Fake airdrops remain one of the most effective crypto scams. In 2026, scammers have evolved beyond simple “claim your free tokens” websites to sophisticated multi-step attacks.
The Classic Airdrop Scam (Still Popular)
You see a post about a new token airdrop. The “claim” website asks you to connect your wallet. When you do, a transaction asks you to “verify your wallet” or “pay gas fees.” This transaction gives the scammer permission to drain your wallet.
Still works because: People want free money. The fear of missing out overrides caution.
Advanced Tactics in 2026
1. “Proof of Funds” Airdrops
You’re told you need at least 1 ETH in your wallet to qualify for the airdrop. The scammer watches the blockchain for deposits and drains wallets that meet the threshold.
Why it works: Victims deposit ETH to “qualify” and the scammer drains it immediately.
2. NFT-Based Airdrop Verification
The scammer claims you need a specific NFT (sold only on their site) to claim the airdrop. You buy the NFT, but the airdrop never existed.
3. Multi-Signature Trap
The “claim” process requires two signatures. The first looks harmless. The second gives unlimited approval. Most victims see the second signature and think “one more step” instead of reading the warning.
4. Discord Bot Airdrops
A bot in a popular crypto Discord server DMs you: “Congratulations! You’ve been selected for a private airdrop. Click here to claim.” The link leads to a wallet drainer.
5. Token Address Spoofing
Scammers create fake tokens with names similar to legitimate airdrops. The tokens appear in your wallet without you doing anything. When you try to swap them on a DEX, the swap transaction drains your wallet.
How to Identify a Real Airdrop
| Real Airdrop | Fake Airdrop |
|---|---|
| Announced months in advance | Announced suddenly |
| Clear claiming process on the project’s official site | Claims require connecting wallet to third-party site |
| No gas fee required (or minimal, covered by project) | “Gas fee required” to claim |
| Claim window is weeks to months | Claim window is 24-48 hours (urgency) |
| Multiple reputable sources confirm it | Only rumored on anonymous accounts |
| No wallet “verification” needed | Requires signing a suspicious transaction |
The “Safe” Way to Claim Airdrops
- Only claim from the project’s official website — Not from a link in a DM, tweet, or Discord message
- Use a burner wallet — Never connect your main wallet to claim an airdrop
- Never pay to claim — Real airdrops don’t require gas fees paid through a third-party site
- Check the contract address — Does it match the project’s official contract?
- Wait for others to claim first — If it’s real, the community will confirm
What to Do If You Connected to a Fake Airdrop Site
- Immediately use Revoke.cash to revoke all approvals
- Move all funds from the connected wallet to a new wallet
- Don’t interact with that wallet again until you’re sure it’s clean
Verdict
Fake airdrops prey on greed. The promise of free money makes people ignore obvious warning signs. Always claim airdrops from the official project website, use a burner wallet, and never sign a transaction you don’t understand.
Related: What Is a Real Crypto Airdrop? | Crypto Wallet Drainers | Upcoming Airdrops