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Nearly a million Ethereum tokens have been identified as lost forever, according to new research by on-chain analyst Conor Grogan. In a widely shared tweet thread, Grogan revealed that at least 913,111 ETH is “lost forever due to user error,” representing a striking 0.76% of the current ETH supply, with the lost funds today valued at more than $3.4 billion. The scale of the loss has drawn attention to persistent problems around crypto wallet design and the high stakes of managing digital assets without recovery mechanisms.
Grogan’s breakdown includes ETH stuck in dead smart contracts, wallets with no known keyholders, and funds accidentally sent to burn addresses or incorrect destinations. Among the examples he cited was the QuadrigaCX scandal, where approximately 60,000 ETH became inaccessible after the founder died without sharing wallet credentials:
Grogan noted that there are “hundreds of examples of people sending ETH to contracts with no withdraw function,” highlighting that the problem is systemic, rather than isolated. As Ethereum continues to gain adoption, these incidents serve as stark reminders that human error remains one of the biggest risks in the ecosystem.
The discussion has sparked renewed interest in improving wallet usability and developing better safety nets, with developers exploring features such as social recovery, clearer backup instructions, and account abstraction to make crypto more user-friendly. While some advocate for blockchain-level changes to address inaccessible funds, others argue that any such intervention would undermine Ethereum’s core principles of immutability and decentralization.
Either way, Grogan’s research has brought fresh urgency to a longstanding issue: when users lose access to their wallets, the consequences are often final, and incredibly costly.
The post Over 913,000 ETH Lost to User Error, Says Analyst appeared first on FullyCrypto.

