How Wallets Validate Addresses (And Why That’s Not Enough)

Most users believe their wallet will protect them.
It won’t.
Wallets only validate format — not intent, ownership, or risk.
What Wallets Actually Check
When you paste an address, wallets typically verify:
- Correct length
- Correct character set
- Valid checksum
- Proper prefix for the network
If those conditions are met, the wallet allows the transaction.
That’s it.
What Wallets Do NOT Check
Wallets do not verify:
- If the address belongs to a scammer
- If it’s a known phishing wallet
- If it’s sanctioned
- If it’s a high-risk contract
- If it’s part of an exploit
- If it’s associated with fraud
The wallet assumes you know what you’re doing.
Why This Is Dangerous
A scam address can be:
- Perfectly formatted
- Fully valid
- And still malicious
To your wallet, it looks fine.
To you, it looks fine.
But to your balance… it’s a one-way exit.
The Bottom Line
Wallets validate structure, not safety.
And in crypto, structure alone is not protection.
