AirBit Club Victims May Have Until July 31, 2026 to File a Claim

by Staff Attorney | June 23, 2026 6:49 pm

AirBit Club Victims May Have Until July 31, 2026 to File a Claim

MDF Law is looking to speak with victims of the AirBit Club cryptocurrency fraud before the upcoming claim deadline. If you invested money or cryptocurrency in AirBit Club, bought an AirBit membership, paid cash to a promoter, or sent crypto to an AirBit-related wallet, you may be eligible to submit a claim to the AirBit Victim Fund. Call our crypto fraud attorneys at 800-767-8040 to discuss this matter and your legal rights.

The current deadline is July 31, 2026.

The AirBit Victim Fund was created to return forfeited assets to eligible victims. The process is important, but it may not be simple for every investor. Many victims invested years ago. Some paid in cash. Others paid with Bitcoin or other cryptocurrency. Many were recruited by promoters and may no longer have easy access to their records. Our crypto fraud attorneys are reviewing AirBit Club claims[1] and speaking with victims who want to understand their rights before the deadline.

What Was AirBit Club?

AirBit Club was promoted as a cryptocurrency investment program. Investors were told they could buy memberships and earn passive income from crypto mining and trading. Many victims believed they were investing in a legitimate crypto business. AirBit Club gave investors access to an online portal that appeared to show daily profits and growing account balances. According to the government, those profits were not real. AirBit Club did not generate the promised returns from legitimate mining or trading. Instead, the people behind the scheme used investor money to enrich themselves and recruit more victims.

AirBit Club operated for years and reached victims in the United States and abroad. Many investors joined after attending presentations, speaking with promoters, or relying on people they trusted.

The AirBit Victim Fund Is Now Open

The AirBit Victim Fund gives eligible victims a chance to recover part of their losses from assets recovered by the government. Victims must submit a petition before the deadline. Online petitions must be submitted before midnight on July 31, 2026. Mailed petitions must be postmarked by that date. Victims should not wait until the last minute. The strongest claims usually include records showing how much money or cryptocurrency was invested, when it was sent, where it was sent, and whether anything was withdrawn. That proof can take time to collect. Banks, crypto exchanges, wallets, and old email accounts may all contain important records.

Who May Qualify as an AirBit Club Victim?

You may qualify if you invested your own money or cryptocurrency into AirBit Club and did not recover your full investment. The fund generally looks at what you put into AirBit Club and subtracts what you received back. This is often called a “cash-in, cash-out” calculation. That means the fund may not credit the fake profits shown in the AirBit portal. It also may not compensate victims for emotional distress, lost opportunities, loan interest, or the current value of cryptocurrency that was invested years ago.

For example, if a victim invested Bitcoin, the fund may look at the value of the Bitcoin at the time it was invested, not the value of Bitcoin today. This can make the claim calculation confusing for some victims.

Why Records Matter to Victims

AirBit Club victims should begin gathering records now.

Useful records may include bank statements, wire records, crypto exchange statements, wallet addresses, blockchain transaction IDs, emails, screenshots, text messages, WhatsApp messages, Telegram messages, membership records, and communications with promoters. A screenshot of an AirBit account balance may help show that a victim participated in the program. But screenshots may not be enough to prove the amount of the loss. Third-party financial records are usually stronger.

Victims should also keep records showing any withdrawals. The fund will likely subtract money or cryptocurrency that a victim received back from AirBit Club.

Were You Recruited by an AirBit Promoter?

Many AirBit Club victims were recruited by promoters. Some promoters held events. Some gave presentations. Others used personal relationships to convince friends, relatives, or community members to invest. The AirBit Victim Fund asks victims to identify who recruited them. This may be important. Some people who promoted AirBit may also have been victims. Others may have earned money by recruiting new investors. The government may treat those situations differently.

If someone recruited you, preserve your communications with that person. If you recruited others and are unsure whether you still qualify as a victim, you should speak with a crypto attorney[2] about your claim.

What If You Already Spoke With Law Enforcement?

Some AirBit victims previously spoke with the FBI, DOJ, or another government agency. That may be helpful, but it does not replace the claim process. Victims who want compensation from the AirBit Victim Fund still need to submit a petition. Prior contact with law enforcement does not automatically create a claim.

If you already gave records to the government, you should still make sure your petition is complete and timely.

What If You Invested in TRAXALT or Another Related Crypto Program?

Some AirBit investors also received or purchased TRAXALT coins. Others may have been pushed into related crypto programs after investing in AirBit Club. These issues may require closer review. Victims should preserve all records involving TRAXALT, related wallets, follow-on investments, and communications with promoters. Crypto fraud schemes often overlap. A victim may start in one program and later be moved into another coin, token, platform, or investment opportunity. Those facts may matter when evaluating the claim.

Why Speak With a Crypto Fraud Attorney?

The AirBit Victim Fund is a government process. Victims do not need a lawyer to submit a claim. But some victims may want help. This is especially true when records are incomplete, payments were made in cryptocurrency, a promoter was involved, the victim received some money back, or the victim invested through multiple related programs. A crypto fraud attorney can help review the records, identify missing documents, understand the loss calculation, and evaluate issues that may affect eligibility. MDF Law is speaking with AirBit Club victims now. We want to understand how victims were recruited, what they were told, what records they still have, and whether they may qualify to file a claim before the July 31, 2026 deadline.

Contact MDF Law About an AirBit Club Claim

If you invested in AirBit Club, you should act before the deadline.

MDF Law represents victims of cryptocurrency fraud, investment fraud, Ponzi schemes, hacked wallets, pig-butchering scams, and digital asset theft. If you believe you are an AirBit Club victim, contact MDF Law to discuss your investment, your records, and the AirBit Victim Fund claim process.

This article is for informational purposes only. It does not guarantee eligibility, approval, or recovery from the AirBit Victim Fund. The Department of Justice makes the final decisions regarding eligibility and payment amounts. The deadline to submit a petition is July 31, 2026.

Endnotes:
  1. AirBit Club claims: https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/us-department-justice-announces-compensation-process-victims-airbit-club-fraud-scheme
  2. crypto attorney: https://mdf-law.com/crypto/

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