- BONK.fun restored its website after a domain hijack caused by a third-party provider breach
- Attackers used the compromised domain to launch a phishing site, leading to $30,000 in losses
- BONK price remains weak as market sentiment stays cautious despite the platform’s recovery
BONK.fun is back online after what turned out to be a pretty messy situation involving a domain hijack last week. The team confirmed that the issue wasn’t internal, but rather tied to a breach at a third-party domain provider, which led to roughly $30,000 in user losses. Not massive in the grand scheme of crypto exploits, but still… enough to raise concern.
According to their March 20 update, the attack came through a social engineering exploit. Basically, someone managed to manipulate the domain service provider, which resulted in BONK.fun’s domain being transferred out to an external registrar. The provider has since taken responsibility, which, at least, adds some clarity to what happened.

Phishing Attack Exploited Domain Control
Once attackers got control of the domain, things escalated quickly. They deployed a phishing version of the BONK.fun site, tricking users into signing malicious transactions. From the outside, it likely looked normal enough, which is what made it effective.
Earlier reports suggested losses around $23,000, but the team later revised that number up to about $30,000. Not a huge jump, but still significant. In response, BONK.fun says it will reimburse affected users at 110% of their losses, which includes not just what was lost, but also potential missed opportunities. It’s a move that feels… proactive, maybe necessary to rebuild trust.
Recovery Slowed by Domain Transfer Issues
One of the bigger complications was the domain itself being out of reach during the attack. Since it had been transferred externally, BONK.fun couldn’t immediately regain control, which slowed down the response quite a bit.
Eventually, the domain was restored on March 18, and by the next day, full functionality was back, including wallet integrations. Wallet providers like Phantom, MetaMask, and Solflare played a role in flagging the compromised site, which likely helped limit further damage. Still, the delay shows how tricky these infrastructure-level issues can be.

Platform Returns, But Some Warnings Persist
Even though the site is now live again, not everything is fully back to normal. Some antivirus tools are still flagging the domain as suspicious, which can create friction for users trying to access it.
To work around that, the team has pointed users toward an alternative domain that mirrors the platform. It’s not ideal, but it does keep things running while those warnings gradually clear, hopefully.
BONK Price Remains Under Pressure
On the market side, the reaction hasn’t been dramatic, but it hasn’t been positive either. BONK’s price is still trending downward, sitting around $0.0000059 at the time of writing. The chart shows limited recovery since the incident, which suggests that sentiment is still a bit shaky.
Even with the platform back online, confidence doesn’t snap back instantly. It takes time, and right now, the market seems to be waiting… watching, seeing how things settle.
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