Polymarket hack estimate rises to $3.1 million after refund pledge

Polymarket hack estimate rises to .1 million after refund pledge Thumbnail

The estimated losses from a recent Polymarket hack have climbed to $3.1 million, a revision that arrived just days after the prediction market platform pledged to refund affected users.

Revised estimate raises new questions

The updated figure of $3.1 million marks a notable increase from earlier assessments of the breach. While the initial scope of the exploit prompted Polymarket to issue a rapidly growing platform’s public commitment to make users whole, the rising estimate suggests the full extent of the damage took time to surface. For related coverage, see Binance Charity to Donate $3 Million for Users Affected by Venezuela Earthquakes.

Posts on X from accounts tracking the incident, including @PolymarketTrade, flagged the higher loss calculation as additional wallet movements and affected accounts were identified in the days following the initial disclosure.

The revision is not unusual for crypto exploits. On-chain forensics teams often need days or weeks to trace the full path of stolen funds across wallets and bridges, meaning early damage estimates frequently undercount actual losses. A similar pattern played out with the SecondFi wallet exploit, where recovery timelines stretched beyond initial projections.

Refund pledge meets a moving target

Polymarket’s refund commitment, announced shortly after the breach became public, was initially framed around a smaller estimated loss. The jump to $3.1 million raises practical questions about whether the platform’s reimbursement capacity and timeline will need to adjust accordingly.

For a platform that has faced regulatory scrutiny from U.S. senators urging a CFTC probe, the optics of an expanding hack estimate compound existing credibility pressures. A refund pledge only holds weight if it keeps pace with the actual damage.

The timing also matters. Users who accepted the pledge at face value may now question whether the original scope was disclosed accurately or simply incomplete. Neither outcome is reassuring for a platform built on trust in transparent, verifiable outcomes.

What comes next

The $3.1 million figure may not be final. As blockchain analysts, including Bubblemaps, continue tracing fund flows, further upward revisions remain possible.

For Polymarket, the immediate priority is executing on its refund promise at whatever scale the final tally demands. Any gap between the pledge and actual reimbursements could erode user confidence at a critical moment for the platform, which recently saw its $120 million Iran peace deal market enter a dispute.

Users affected by the exploit should monitor official Polymarket channels for updated reimbursement timelines, particularly as the estimated loss continues to evolve.

Additional source references: source document 1, source document 2.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.

Share This Article
Thiago Alvarez is a crypto and fintech analyst at Coinwy, covering blockchain payments, DeFi protocols, and digital asset regulation. With a background in financial technology and compliance analysis, Thiago focuses on evaluating the operational viability and regulatory positioning of emerging crypto projects. His work examines token economics, cross-border payment infrastructure, and institutional adoption trends across global markets.
Exit mobile version