Author: Lawyer Liu Honglin
Today in Hangzhou, I had a long chat with a friend who specializes in recovering crypto assets.
They have handled many cases over the past year or so, with single-project amounts generally starting at $1 million, and some even higher. Before our conversation, my understanding of this type of business was also relatively superficial. I thought so-called "crypto asset recovery" mainly involved more sensational scenarios like theft, scams, hacking attacks, and on-chain tracking. After talking, I discovered that what truly occurs in large volume are actually more mundane, specific, and utterly frustrating problems for the parties involved.
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Selecting the wrong network for deposit: Users deposit coins to an exchange but select the wrong chain, using one network when they should have used another.
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Missing the memo/tag: Forgetting to fill in the memo or tag during deposit—the additional identifying note required by the exchange. The coins arrive at the platform's address but are not automatically credited to the user's account.
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Wallet physical malfunction: The phone breaks, the wallet app won't open.
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Incorrect mnemonic phrase backup: The mnemonic phrase was clearly written down on paper, but it never works during recovery. Or, the user "adjusted" the order of the words for "security" and can't remember years later how exactly they changed it when trying to recover the wallet.
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Centralized exchange roadblocks: Accounts are suddenly frozen, withdrawals don't arrive, identity verification repeatedly fails, customer service keeps asking for more documents, support tickets get passed around for many rounds, and users don't know where they're stuck.
In the traditional internet, account recovery at least has phone numbers, email, customer service, and appeal channels. If there's a problem with a bank account, you can go to a branch or call to ask. But in the cryptocurrency world, especially with on-chain assets, you often don't even know who to turn to.
This is the real foundation of this business.
A Real and Continuously Growing Business
When many people use a crypto wallet for the first time, they don't truly understand what "decentralization" means. In their intuition, a wallet is just an app, an exchange is just an account, and USDT is just a balance number. If the app won't open, they look for customer service. If they forget the password, they click "forgot password." If a transfer goes wrong, surely someone can help reverse it.
The real trouble reveals itself when something goes wrong: If the private key exists, the assets exist; if the private key is lost, it's hard for anyone else to prove "this money was originally mine." If a user makes an error, the system won't block it for them like a bank teller would. For many, it's only when they encounter their first mishap that they truly realize crypto wallets are not the same as internet accounts.
Decentralization gives users stronger control over their assets but also pushes many operational responsibilities originally borne by platforms back onto the users themselves. Those entering the crypto world now are far from just the old players familiar with wallets, public chains, cross-chain bridges, and transaction hashes. Ordinary investors, foreign trade bosses, project teams, company finance personnel, and even users temporarily receiving a USDT payment can get caught up in it.
When the user base grows, misoperations are bound to increase. This is a simple business logic.
Some might say, since on-chain is so troublesome, isn't it safer to keep assets on a centralized exchange? To some extent, yes. Exchanges at least have account systems, identity verification, customer service, risk control, and internal ledgers. Issues like wrong network deposits, missing memos, account freezes, and withdrawal anomalies can sometimes be handled through platform processes.
But the real experience is usually not as smooth as imagined. Many exchanges are overseas entities. Users face ticket systems, English documentation, template replies, and long wait times.
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You say, "My coins haven't arrived." The customer service asks for the transaction hash (the unique identifier for that on-chain transaction).
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You say, "I deposited to the wrong chain." They ask for the network, address, coin type, deposit time.
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You say, "My account is frozen." The platform asks you to explain the source of funds, transaction context, counterparty relationship, and historical transaction records.
On the user's side, there's only one statement: "Why can't I move my money?" On the platform's side, they require a different set of materials. Did the coins even reach the chain? Was the on-chain transaction a failure, or was it successful but the exchange hasn't credited it? Is this a technical issue or a platform risk control problem? What documents need to be supplemented? How should one communicate with the exchange? Is recovery possible? Is the cost worth further investment? All this needs to be sorted out first for the involved party.
The value of crypto asset recovery services often lies hidden in these details.
The crypto industry has many businesses that look lively but aren't necessarily real. Asset recovery is quite the opposite. It's not suited for grand narratives and can't easily be turned into a sleek pitch deck, but it's a low-frequency, rigid need for users. As long as on-chain assets continue to grow, and as long as wallets, exchanges, cross-chain bridges, and stablecoins are used more widely, various "unrecoverable" problems will continue to occur.
This isn't a problem that can be eliminated by user education. ERC20, TRC20, BEP20, Solana, Polygon, Arbitrum, Base. For experienced players, these are just daily options; for ordinary users, they are a series of multiple-choice questions. Not to mention more fundamental issues like mnemonic phrases, private keys, derivation paths, wallet formats, hardware devices, and backup files.
The more the industry moves toward the mass market, the more interesting a paradox emerges: Technologically, the more emphasis is placed on users controlling their own assets, the more professional services are needed to stand in the middle in reality. A truly mature market never aims to turn every user into an expert. Instead, it develops a layer of services between complex systems and ordinary users that can solve specific problems.
Traditional finance has bank counters, customer service, lawyers, auditors, debt collectors, asset disposal teams, and anti-fraud teams. The crypto world will also have its own asset recovery, on-chain forensics, wallet restoration, exchange communication, compliance explanation, and legal relief services. This direction isn't sexy, but it's real.
The Water Is Deep in This Business
However, the water in this business is also deep.
Clients usually reach out to service providers at their most anxious moment. Money is gone, accounts won't open, exchanges aren't responding, wallets can't be recovered. At such times, it's easy to believe any statement like "We can help you get it back." Precisely because of this, many so-called recovery teams have appeared in the market.
Some are actually just middlemen. They lack technical capability, exchange communication skills, and legal service ability. After taking a client, they collect a fee and then pass the case to someone else. That person passes it to a so-called technical team. After multiple layers of hand-offs, the client's money is gone first, and there's no progress on the issue.
Worse is secondary scams. For example, claiming to know exchange insiders, saying they can crack wallets, asking clients to provide mnemonic phrases and private keys, promising 100% recovery, or asking clients to transfer additional so-called unfreezing fees, verification fees, or channel fees. These claims sound tempting but are dangerous.
Truly professional crypto asset recovery teams, on the other hand, won't easily promise results. Because whether recovery is possible depends on the specific cause:
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Wrong network deposit: It depends on whether the receiving address is a controllable one, whether the exchange supports that network, and if manual consolidation of the assets is possible.
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Incorrect mnemonic phrase: It depends on whether it's a spelling issue, order issue, derivation path problem, or wallet type mismatch.
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Wallet won't open: It depends on whether the problem lies with the device, the app, the backup file, or if the private key itself no longer exists.
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Exchange account frozen: It depends on whether it's identity verification, platform risk control, judicial assistance inquiry, sanctions screening, or insufficient explanation of the source of funds.
For each situation, the path is different. Teams that can clearly explain what "might not be possible" are often more trustworthy than those who immediately promise "guaranteed recovery."
What We Can Do
Crypto asset recovery is gradually evolving from a scattered need into a specialized market. In the past, when people encountered problems, they could only ask friends in chat groups, search for tutorials online, or find a "master" of unknown reliability. But as asset amounts get higher and problem types more complex, users need a more stable service entry point.
Behind this entry point, more than just one person's gut feeling based on experience is needed. Some need to assess if the problem has a chance. Others need to perform on-chain analysis. Others need to check wallet recovery paths. Others need to compile materials for exchanges. Others need to consider legal boundaries and compliance risks. Technical teams, compliance teams, legal services, and platform communication capabilities need to work together.
Currently, we have established cooperation with this professional crypto asset recovery team in the industry. If you encounter similar problems in the future, such as wrong network deposits, missing memos, wallets that won't open, tricky mnemonic phrase recovery, frozen exchange accounts, on-chain asset anomalies, or path analysis after being scammed or hacked, you can contact us for a preliminary assessment.
We won't promise 100% recovery, nor will we engage in any questionable operations. What we can do is first help you determine exactly where the problem lies and whether there is a technical path, a platform path, or a legal path. Often, the most important first step in asset recovery is not immediately finding someone to "perform magic," but first making sure not to make things worse.





