!e.getElementById(i)){var r=e.createElement(n);r.async=1,r.id=i,r.src=s,o.parentNode.insertBefore(r,o)}}(document,"script","infogram-async","https://e.infogram.com/js/dist/embed-loader-min.js"); Bybit breach shaped the entire risk profile of 2025 The defining event of the year was the Bybit hack, which alone accounted for $1.5 billion in losses. That single incident represented more than half of all known crypto funds stolen in 2025 and dramatically skewed the annual total. The breach stemmed from a wallet compromise, underscoring that custody and key management remain among the most critical points of failure in the digital asset ecosystem. Even as smart contract security has improved across many protocols, centralized wallet infrastructure continues to pose systemic risk when safeguards fail. !function(e,n,i,s){var d="InfogramEmbeds";var o=e.getElementsByTagName(n)[0];if(window[d]&&window[d].initialized)window[d].process&&window[d].process();else if(!e.getElementById(i)){var r=e.createElement(n);r.async=1,r.id=i,r.src=s,o.parentNode.insertBefore(r,o)}}(document,"script","infogram-async","https://e.infogram.com/js/dist/embed-loader-min.js"); Beyond Bybit, losses were distributed across a smaller number of high-impact incidents. Attacks on Cetus Protocol, Balancer V2, LIBRA, and Nobitex together made up the bulk of the remaining losses, with causes ranging from contract vulnerabilities and logic flaws to rug pulls and security lapses. Hack activity was front-loaded, not persistent Quarterly data shows that 2025’s hack losses were overwhelmingly front-loaded, with momentum fading steadily through the year. In Q1, crypto hacks resulted in approximately $1.78 billion in losses, driven primarily by the Bybit incident. That figure alone accounted for nearly two-thirds of the total amount stolen in 2025. Losses dropped sharply in Q2, falling to roughly $465 million, before declining further in Q3 to just over $300 million. By Q4, total hack-related losses fell below $230 million, marking the lowest quarterly figure of the year. This progressive decline suggests that 2025 was not defined by sustained exploit activity, but rather by a small number of early, high-impact breaches followed by a prolonged period of relative stabilization. Wallet compromises outweighed smart contract exploits Despite continued attention on smart contract auditing and protocol-level defenses, wallet-related breaches proved to be the most financially destructive attack vector in 2025. The dominance of the Bybit incident highlights how failures in custody infrastructure can still result in outsized losses, even as decentralized protocols increasingly adopt stronger security frameworks. Contract vulnerabilities and logic flaws remained present throughout the year, but their cumulative impact was notably smaller compared with wallet compromises. Q4 slowdown hints at improving security discipline The most notable development in the data is the sharp slowdown in losses during the second half of the year, culminating in a subdued fourth quarter. While the crypto sector remained exposed to risk, the absence of large-scale breaches in Q4 suggests a combination of improved security practices, more cautious capital deployment, and fewer exploitable concentrations of value as markets matured. Finbold’s analysis indicates that 2025 was less a year of escalating cybercrime and more a period of adjustment, where early shocks gave way to tighter controls and reduced exploit frequency. Although the industry still faces meaningful security challenges, the year-end trend points toward gradual progress rather than deterioration. The post Crypto hacks drained $2.78 billion in 2025 – Finbold report appeared first on Finbold .

Ricevi la newsletter di Crypto
Leggi la dichiarazione di non responsabilità : Tutti i contenuti forniti nel nostro sito Web, i siti con collegamento ipertestuale, le applicazioni associate, i forum, i blog, gli account dei social media e altre piattaforme ("Sito") sono solo per le vostre informazioni generali, procurati da fonti di terze parti. Non rilasciamo alcuna garanzia di alcun tipo in relazione al nostro contenuto, incluso ma non limitato a accuratezza e aggiornamento. Nessuna parte del contenuto che forniamo costituisce consulenza finanziaria, consulenza legale o qualsiasi altra forma di consulenza intesa per la vostra specifica dipendenza per qualsiasi scopo. Qualsiasi uso o affidamento sui nostri contenuti è esclusivamente a proprio rischio e discrezione. Devi condurre la tua ricerca, rivedere, analizzare e verificare i nostri contenuti prima di fare affidamento su di essi. Il trading è un'attività altamente rischiosa che può portare a perdite importanti, pertanto si prega di consultare il proprio consulente finanziario prima di prendere qualsiasi decisione. Nessun contenuto sul nostro sito è pensato per essere una sollecitazione o un'offerta