This article was first published on The Bit Journal. Trust Wallet has introduced a compensational program to users because they became victims of a recent security breach of its Chrome browser extension, with a malicious update revealing wallet recovery phrases, causing millions of dollars in crypto losses.
In a statement released on Friday, Trust Wallet has affirmed that those who have been affected now have the opportunity to file claims using an official support form, which is found on the company’s portal. The announcement comes after users have reported unauthorized fund transfers in the near future after installing the faulty extension update.
Trust Wallet is a service that needs claimants to submit a simple form of identification information to initiate the compensation process by giving their email address and the country they are located in.
Users are also required to provide affected wallet addresses, suspected attacker addresses and transaction hashes associated with the unauthorized withdrawals. According to the company, submissions would go through a rigorous verification process before payment is accepted.
Trust Wallet, in a post on X on December 26, admitted that the incident had caused disruption, but stated that its support department was already beginning to contact affected users. The company has underlined that all the victims of the breach that would have been verified will be compensated, and an update on progress will be provided on a regular basis.
Meanwhile, crypto wallet firm advised its users to be wary because scammers will seek to take advantage of the situation. The fake compensation forms, impersonated Trust Wallet support accounts, and unsolicited direct messages have been circulating on Telegram and other social media platforms, according to the company. The users were encouraged to use official communication channels only.
The compensation news came after Trust Wallet on December 25 confirmed that the breach had been limited to version 2.68 of its Chrome browser extension. The problem was first reported by blockchain investigator ZachXBT who was receiving reports of fast and unauthorized outflows of funds soon after installing the update.
After finding out about it, Trust Wallet recommended that users who had the compromised version should disable it as soon as possible and update to version 2.69. The number of victims increased to the hundreds shortly afterward as reported by ZachXBT and over 6 million dollars had been emptied over Bitcoin, Solana, and EVM-compatible networks.
As investigators have observed, the rogue crypto wallet firm extension looked like a regular extension and was installed via the regular update process on Chrome. Nonetheless, embedded code gave hackers an opportunity to recover wallet phrases, and this would enable them to access user wallets immediately. A number of users also cautioned that when a seed phrase is simply put into the extension, it immediately causes one to drain their wallets.
The security researchers have pointed out that browser extensions such as Trust Wallet are run with higher permissions, and therefore they have access to web pages, storage, and browsing data, thus have a high value target when exploited.
Trust Wallet had clarified that its mobile applications and other versions of browser extensions were not affected. Its Chrome Web Store listing indicates that alone the Chrome extension has around one million users.
In another announcement, Changpeng Zhao, the founder of Binance, which purchased Trust Wallet in 2018, affirmed that all the confirmed losses will be refunded. According to Zhao, the damages were estimated to be around 7 million dollars and user funds were to be fully refunded.
The crypto wallet firm event occurs in the context of more extensive exploits of wallets within the crypto sector. Chainalysis estimates that over $3.4 billion had been stolen in January 2025 to early December 2025, with personal wallet compromises taking an increasing portion of that total loss.
Trust Wallet’s response underscores mounting security pressures facing crypto wallets, as browser-based attacks grow more sophisticated. Although the reimbursement commitment of the company might alleviate short-term losses, the event shows that the extension protection requires more vigour, user awareness and a wider industry campaign to restrain increasing wallet scams.
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Users affected by the Chrome extension 2.68 breach exposing wallet seed phrases.
Fill the official Trust Wallet support form with email, country, wallets, and transaction details.
No, only Chrome extension version 2.68. Mobile and other versions are safe.
Chainalysis
Read More: Trust Wallet Launches Compensation Program After Chrome Extension Breach">Trust Wallet Launches Compensation Program After Chrome Extension Breach


