North Korea Captures 76% of Stolen Crypto in 2026

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Published: May 02, 2026 at 13:23

No longer just "crimes of opportunity"

According to a report released on May 1, 2026, by TRM Labs and Dark Reading, an incredible 76% of all cryptocurrency stolen globally in 2026 is now sitting in wallets controlled by North Korea (DPRK).

While crypto theft has been a persistent thorn in the industry's side for years, the concentration of these illicit flows into a single nation-state suggests a terrifying efficiency in their latest operations.

North Korean threat actors, such as the infamous Lazarus Group, have moved beyond simple phishing to complex, AI-assisted exploits of decentralized protocols and cross-chain bridges.

The report highlights that these heists are no longer just "crimes of opportunity" but are essential to the DPRK’s national budget, effectively funding a significant portion of their GDP through digital extraction.

In 2025 alone, Americans lost over $11 billion to crypto-focused scams, but the 2026 data shows a pivot toward high-frequency, low-detection strikes that bypass traditional institutional safeguards. The "Code is Law" ethos, which lacks the safety nets of traditional banking, has inadvertently created a perfect environment for these actors.

As AI tools become more adept at finding vulnerabilities in smart contracts faster than human auditors, the industry is facing a "security arms race." For the average DeFi user, this is a direct warning: the "un-banked" dream also means being "un-protected" against some of the most sophisticated hackers on the planet. The message for 2026 is clear—if your protocol isn’t quantum-ready and AI-shielded, it’s effectively a North Korean piggy bank.

Disclaimer. The data provided is collected by the author and is not sponsored by any company or token developer. This is not a recommendation to buy or sell cryptocurrency and should not be viewed as an endorsement by Coinidol.com. Readers should do their research before investing in funds.

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