Most money lost in crypto by beginners is not lost to market crashes. It is lost to avoidable mistakes — the wrong coin at the wrong time for the wrong reasons, poor security habits, emotional decisions, and basic misunderstandings about how the technology works.
The good news is that every mistake on this list is preventable. None of them require sophisticated knowledge. They just require knowing what to watch for before it happens to you.
📋 The 10 mistakes covered in this guide
- Investing money you cannot afford to lose
- Buying on hype without doing any research
- Panic selling during a price dip
- Not securing your account properly
- Losing or mishandling your seed phrase
- Sending to the wrong address or network
- Ignoring fees until they eat your returns
- Falling for scams and fake platforms
- Not keeping records for tax
- Trying to trade actively as a beginner
Mistake 1 — Investing Money You Cannot Afford to Lose
This is the foundational mistake that makes every other mistake worse. When people invest money they genuinely need — rent, emergency savings, borrowed funds, money earmarked for something else — they lose the ability to make rational decisions. Every price drop feels catastrophic. Every dip triggers the urge to sell before it gets worse. And selling during a dip is almost always the worst thing you can do.
Crypto is a volatile asset class. Established coins like Bitcoin and Ethereum regularly experience 30–50% drawdowns during broader market downturns. If seeing your €500 investment drop to €250 would cause you real financial or emotional distress, then €500 is too much. Start with an amount where that outcome is something you could genuinely accept.
Mistake 2 — Buying on Hype Without Doing Any Research
A coin appears everywhere at once — Telegram groups, Reddit threads, YouTube videos, TikTok clips. Everyone is talking about it. The price has already doubled this week. The FOMO kicks in and you buy at the peak, just in time to watch the price collapse as the people who were promoting it sell their holdings.
This pattern repeats constantly in crypto. The coins being loudly promoted are almost always the ones someone already holds and wants others to buy to push the price up. By the time a coin is generating viral social media excitement, the easy money has usually already been made — by the people creating that excitement.
Before buying any coin, you should be able to answer: What does it do? Who built it? How long has it existed? Is the team publicly known? Has the code been audited? What is the total supply and how are tokens distributed? If you cannot answer these questions, you are not investing — you are gambling.
Mistake 3 — Panic Selling During a Price Dip
Bitcoin has dropped 30%, 40%, or more multiple times in its history — including from all-time highs — and has recovered every time so far. Beginners who are not prepared for this volatility often see a drop and sell to cut their losses, locking in permanent losses on what would have been a temporary decline.
The pattern is painfully common: a beginner buys during excitement, watches the price drop, sells near the bottom to avoid further pain, watches the price recover, and buys back in near the top again. This cycle reliably destroys wealth. It is driven entirely by emotion rather than logic.
The solution is not to suppress emotion — that is impossible. The solution is to invest only amounts and assets that you have enough conviction in to hold through a significant drop. If you would panic at a 40% drop, the problem is not the market — it is the position size or the asset choice.
Mistake 4 — Not Securing Your Account Properly
Crypto exchange accounts are high-value targets. A hacker who gains access to your account can drain it in minutes. Unlike a bank account, there is no fraud department to reverse the transactions. Yet many beginners use weak passwords, reuse passwords from other sites, and skip two-factor authentication entirely — leaving their accounts wide open.
Common attack vectors include phishing emails that steal login credentials, data breaches on other sites where you reused the same password, and SIM swapping attacks that intercept SMS verification codes. All of these are preventable with basic security hygiene.
Mistake 5 — Losing or Mishandling Your Seed Phrase
If you use a self-custody wallet, your seed phrase is the only way to recover your funds if you lose access to your device. Billions of euros worth of crypto has been permanently lost because people stored their seed phrase carelessly — in a notes app that was deleted, in an email that was hacked, in a photo that was lost, or simply on a piece of paper that was thrown away.
The opposite problem also exists: people share their seed phrase with someone claiming to be from a support team, or enter it into a phishing website that looked legitimate. Either way, the result is the same — permanent loss of everything in that wallet.
Mistake 6 — Sending to the Wrong Address or Network
Crypto transactions are irreversible. If you send funds to the wrong wallet address, they are gone. If you send to the right address on the wrong network, recovery is sometimes possible but never guaranteed. Both mistakes happen constantly — addresses are long strings of characters that are hard to verify visually, and many networks share the same address format making network selection errors easy to make.
Sending to the wrong address is the more serious of the two mistakes. A single character error in a wallet address sends your crypto somewhere else permanently. Sending to the wrong network lands your funds at the right address but on the wrong blockchain — sometimes recoverable, sometimes not, depending on the platforms involved.
Mistake 7 — Ignoring Fees Until They Eat Your Returns
Fees in crypto come from multiple directions and beginners often do not notice them until they add up significantly. Exchange trading fees, withdrawal fees, network gas fees, conversion spreads, weekend surcharges — each one small in isolation but together they can represent a substantial percentage of a small investment.
A beginner buying €100 of crypto on a high-fee platform with a debit card, paying card deposit fees, a trading spread, and then paying gas fees to move it to a wallet, might spend €8–15 in fees on a €100 investment before anything even starts. That means the investment needs to grow 8–15% just to break even on fees alone.
Mistake 8 — Falling for Scams and Fake Platforms
Crypto scams are sophisticated, well-resourced, and specifically designed to fool intelligent people. The most damaging ones — pig butchering scams, fake DEX sites in Google Ads, fake staking links in Telegram, phishing emails impersonating major exchanges — are not obviously fraudulent. They look legitimate. They feel legitimate. And by the time you realise what happened, your funds are gone.
Beginners are disproportionately targeted because they do not yet have the instinct to recognise red flags. A stranger offering to help you invest, a Google Ad for a well-known exchange that takes you to a slightly different URL, a Telegram post about staking rewards with an urgent deadline — all of these are the kind of thing an experienced user would immediately dismiss and a beginner might not.
Mistake 9 — Not Keeping Records for Tax
In Ireland, every sale, swap, and crypto-to-crypto exchange is a taxable event for Capital Gains Tax purposes. Revenue now receives transaction data from EU exchanges automatically under DAC8 and CARF regulations. Many beginners ignore records entirely in their first year, then face a stressful and time-consuming reconstruction exercise when tax season arrives — if they do it at all.
The longer you leave record keeping, the harder it becomes. Exchanges close, transaction histories become harder to retrieve, and the memory of what you paid for a coin at what price fades quickly. Starting records from your very first transaction takes minutes. Trying to reconstruct two years of trading history can take days.
Mistake 10 — Trying to Trade Actively as a Beginner
Active trading — buying and selling frequently based on price movements — sounds exciting and potentially very profitable. In practice, the overwhelming majority of retail traders lose money compared to simply buying and holding. This is not because active trading is impossible, but because it is genuinely difficult, requires skills that take years to develop, and the fees and tax costs of frequent transactions erode returns significantly.
Beginners who attempt to day trade or swing trade typically buy near highs driven by excitement, sell near lows driven by fear, and pay fees and taxes on every transaction along the way. The market is full of experienced, well-resourced traders on the other side of these trades — and they are better at this than a beginner will be in their first year.
Additionally in Ireland, if Revenue determines your crypto activity constitutes trading rather than investing, it may be taxed as income rather than CGT — which can mean a significantly higher tax rate depending on your earnings.
The common thread: Most of these mistakes come down to two things — moving too fast and investing too much. Slow down, start small, learn the fundamentals, and the rest follows naturally. The people who do best in crypto long-term are almost never the ones who jumped in with everything they had on the first coin that caught their eye.
Ready to start the right way?
See our guide to the best exchanges for Irish beginners — regulated, low fees, and simple to use.