Risk & Disclaimer
This page is short, but every line of it is true. Before you start farming, please read it through — hit any one of these risks and you could lose money, or lose everything.
The content is educational reference, not advice
Every article, guide, tool, and chart on Airdrop Hunter exists only to help you understand how farming and airdrops work. They do not constitute investment advice, nor tax or legal advice. We are not your financial advisor, not your accountant, not your lawyer, and we don't know your real financial situation or what you can afford to lose — so nothing we write should be taken as an instruction to "buy this / sell that / do it this way." Whatever you decide after reading is your own judgment and your own responsibility.
Crypto can swing violently, even to zero
Crypto prices swing far more than traditional assets — moving tens of percent in a day is routine. The airdrop token you receive today might double tomorrow, or it might drop to a fraction of its value, or it might go to zero entirely and lose all liquidity so you can't even sell it. Plenty of projects end up stalled, rug-pulled, or abandoned with no one left to buy. Only take part with money you can fully afford to lose — don't touch money you'll soon need, don't borrow, and don't lever up to gamble.
Lose your private key or seed phrase and no one can recover it
The private key and seed phrase of a self-custody wallet (including the Binance Web3 Wallet) are held by you alone. This is fundamentally different from a bank card or an exchange account: there is no support desk, no platform, and no one who can recover your assets once you lose the seed phrase, and there's no "reset password." Likewise, if you're tricked into signing a malicious approval or you leak your seed phrase, the assets being moved out is usually irreversible. Back it up offline properly, never screenshot it, never tell anyone — the importance of this cannot be overstated.
Anyone (including someone claiming to be us, Binance support, or a project team) who asks you for your seed phrase or private key is running a scam, without exception. We will never ask you for these either.
Airdrops are not guaranteed, nor guaranteed to be worth anything
Interacting, earning points, and meeting so-called "eligibility" do not mean you're guaranteed to receive an airdrop. A project can change its rules, alter its distribution criteria, delay or even cancel the airdrop at any time; even if you're judged an eligible user, sybil detection can catch you by mistake, and the final allocation rate may come in far below expectations. And even if you do receive tokens, they may be worth next to nothing. Our articles explain mechanics and approaches; we don't predict the timing, amount, or return of any project's next airdrop, and you should be wary of anyone who tells you they can.
We don't endorse third-party links or projects
Articles sometimes cite external links — block explorers, official docs, encyclopedias — so you can verify things yourself. Those sites are run by their own operators, we have no control over their content, and linking out is not a guarantee on our part. As for specific on-chain projects, protocols, and tokens — we endorse none of them; mentioning a project is just an example of how something works, not a recommendation to invest. Visiting any third-party site, connecting your wallet, and signing transactions are all at your own risk.
Affiliate disclosure
To be blunt: this site is sustained by referral fees from the exchange. The "sign up for Binance" and "open a Web3 Wallet" buttons on this site all carry the Binance referral code BNB3469 and point to Binance. If you sign up or open an account through these links, Binance pays us a referral fee for bringing in a new user.
Two things you should be clear on: first, that fee doesn't affect your costs — signing up through our code never costs you a cent more than going direct; second, the referral relationship may affect how often we mention Binance, but it does not change our honest disclosure of risk — we won't skip a single risk worth flagging. Whether you use our code is entirely up to you, and you can read all the content without it.
Please DYOR and judge for yourself
DYOR (Do Your Own Research) isn't just a slogan. Treat our articles as a starting point: before you actually act, cross-check the current rules on the official page, confirm the link and contract address are correct, and think through whether you could bear the worst case. Neither this site nor the editorial team is liable for any action you take based on this content, or any loss arising from it.
If you have questions about the content or find an error, we'd welcome an email: [email protected]. As companions to this page, you can also read the Privacy Policy and our public Corrections record.