50% of NFT Holders Have Lost Access to Their NFTs

  • MetaMask, Trust Wallet and Math Wallet are the most commonly used wallets
  • 16% of respondents said their accounts on NFT platforms had been previously hacked

From multi-million dollar rugpulls to user exploits on marketplaces, investing in NFTs can be fraught with risk. 

New York gallery owner Todd Kramer, for example, had $2.2 million of NFTs (non-fungible tokens) stolen in January through a phishing scam.

Half of NFT owners have lost access to at least one of their digital collectibles before, according to a March 8 report by research firm PrivacyHQ.

The study, which polled over one thousand collectors, showed two out of three NFT investors panic sold one of their blockchain-based collectibles last year. 

Justin Kan, co-founder of NFT gaming marketplace Fractal and streaming platform Twitch, told Blockworks users should follow precautions to safeguard their assets.

There [are] a high level of rugpulls and scams [in NFTs], Kan said. [But] hopefully as the space matures, companies will be able to provide protocols that will be able to [offer] this kind of security for their users. 

You should have a burner wallet when you’re minting, have a cold wallet for storage of your NFTs, and you should be aware of phishing attacks.

Per the survey, 16% of respondents said their NFT platforms had been hacked, but roughly 90% said they were able to recoup losses in some capacity.

MetaMask, Trust Wallet and MathWallet are the most popular NFT wallets with MetaMask believed to be the safest.

Don’t [click on] links, Kan said. We [recommend] typing out Fractal.is in your browser. Now, people in Web2 are going to [say], That’s insane that you have to do all these protections. But I think it’s the cost of having true ownership of [something.] You kind of have to rebuild the space from the ground up.

Security concerns, however, didnt seem to slow the exponential growth of the industry last year. NFT sales reached $17.7 billion in 2021, up from $82.5 million in 2020, according to a Thursday report from NonFungible.


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  • Morgan Chittum

    Morgan Chittum is a New York-based reporter covering NFTs, the metaverse, play-to-earn gaming and other emerging Web3 tech for Blockworks. Previously she was a street reporter, covering crime at New York Daily News, and a media and journalism fellow at the Poynter Institute.

    Contact Morgan via email at [email protected]