Crypto Hacks Information: Your Complete Database of Cryptocurrency Exploits
A transparent, fully-sourced archive of every major crypto hack since 2010 — with laundering analysis, fund-flow narratives, and recovery tracking. Built for researchers, journalists, and the crypto-curious who need reliable crypto hacks information.
175
Documented hacks
$13.71B
Total stolen
2010+
Years covered
What Is the CryptoHacks Archive?
The CryptoHacks Archive is a free, public database of crypto hacks information covering every major cryptocurrency exploit since 2010. From the early days of exchange breaches to the largest bridge hacks and smart contract vulnerabilities of recent years, each incident is documented with the date, amount stolen, affected chains, attack technique, and a detailed narrative of how the exploit unfolded. Our goal is to make crypto hacks information accessible, searchable, and transparent — so researchers, journalists, developers, and everyday users can learn from past failures and better understand the security landscape of decentralized finance.
Every record in this archive is sourced from public on-chain data, official post-mortem reports from affected projects, reputable security research firms, and primary news sources. We trace the flow of stolen funds through mixers, bridges, and exchanges, documenting laundering patterns and recovery outcomes where available. Each hack entry links directly to its original sources and transaction hashes, so you can verify every claim independently. We do not publish unsourced speculation — if a detail cannot be corroborated, it is marked as unconfirmed.
Whether you are researching a specific incident, tracking trends in crypto hacks over time, or simply trying to understand how attackers exploit blockchain systems, the CryptoHacks Archive provides the structured crypto hacks information you need. Filter by chain, category, year, or amount; compare recovery rates across projects; and follow the money from the moment it was stolen to its final destination. This is crypto security documentation, built for the public good.
Why Trust This Crypto Hacks Information
Three principles that keep this archive accurate, verifiable, and useful.
150+ Documented Incidents
Every major crypto hack since 2010, curated from public on-chain data, post-mortem reports, and verified primary sources.
Full Laundering Analysis
On-chain fund-flow narratives tracing how stolen assets move through mixers, bridges, and exchanges after each exploit.
Transparent & Sourced
Each incident links to primary sources, transaction hashes, and recovery status — no speculation, no unsourced claims.
Largest Crypto Hacks by Amount Stolen
The biggest cryptocurrency heists ever recorded — each with a full laundering analysis and source links.
Bybit
$1.50B
North Korean Lazarus Group compromised Bybit's cold wallet via a sophisticated supply chain attack on Safe{Wallet} multisig infrastructure.
Ronin Network (Axie Infinity)
$625.0M
North Korean Lazarus Group compromised 5 of 9 Ronin validator private keys, enabling unauthorized withdrawals from the bridge.
Poly Network
$611.0M
Attacker exploited a flaw in Poly Network's cross-chain contract to override keeper role and transfer assets.
BNB Chain Bridge (BSC Token Hub)
$570.0M
Attacker forged proofs to mint 2M BNB from BSC's cross-chain bridge, exploiting a bug in the IAVL Merkle proof verification.
Coincheck
$534.0M
Japanese exchange Coincheck lost 523M NEM tokens stored in a single hot wallet without multisig protection.
FTX
$477.0M
During FTX's bankruptcy filing, ~$477M was drained from FTX wallets by an insider or external attacker exploiting access during the chaos.
Most Affected Blockchain Networks
Chains hit hardest by crypto hacks, ranked by total value stolen. Click any chain to filter the full database.
Recent Crypto Hacks & Incidents
The latest documented cryptocurrency exploits, sorted by date. Stay current with breaking crypto hacks information.
StablR Euro
Ethereum$2.8M
Attacker compromised a 1-of-3 multisig signer key for StablR's minting contract, minted 8.35M unbacked USDR and 4.5M EURR, and dumped them on DEXes for ~1,115 ETH, realizing ~$2.8M profit.
Bonzo Lend
Hedera$9.1M
Attacker exploited a flaw in Supra's oracle verifier (treated a zeroed BLS signature as valid), submitted a forged price update inflating SAUCE token value by ~12 orders of magnitude, deposited 250 SAUCE as collateral, and borrowed millions from Bonzo Lend.
Hedera Network
Hedera$5.3M
Suspected exploit on Hedera network moved ~$5.25M in assets from Hedera to Ethereum via the LayerZero bridge; Hedera has not officially confirmed.
Ethereum Phishing (Uniswap Permit2)
Ethereum$1.0M
Trader lost ~$1M (999,999 USDT) after signing a malicious Uniswap Permit2 phishing message that granted attackers full wallet access; no protocol was hacked — a single bad signature caused the loss.
Injective npm SDK Backdoor
Injective$0
Attackers compromised a trusted maintainer's account and pushed a wallet-stealing backdoor into @injectivelabs/sdk-ts v1.20.21 on npm, exfiltrating BIP-39 seed phrases and private keys.
StakeDAO
Arbitrum$91K
Attacker exploited a compromised StakeDAO deployer private key on Arbitrum, reconfigured the LayerZero v2 OFT peer setting on the vsdCRV contract to redirect to a malicious contract, and forged a cross-chain message triggering a massive unauthorized mint of 5.446 trillion vsdCRV tokens.
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Dive deeper with dedicated tools for browsing, visualizing, and analyzing crypto hacks information.
Start Exploring Crypto Hacks Information
Filter by chain, technique, amount, and status. Every incident includes a full laundering analysis with on-chain flow narratives and primary source links.
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