Crypto Hack Losses Drop 60% in December

While the decline suggests a slowdown in the scale of successful attacks, several high-impact incidents—including a $50 million address poisoning scam, a $27.3 million multi-signature wallet breach, and exploits affecting Trust Wallet and the Flow protocol—show that security risks are still elevated.
Hack Losses Ease in December
Losses from hacks
PeckShield reported a total of 26 major crypto exploits in December. One of the most severe incidents involved a single user losing approximately $50 million through an address poisoning scam.
This type of attack relies on subtle deception rather than technical vulnerabilities, with attackers sending small transactions from wallet addresses designed to closely resemble legitimate ones. These fake addresses often share the same first and last characters as the intended destination, increasing the likelihood that a victim might mistakenly select the fraudulent address from their transaction history without carefully reviewing the full string.
Another major loss that was pointed out by PeckShield involved a private key leak tied to a multi-signature wallet, resulting in roughly $27.3 million in stolen funds. Incidents like this prove that even more sophisticated wallet setups are not immune to user-side security failures, especially when private keys
Beyond these large individual losses, December also saw several platform-level exploits. Among them was a Christmas-time hack affecting Trust Wallet
Despite the month-over-month decline in stolen funds, security experts place a lot of emphasis on the fact that users should not interpret the data as a signal that risks are diminishing. Instead, they prove the importance of vigilance and basic security hygiene.
Simple practices like verifying every character of a wallet address before sending funds can greatly reduce the risk of address poisoning scams. Similarly, storing private keys on hardware wallets
Overall, December’s figures suggest that while the scale of losses can vary, the threat landscape is still active and changing.




