The accidental transfer and subsequent sell-off occurred solely on bithumb's internal ledger and was corrected within five minutes. this prevented any on-chain movements or wider market contagion, localizing the price crash to bithumb itself. bitcoin's price on other major exchanges only saw a brief dip before quickly recovering, indicating minimal external market effect.
The incident was confirmed by bithumb in a blog post, and detailed by various local reports, providing strong corroboration.
While bithumb experienced a localized flash crash, the broader bitcoin market was not significantly impacted due to the internal nature and swift resolution of the error. the global price quickly rebounded, suggesting no lasting bearish or bullish sentiment from this event.
The error was detected and corrected within five minutes. any direct price volatility was confined to this very brief period and to the specific exchange.
In brief South Korean exchange Bithumb mistakenly credited users with 2,000 BTC each instead of a tiny cash reward. The error was corrected within five minutes, but not before users sold an estimated $2 billion worth, per local reports. The sell-off, only on Bithumb's internal ledger and not on-chain, still triggered a sharp Bitcoin price crash on the exchange. A South Korean crypto exchange accidentally credited users with billions of dollars’ worth of Bitcoin this week, triggering a flash crash in the platform’s listed value of the token. Instead of airdropping users 2,000 won (a sum worth $1.37 at writing), the exchange, Bithumb, reportedly sent 2,000 BTC apiece, users said . That massive sum was worth some $142 million at writing, with Bitcoin recently trading around $71,000. According to local reports , the accidental transfers were made as part of a “Random Box” giveaway, where 96% of recipients were poised to receive the lowest-value prize (presumably, the 2,000 won). Around 700 Bithumb users bought Random Boxes, meaning roughly 672 likely received the erroneous Bitcoin. That would put the current value of Bitcoin accidentally transferred to Bithumb customers at over $95.4 billion. The deposits were recorded only on Bithumb’s internal ledgers, though, and didn’t involve actual on-chain transfers of Bitcoin. The irregularity was detected and corrected within five minutes, the company said today in a blog post . 世界巨大的草台班子!刚刚韩国第二大币圈交易所 Bithumb,出现了短时比特币 -22% 的向下插针。 原因竟然是 Bithumb 交易所误将 2000 枚比特币,当成 2000 韩元奖励,错发给了数百名用户。 而收到钱的用户,在看到后第一件事就是砸盘、变现、赶紧提走跑路。 pic.twitter.com/IS3PzSV78x — AB Kuai.Dong (@_FORAB) February 6, 2026 But that was plenty enough time for some amazed Bithumb users to attempt to sell off the funds and make millions off the company’s error. Korean financial authorities estimate that users managed to sell off over $2 billion worth of the phantom Bitcoin in that window, per local reports. Such a rapid sell-off immediately plunged Bitcoin's price on the exchange to $55,000—far below prices on other exchanges, despite the cryptocurrency’s recent downturn . The price of Bitcoin bottomed out around $60,000 on most exchanges Thursday before rebounding to a recent price of $71,047. “The Bitcoin price temporarily fluctuated sharply as some accounts that received the Bitcoin sold it,” Bithumb said. “We want to make it clear that this incident is unrelated to any external hacking or security breach, and does not pose any issues with system security or customer asset management,” the company added. Bithumb further insisted that the chain of events did not result in any customer’s loss of preexisting assets. Daily Debrief Newsletter Start every day with the top news stories right now, plus original features, a podcast, videos and more. Your Email Get it! Get it!