crypto hacks reduced significantly

While crypto hacking incidents plummeted by half in 2025, the thieves made off with a record-breaking haul. Approximately $2.17 billion in digital assets vanished by mid-July, already surpassing the entire previous year’s total. Fewer attacks, bigger paydays. Welcome to the new normal in crypto security.

Quality over quantity: hackers strike less but steal more in crypto’s record-shattering $2.17 billion heist season.

The numbers tell a sobering story. SlowMist tracked just 121 security incidents in the first half of 2025, marking a significant drop from 2024. But don’t celebrate yet. The declining incident count masks an alarming reality: thieves are getting more efficient. Total losses jumped by a staggering 46% year-over-year. Bybit paid 2.33 million dollars to white-hat hackers who helped track and intercept portions of the stolen funds.

February’s Bybit breach epitomizes this disturbing trend. In a single day, February 21, attackers absconded with nearly $1.5 billion, instantly becoming cryptocurrency’s largest hack ever. The 499,395 ETH that disappeared? North Korean fingerprints all over it. The Lazarus Group doubled their 2024 haul to $2 billion, mostly thanks to this one massive score.

These thieves don’t waste time. Within ten days, the stolen Bybit funds were laundered through mixers, swapped between different Ethereum tokens, and split across dozens of addresses. Some criminals have apparently been taking efficiency workshops.

Wallet takeovers emerged as 2025’s most devastating attack vector. Compromised private keys at centralized services accounted for the lion’s share of losses. Q1 2025 has earned the unfortunate distinction of becoming the worst quarter ever for cryptocurrency losses. Off-chain attacks continued the pattern established in 2024, when they were responsible for 80.5% of stolen funds.

Phishing, meanwhile, remains the volume leader. More incidents, less value per hit. It topped the charts in Q2 both in incident count and, surprisingly, total value. Code exploits took second place in the financial damage rankings.

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