Crypto heists reach record $2.7 billion in 2025

Cybercriminals stole a record $2.7 billion in cryptocurrency in 2025, according to blockchain analytics firms Chainalysis and TRM Labs. North Korean hackers accounted for over $2 billion of the total, marking a 51% increase from the previous year. The largest single incident was a $1.4 billion breach at the Bybit exchange.

The year 2025 saw cryptocurrency thefts escalate to unprecedented levels, with total losses hitting $2.7 billion. This figure surpasses previous records and represents the third consecutive year of rising incidents, driven largely by nation-state actors. North Korea-linked groups, such as Lazarus, executed fewer but more profitable attacks, stealing $2.02 billion overall. Their cumulative hauls now exceed $6.75 billion, funding programs amid international sanctions.

The standout event was the mid-2025 Bybit exchange hack, where attackers siphoned $1.4 billion in various tokens. Blockchain analysis traced the funds to North Korean wallets, confirming state involvement. Bybit quickly halted withdrawals and worked with firms like Chainalysis to recover portions through disrupting money mixers. As Chainalysis noted in its preview for the 2026 Crypto Crime Report, "North Korean hackers stole $2.02 billion in cryptocurrency in 2025, a 51% year-over-year increase."

While centralized exchanges like Bybit remained vulnerable due to issues like private key mismanagement and supply-chain weaknesses, decentralized finance (DeFi) protocols fared better. DeFi hacks totaled under $500 million, thanks to improved auditing, multi-signature wallets, and insurance measures. Personal wallet breaches surged to 158,000 incidents affecting 80,000 victims, but the stolen value fell to $713 million from $1.5 billion in 2024.

Recovery efforts benefited from blockchain's transparency, with over $300 million frozen via exchange blacklists and international cooperation, including U.S. Treasury sanctions. TRM Labs reported on X, "In our latest report, we detail how North Korea was responsible for over half of the USD 2.7 billion stolen in crypto hacks in 2025."

Regulators responded with heightened scrutiny, such as the EU's MiCA framework and U.S. proof-of-reserves mandates. Industry experts anticipate further advancements in AI defenses and threat-sharing to counter ongoing geopolitical cyber risks.

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Illustration of North Korean hackers in a cyber command center stealing a record $2 billion in cryptocurrency from global exchanges like Bybit.
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North Korea steals record $2 billion in cryptocurrency in 2025

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North Korean hackers stole a record $2.02 billion in cryptocurrency in 2025, according to a new Chainalysis report, surpassing the previous year's haul by 51 percent and bringing their total to $6.75 billion. The thefts, which accounted for 60 percent of the global total of $3.4 billion stolen, were driven by fewer but larger attacks, including a $1.5 billion breach of the Dubai-based Bybit exchange in February. Experts attribute the success to sophisticated tactics like embedding IT workers in crypto firms and impersonating recruiters.

The Chainalysis 2026 Crypto Crime Report, published January 13, 2026, reveals at least $14 billion stolen in 2025 scams—projected to reach $17 billion—driven by a 1,400% surge in AI-boosted impersonation tactics, amid broader losses including $4 billion from hacks per PeckShield and $154 billion in total illicit volumes linked to nation-state actors.

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Building on late-2025 reports of record $2.7 billion in cryptocurrency heists, illicit addresses received at least $154 billion in 2025—a 162% year-over-year increase—according to the introduction to Chainalysis's 2026 Crypto Crime Report, published January 8, 2026. The surge was driven by a 694% rise in funds to sanctioned entities, with growth across most illicit categories even excluding that factor. The report emphasizes the professionalization of crypto crime, including nation-state involvement and specialized laundering services.

South Korean investors shifted more than 160 trillion won ($110 billion) from local crypto exchanges to foreign platforms last year, driven by restrictive domestic regulations. A joint report from Coingecko and Tiger Research highlighted this outflow, attributing it to delays in broader crypto frameworks. Officials acknowledged the need for updated rules, but disagreements over stablecoins stalled progress.

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The crypto sector shattered records with $8.6 billion in deal volume in 2025—a fourfold jump fueled by deregulation and institutional demand—complemented by 11 firms raising $14.6 billion via U.S. IPOs. Amid Bitcoin's volatility from $126,000 highs to $80,000 lows, key deals by Coinbase, Kraken, and Ripple, alongside standout public listings, signaled mainstream maturation.

Bitcoin surged 4% to $106,087.54 as the global cryptocurrency market recovered, with its total capitalization rising to $3.57 trillion. The rebound follows a sharp selloff that liquidated nearly $20 billion in leveraged positions and erased half a trillion dollars from the market over a weekend. Experts view the event as a necessary correction exposing structural flaws while highlighting improved infrastructure resilience.

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Bitcoin tumbled to a seven-month low of around $80,500 on November 21, 2025, amid a sharp market selloff that erased nearly a quarter of its value this month. The decline, the worst monthly performance since the 2022 crypto collapse, swept up ether and other assets as investors fled riskier holdings. Factors include fears of an AI bubble, strong U.S. jobs data dampening rate cut hopes, and over $2 billion in liquidations.

 

 

 

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