- Bithumb seeks legal recovery of 7 BTC still missing after massive payout error
- Exchange accidentally distributed BTC instead of Korean won to hundreds of users
- Case highlights growing legal enforcement around crypto mistakes and user liability
Bithumb is still cleaning up one of the most surreal operational errors crypto has seen this year. After accidentally sending out Bitcoin instead of Korean won during a payout event, the exchange is now taking legal action to recover the last remaining funds.

Out of the massive mistaken distribution, seven Bitcoin are still unreturned. And now, that’s turning into a legal problem.
When a Simple Error Becomes a $40 Billion Problem
The incident traces back to February, when Bithumb intended to distribute 620,000 won to a few hundred users. Instead, due to what appears to be an input error, the system sent out 620,000 BTC across hundreds of accounts.
Yes, Bitcoin. Not won.
The mistake was caught within 20 minutes, and withdrawals were quickly halted. But in crypto, even minutes can be enough for funds to move, split, or disappear into wallets that don’t answer emails.
Most Funds Recovered, But Not All
Bithumb managed to retrieve the vast majority of the mistakenly sent assets through direct outreach. Still, not everyone cooperated.

Seven Bitcoin remain outstanding, which might not sound like much compared to the original figure, but at current prices, it’s still over $500,000. Enough to justify legal escalation.
The Legal Argument Is Pretty Straightforward
The exchange is now pursuing provisional attachment proceedings, essentially freezing assets where possible to recover what’s left.
Legally, this falls under unjust enrichment. In simple terms, if you received funds you weren’t meant to receive, you’re expected to return them. If you already sold them, things get more complicated, especially if prices moved.
Some users could end up buying back Bitcoin at a higher price just to settle what they owe.
Bithumb Is Trying to Contain the Damage
To manage fallout, Bithumb rolled out a compensation plan shortly after the incident. Affected users were promised 110% compensation, while general users received small payouts and temporary fee waivers.
More importantly, the exchange is now tightening internal controls. Multi-step approvals, AI monitoring, and stricter verification systems are all being introduced to prevent a repeat.
There’s also a 100 billion won customer protection fund being planned, which suggests this wasn’t taken lightly internally.
A Reminder That Crypto Isn’t Lawless
There’s a lingering myth that crypto transactions are irreversible and therefore outside legal reach. This case shows that’s not entirely true.
While the blockchain itself doesn’t reverse transactions, legal systems still apply to the people using it. If anything, enforcement is becoming more aggressive as the industry matures.
A Small Amount, But a Bigger Signal
Seven Bitcoin won’t move markets. But the precedent matters.
Exchanges are showing they will pursue recovery, even for relatively small amounts compared to the original error. And users are being reminded that “finders keepers” doesn’t really hold up when lawyers get involved.
This is what a more mature crypto system looks like. Messy, enforceable, and increasingly aligned with traditional financial rules.









