Bithumb Finds Over $200M in Dormant Crypto Across 2.6M Accounts

Crypto Journalist

Amin Ayan

Crypto Journalist

Amin AyanVerified

Part of the Team Since

Apr 2025

About Author

Amin Ayan is a crypto journalist with over four years of experience in the industry. He has contributed to leading publications such as Cryptonews, Investing.com, 99Bitcoins, and 24/7 Wall St. He has…

Last updated: 

Bithumb Finds Over $200M in Dormant Crypto Across 2.6M Accounts

South Korean cryptocurrency exchange Bithumb has uncovered more than $200 million in customer assets sitting idle across roughly 2.6 million accounts.

Key Takeaways:

  • Bithumb identified more than $200 million in dormant crypto spread across 2.6 million inactive accounts.
  • One account held $2.84 million after nearly 12 years of inactivity, highlighting early crypto adopters who never returned.
  • Some dormant assets posted gains exceeding 61,000%, showing how long-term inactivity amplified early-stage crypto returns.

The disclosure came as part of a dormant asset recovery campaign aimed at users who have not logged in or traded for more than a year, according to Finance Feeds.

Bithumb said inactive balances totaled about 291.6 billion Korean won, or roughly $201.8 million. Some of the accounts flagged in the review had shown no activity for more than a decade.

Bithumb Finds $2.84M Dormant Account Idle for Nearly 12 Years

According to the exchange, the single largest dormant balance was worth around $2.84 million.

The longest period of inactivity stretched to 4,380 days, nearly 12 years, pointing to early market participants who entered during crypto’s formative years and never returned.

The findings offer a glimpse into the industry’s early retail-driven phase, when users often bought small amounts of digital assets with little expectation of long-term value.

Many of those accounts were abandoned as markets cooled, platforms evolved, or personal interest faded.

In some cases, users may have assumed their holdings were insignificant, unaware that years of price appreciation had turned them into sizable sums.

Bithumb said some dormant holdings recorded gains exceeding 61,000%, or roughly 610 times their original value.

Tracing further reveals this wallet received ~93,947 BTC in 2017–2018, mainly from CEXs and CoinJoin, including HTX, Gemini, Bixin, Bitfinex, Bithumb, and QuadrigaCX.
The wallet remained dormant for 3 years until 2020.
With mixed sources like these and long dormancy, the funds… pic.twitter.com/XP5mMwjkV3

— Specter (@SpecterAnalyst) October 11, 2025

These outsized returns reflect assets acquired in the earliest stages of crypto adoption, before broader public awareness and institutional involvement.

For comparison, Bitcoin traded at around $767 at the start of 2014. At recent prices near $87,700, that represents a gain of about 11,300%, or roughly 114 times.

Several of the forgotten assets held on Bithumb therefore outperformed Bitcoin over a similar timeframe, underscoring how early exposure combined with long-term inactivity can yield extreme results.

The exchange has run similar recovery efforts before. During its 11th anniversary campaign last year, Bithumb said roughly 36,000 users reclaimed dormant assets worth about $50 million.

The current campaign is larger in scale, reflecting both the platform’s age and the growth of the crypto market over time.

Bithumb said it plans to notify eligible customers directly and assist with account recovery, positioning the initiative as part of its customer protection efforts.

Beyond individual users, the disclosure carries broader implications for the market. Dormant balances represent latent supply that could re-enter circulation during future market cycles.

Upbit Moves 99% of Customer Assets to Cold Storage After $30M Hack

As reported, Upbit is shifting nearly all customer assets into cold storage after hackers stole 44.5 billion won (about $30 million) from its Solana hot wallet, marking one of the strongest security responses yet by a major exchange.

Operator Dunamu said the platform will raise its cold wallet ratio to 99% and reduce hot wallet exposure to effectively zero, far above South Korea’s legal requirement that 80% of user funds be stored offline.

The exchange already held 98.33% of assets in cold storage at the end of October, the highest among domestic platforms, but accelerated its overhaul following the breach.

Meanwhile, South Korean authorities have launched an investigation, and local reports have cited early intelligence assessments that allegedly connect the intrusion to North Korea’s Lazarus Group.


Follow us on Google News

Read More
Johnathon Badon

Latest

Everything you need to know about Greek yogurt and how it can meet your nutrition needs

Recipes Two-ingredient cheesecake. Turkish-style pasta. Baked yogurt toast. Bagels....

Cook This: 3 recipes from Istanbul, including one of Turkey’s favourite breakfasts

Recipes Özlem Warren shines a light on the culinary...

Green Sauce Tofu and More Recipes We Made This Week

Recipes It’s no secret that Bon Appétit editors cook...

Newsletter

Don't miss

Everything you need to know about Greek yogurt and how it can meet your nutrition needs

Recipes Two-ingredient cheesecake. Turkish-style pasta. Baked yogurt toast. Bagels....

Cook This: 3 recipes from Istanbul, including one of Turkey’s favourite breakfasts

Recipes Özlem Warren shines a light on the culinary...

Green Sauce Tofu and More Recipes We Made This Week

Recipes It’s no secret that Bon Appétit editors cook...

Marshmallow Creme vs. Fluff: The Sweet and Sticky Showdown

Recipes Skip to main content Taste of Home Taste of Home Do...

13 Real Business Trip Stories That Prove Work Travel Collects More Stories Than Miles

Real business trips almost never go the way the itinerary promised. They start with a confidently-packed suitcase and an eight-page agenda, and somewhere between the airport gate and the hotel breakfast they quietly turn into something nobody could have invented — equal parts comedy, chaos, and unscheduled adventure. These 13 real business trip moments are exactly that kind of work-trip plot

Your business texts could look like scam messages from July 1 if you don’t act now

From July 1, any branded SMS your business sends without a registered sender ID will be labelled “Unverified” and grouped with scam messages.  What’s happening: From 1 July 2026, any business or organisation that sends SMS using a branded name, such as “MyShop” or “AcmeServices”, instead of a phone number, must have that sender ID

Business groups are fighting Labor’s CGT changes. Here is where SMEs stand

Labor’s most contested tax reform in a generation cleared its first formal hurdle on Thursday and immediately ran into organised resistance. Treasurer Jim Chalmers introduced the government’s tax reform legislation to the House of Representatives on 28 May, bundling together four budget measures: the capital gains tax overhaul, new limits on negative gearing, a $250