Drift Protocol says a reported $270 million hack is real and “not an April Fools joke,” after the Solana-based decentralized exchange disclosed an active attack and paused deposits and withdrawals. The alert turned a rumor-heavy headline into a live Solana DeFi security event with immediate wallet-provider and market fallout.
In its official X statement on April 1, 2026, Drift said it was experiencing an active attack, that deposits and withdrawals were suspended, and that it was coordinating with security firms, bridges, and exchanges. The reported $270 million figure remains unconfirmed, and Decrypt reported losses above $200 million, with some estimates at about $285 million.
More than $200M; some estimates at about $285M
Reported loss estimate range cited in Decrypt’s incident coverage.What Drift Confirmed
Drift’s website describes the protocol as an open-sourced perpetual futures exchange built on Solana, which is why the incident immediately mattered beyond one app. The disruption also hit a market already tracking soft Bitcoin fee signals, stablecoin policy deadline risk, and new corporate treasury use of XRP.
That is why the “not an April Fools joke” line in Drift’s post became the key hook. It told users the suspension notice was an actual incident response, not prank-day noise.
Drift used unusually direct language in the post it published while the attack was ongoing. That message remains the clearest primary confirmation available as the protocol says further updates will come from the same account.
Why Solana DeFi Is Watching
Phantom said users trying to access Drift through Phantom would see a required warning that there may be unique risks in accessing the protocol while its security team investigated. That response matters because a major Solana wallet moved quickly enough to add user-facing friction around the incident.
On April 2, 2026, DRIFT traded at $0.050083 and was down 26.12% over 24 hours, leaving the token with a $29.19 million market cap. The selloff matches the same risk signal implied by suspended withdrawals and the third-party loss estimates.
-26.12%
DRIFT 24-hour price change from CoinGecko data fetched on April 2, 2026.What Still Needs Confirmation
The root cause is still unresolved in public. Decrypt said a leaked private key was suspected, while Bloomberg Law reported that blockchain analytics firms said stolen assets were converted into USDC, but both points remain unconfirmed and Drift has not published a postmortem.
Drift’s public updates still do not include an official loss tally, a recovery plan, or an on-chain incident breakdown. For now, readers should watch the same channel for confirmed detail on user impact, recovery steps, and whether the protocol eventually validates or rejects the third-party loss range.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.







