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Home Articles Upbit Increases Cold Wallet Storage to 99% After ₩44.5B Hack

Upbit Increases Cold Wallet Storage to 99% After ₩44.5B Hack

Simon Simba
Simon Simba
Simon is a writer with five years experience in crypto and iGaming. He currently works as a freelance writer at BanklessTimes where he focuses on simplifying daily crypto developments for readers. He discovered crypto in 2022 while writing news about NFTs for a news website in the US, and has since written for two other international NFT projects, and a Web3 gaming agency.
Updated: December 10th, 2025
Editor:
Joseph Alalade
Joseph Alalade
Editor:
Joseph Alalade
News Lead and Editor
Joseph is a content writer and editor who has actively participated in crypto for over 6 years. He enjoys educating others about Web3 and covering its updates, regulatory developments, and exciting stories.

Upbit cryptocurrency exchange has moved almost all customer assets to offline storage after a 44.5 billion won hack, aiming to keep 99% of funds in cold wallets and turning the Solana-based exploit into a line in the sand for Korean exchange security.

Upbit Moves Funds to Cold Storage

The change follows a late‑November incident in which attackers siphoned roughly 44.5 billion won (about 30–33 million dollars) in Solana ecosystem tokens from Upbit’s hot wallets, triggering emergency halts on deposits and withdrawals.

The stolen assets spanned several Solana-based coins, including SOL and popular DeFi and memecoins, and forced the exchange to freeze additional funds in cooperation with projects and other platforms.​

Upbit has said it will cover user losses from its own reserves and confirmed that engineers uncovered and fixed a critical wallet vulnerability during the forensic review.

As part of the overhaul, the exchange has shifted to a stance in which 99% of all crypto assets are in offline cold wallets, leaving only a thin liquidity buffer online for daily trading and withdrawals.

Users Benefit from Offline Crypto Storage

Upbit’s shift toward near‑total cold storage minimizes the on‑chain attack surface but introduces trade‑offs for speed and convenience. Large withdrawals and some token transfers will now depend on controlled, often manual processes to move assets from cold to hot wallets, which can slow down peak‑time activity but reduces the risk that another vulnerability drains sizable balances in minutes.​

Security experts say the move puts Upbit in line with so‑called “fortress” custody models used by the most conservative exchanges and custodians, where offline key management, multi‑sig approvals, and hardware isolation act as primary defenses.

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Simon Simba
Simon is a writer with five years experience in crypto and iGaming. He currently works as a freelance writer at BanklessTimes where he focuses on simplifying daily crypto developments for readers. He discovered crypto in 2022 while writing news about NFTs for a news website in the US, and has since written for two other international NFT projects, and a Web3 gaming agency.