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    Fake Crypto Airdrops: How Free Token Scams Drain Your Wallet

    Learn how fake cryptocurrency airdrops steal funds through malicious smart contracts, phishing sites, and social engineering. Protect your wallet from airdrop scams.

    2026-01-107 min read
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    Fake Crypto Airdrops: How Free Token Scams Drain Your Wallet

    When Free Tokens Cost Everything

    Airdrops — free token distributions — are a legitimate marketing strategy in crypto. But scammers have weaponized the concept, creating fake airdrops designed to steal far more than they give. Some of the most devastating wallet drains have started with an innocent-looking airdrop notification.

    How Fake Airdrops Work

    Phishing Airdrops

    You receive an announcement about a free token claim. The link leads to a convincing site that requests a wallet connection. The "claim" transaction actually approves the scammer to spend your tokens, or directly transfers your assets.

    Dust Attacks

    Small amounts of unknown tokens appear in your wallet unsolicited. When you try to sell or interact with them, the token's contract executes malicious code that can drain your wallet. The safe response is to simply ignore unknown tokens.

    Social Media Airdrop Scams

    Fake project accounts announce airdrops requiring you to "connect your wallet" on a third-party site. These sites deploy approval transactions that give scammers access to your assets.

    How to Safely Participate in Legitimate Airdrops

    • Only claim from official project websites (verify URLs carefully)
    • Never enter seed phrases to claim an airdrop
    • Use a separate wallet with minimal funds for claiming
    • Check the contract address on block explorers before interacting
    • If tokens appear unsolicited, don't interact with them
    • Legitimate airdrops don't require you to send crypto first

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