Drift Protocol $270‑$285 million heist full analysis: when it was announced, most people thought it was an April Fool's joke!
Should Sol consider a rollback?
So far this has become the largest DeFi hack of 2026 (we still have eight months, hoping there won’t be a bigger one).
1️⃣ What happened?
Yesterday afternoon, the top Derivatives protocol in the Solana ecosystem, Drift Protocol (perpetual contract DEX), suffered a composite attack that compromised admin privileges.
In just 12 minutes, the attacker drained about $270‑$285 million of real assets from the protocol’s main treasury (estimated by major firms such as PeckShield, Bloomberg, Lookonchain, etc.).
The team quickly confirmed an “active attack”, paused all deposits and withdrawals, and emphasized that “this is not an April Fools joke”.
This is the largest‑value DeFi incident so far this year and the second‑largest security incident in Solana history (only behind the 2022 Wormhole bridge hack of $326 million).
2️⃣ How did the hacker do it?
1) Preparation (weeks before)
The attacker minted fake tokens and fabricated price history to set up later manipulation.
2) Attack launch (around 00:00 UTC+8 on April 1)
Using a compromised Drift admin private key (multisig key leaked), the attacker performed critical operations in a single transaction: added a fake market and removed the withdrawal guard threshold.
3) Deposited massive fake collateral.
Then 31 withdrawal transactions moved assets from multiple vaults (JLP Delta Neutral, SOL/BTC Super Staking, etc.) within 12 minutes.
4) Main stolen assets (on‑chain confirmed):
JLP ≈ $155.6 million
USDC ≈ $60.4 million
cbBTC, WETH, WBTC, FARTCOIN, JitoSOL, etc.
Total $270‑$285 million.
Money laundering (1‑2 hours after the attack) was done through the Jupiter aggregator, swapping to USDC. The funds were bridged to Ethereum, where most were used to buy ETH (approximately 20,000 ETH purchased).
Primary hacker address: HkGz4KmoZ7Zmk7HN6ndJ31UJ1qZ2qgwQxgVqQwovpZES (viewable on‑chain).
3️⃣ Impact on the crypto space:
First, Drift’s TVL was cut in half within an hour (from about $550 million to ~$255 million), pushing the protocol’s liquidity toward collapse.
The DRIFT token also plunged, with a peak drop of 30‑35% and still sitting at low levels.
Then a cascade of effects: several protocols that rely on Drift for yield (such as Reflect, DeFiCarrot, Pyra, etc.) have paused redemptions, leaving user funds stuck.
Market sentiment: concerns over “admin key = single point of failure” in DeFi have intensified. In the short term, funding for Solana DeFi projects and user confidence are likely to suffer, and TVL for DEX projects may also be affected.
4️⃣ Industry warning:
I’ve basically seen it coming; it proves once again that even the strongest smart contracts can’t survive a stolen admin key.
What should ordinary users/investors watch out for?
1) Act now: If you have funds on Drift, you cannot deposit or withdraw at the moment. Keep monitoring the official @DriftProtocol. The Phantom wallet has blocked Drift‑related accesses to avoid accidental actions.
2) Long‑term risk mitigation (must‑read):
Admin privileges are the biggest risk: prioritize highly decentralized protocols (multisig + timelock + DAO governance) and avoid those controlled by a single admin key.
Don’t chase TVL and APY alone: high yields often come with high risk, especially projects that depend on a single oracle or vault.
Fund management: diversify perpetual/leverage positions; use hardware wallets + multisig for large amounts; regularly review protocol audit reports and multisig members.
Bridge caution: hackers love to move funds through bridges; use small test amounts or official bridges.
Information sources: trust only official accounts and on‑chain data (Solscan / Arkham / Lookonchain); ignore any “compensation airdrop” scams.
5️⃣ Future watch‑points and lessons for us:
It’s already very tough; whether Drift can recover part of the funds (Circle may freeze some USDC) remains to be seen.
Honestly, this was a human‑caused disaster: an admin key compromise leading to a permissions catastrophe.
DeFi has been around eight years but is still early; security always outweighs yield.
Crypto survival rule #1: Never your keys, never your coins — this was brutally proven again.