Key Takeaways:
Upbit, South Korea’s leading crypto exchange, has reported another major security incident, this time on the Solana network. In the early hours of November 27, the platform detected abnormal withdrawals from its Solana hot wallet and immediately halted deposits and withdrawals while it moved remaining assets into cold storage.
Here’s what actually happened, which assets were hit, and why this matters for Solana traders and Korean crypto users.
Read More: Upbit Teases “Giwa”: South Korea’s Largest Exchange Prepares Blockchain Launch
Upbit says the incident began around 04:42 KST on November 27, 2025, when its systems flagged unauthorized transfers of Solana-based assets to wallet addresses that were not designated by the exchange.
The exchange later clarified that:
Upbit’s CEO, Oh Kyung-seok of operator Dunamu, issued a formal apology to users, stressing that all customer balances will be fully covered using Upbit’s own assets. According to the statement, no user is expected to take a direct financial hit from the hack.
As soon as the suspicious transfers were detected, Upbit moved into full incident-response mode:
Upbit says deposits and withdrawals will gradually resume only after security and stability on each asset and network are fully verified. Trading on the spot market continues, but users cannot currently move Solana-based assets on or off the platform.
The incident is not limited to SOL itself. Upbit’s notice lists a long roster of Solana-ecosystem tokens that were drained from the affected hot wallet and sent to dozens of unknown addresses.
These include, among others:
The on-chain trail shows assets being split and funneled into many different Solana wallet addresses, a common tactic used to make tracking and potential recovery more difficult.
Upbit has also:
For now, most of the affected funds sit in external wallets beyond Upbit’s direct control, with investigations ongoing.
Read More: 27M Vanishes in BigONE Hack but That’s Not the Most Shocking Part of the Attack
The timing of the Solana breach has not gone unnoticed in the crypto community. It lands on a grim anniversary for Upbit.
On November 27, 2019, exactly six years earlier, Upbit suffered a major attack on its Ethereum hot wallet, losing 342,000 ETH worth roughly ₩58 billion (around US$50 million at the time). That incident was later linked by investigators to North Korean state-backed hacker groups.
The 2025 incident is different in technical details and affected assets, but some key parallels stand out:
The post Upbit Hit Again: ₩44.5B Solana Hot-Wallet Hack Slams Korea’s Top Crypto Exchange appeared first on CryptoNinjas.


