- Binance has introduced a Withdraw Protection feature that lets users lock withdrawals for up to seven days.
- The tool blocks all on-chain withdrawals during the selected period and cannot be removed early by default.
Binance is adding another layer to account security, and this one is deliberately simple: slow withdrawals down before something goes wrong.
The exchange has introduced Withdraw Protection, a feature designed to stop funds from leaving an account during high-risk moments. It is aimed less at everyday trading and more at the kind of situations crypto users know too well: phishing attacks, compromised login details, social engineering, malware, or a user being pressured into sending assets quickly.
Introducing Withdraw Protection. 🔐
🔸 Lock on-chain withdrawals for 1–7 days
🔸 Built for threats beyond digital attacks
🔸 More control. More protectionKnow more → https://t.co/lU3OgtJqEC pic.twitter.com/qdesymSjek
— Binance (@binance) May 4, 2026
Withdrawals can be frozen for seven days
The tool allows users to lock on-chain withdrawals for up to seven days. Once activated, the restriction blocks all on-chain withdrawals during the selected period. By default, the lock cannot be removed early, even by the user.
That last part matters. Withdraw Protection is not just another password prompt or a softer version of two-factor authentication. It is a hard delay. If someone gains access to an account and tries to move funds out on-chain, the withdrawal route remains closed while the protection period is active.
This gives the account holder time to notice suspicious activity, contact support, secure email accounts, reset credentials, revoke compromised devices, and review other security settings before assets can leave the platform.
Binance turns delay into a security tool
Crypto transfers are fast, final, and usually impossible to reverse. That is useful when everything is legitimate. It is brutal when an attacker gets through.
Withdraw Protection addresses that weakness by adding friction at the exact point where losses normally become permanent. It does not replace strong passwords, passkeys, two-factor authentication, withdrawal allowlists, or anti-phishing codes. But it adds something those tools do not always provide: time.
For active traders, a seven-day withdrawal lock may be inconvenient. For users holding larger balances, it may function more like a circuit breaker. The trade-off is clear. Less flexibility in exchange for a stronger chance of stopping an unauthorized withdrawal before it becomes irreversible.
The feature also reflects a broader shift among major exchanges. Security is no longer only about proving who logged in. It is increasingly about slowing down high-risk actions, especially when funds are about to move on-chain and out of reach.






