Crypto Live · GoPlus

Security Shield — Token, Address & dApp Scanner

Scan a token for honeypots and rug-pull risk, screen a wallet for scam reports, or check a dApp URL for phishing — before you connect or buy.

Paste a token contract address and pick its chain. We check honeypot, taxes, mint, ownership, liquidity lock, holder concentration and more.

Enter a token contract to run a security scan.

Check whether a wallet address has been reported for scams, phishing, hacks, sanctions or other malicious activity.

Enter a wallet address to check its reputation.

Verify a dApp or website URL against known phishing sites and the trusted-dApp registry before connecting your wallet.

Enter a dApp URL to check for phishing.

Crypto security — how to read the results

What is a honeypot token?

A honeypot lets you buy a token but blocks or heavily taxes selling, so you can never exit. The contract hides logic that only lets the deployer sell. If Security Shield shows the honeypot field in red, do not buy — you will not be able to get your money out.

How do I spot a rug pull?

Watch for unlocked liquidity the team can withdraw, a mint function that inflates supply, ownership that is not renounced, high holder concentration in a few wallets, and blacklist or pause controls. Security Shield rolls these into a 0-100 Rug-Pull Risk Score — above 60 is high risk, and any confirmed honeypot is treated as dangerous regardless of score.

What does the mint function mean?

A mint function lets the owner create new tokens after launch, diluting holders and crashing the price — a common abuse vector. Safer tokens have minting disabled or ownership renounced, so no new supply can appear.

Security data is provided by GoPlus Security and is informational only. Automated checks can miss novel scams and are not financial advice — always do your own research.

Multi-Chain Security Checks

Security Shield runs the same honeypot, rug-pull and ownership analysis across seven networks, so you can vet a token, wallet or dApp on whichever chain you trade. Here is what the scanner looks for on each.

Ethereum Smart Contract Security

On Ethereum, Security Shield reads the verified smart-contract source to flag hidden owner privileges, mintable supply, blacklist and pausable-transfer functions, and buy/sell taxes. Because most blue-chip DeFi lives on Ethereum, an unverified or owner-controlled ERC-20 is a serious red flag worth catching before you buy.

Check BSC Token for Honeypot

BNB Chain is notorious for scam tokens, so a honeypot check is essential before aping a fresh pair. The BSC rug pull scanner confirms you can actually sell, checks whether liquidity is locked, and detects mint functions that let the deployer inflate supply — the classic setup behind PancakeSwap rugs.

Solana Rug Pull Scanner

For SPL tokens, paste the Solana mint address and the scanner checks whether minting and freeze authority have been revoked. If they haven't, the team can print new supply or freeze your wallet at any time. Solana exposes fewer standardized risk fields than EVM chains, so some checks may show “n/a”.

Base & Arbitrum Token Scanner

New Layer 2 launches move fast, and copy-paste contracts hiding malicious code are common. The Base and Arbitrum token scanner surfaces ownership, mint and tax risks on these L2s so you can tell a legitimate launch from a quick cash-grab before providing liquidity.

Polygon & Avalanche Checks

The same checks run on Polygon (MATIC) and Avalanche (AVAX) tokens, including holder concentration and ownership renunciation. A token where a few wallets hold most of the supply — or where the owner never renounced control — can be dumped or rugged at will, whatever the chain.

Once your token scans clean, size your position with our Position Size Calculator or log the trade in the Trading Journal.