Explore Hub: Airdrops

Merkle airdrop claim verification checklist solves one narrow operating question: verify root, leaf encoding, claimant amount, contract address, approval behavior, and expiry before signing a claim. This guide keeps that intent separate from prediction, promotion, or broad market commentary.

Verifies the exact onchain claim proof and permissions before wallet signature.

Define the decision before collecting data

Start by writing the action that merkle airdrop claim verification checklist is allowed to change. Record the current position, proposed position, maximum loss or operational exposure, and the exact condition that would cancel the action. A checklist without a decision boundary becomes a pile of facts.

A Merkle distributor proves that a leaf belongs to a published root. Safety still depends on correct leaf construction, trusted root updates, claim contract permissions, token identity, and transaction calldata.

Verify the governing mechanism

Use the first-party documentation linked below as the starting point, then verify the live product, contract, lineup, account, or onchain state. Documentation explains the rule; current state shows whether that rule is active in this case. Preserve timestamps in UTC and identifiers that another reviewer can reproduce.

The primary mechanism matters because A valid proof from an unofficial site can target the wrong contract or request unrelated approvals. A matching project logo and allocation number are not contract verification. The safest comparison keeps rule, timestamp, scope, and executable size together instead of relying on a screenshot.

Build the verification sheet

Complete every field before merkle airdrop claim verification checklist changes an entry, transfer, vote, claim, or bet. A blank field is uncertainty, not permission to assume the favorable outcome.

  • Confirm official announcement and chain.
  • Verify distributor and token addresses.
  • Check root and leaf encoding.
  • Decode transaction calldata.
  • Record claim deadline and vesting.

Add the source URL, retrieval time, product or contract identifier, and the person or system that performed the check. Where two sources conflict, give the live first-party state priority and stop until the discrepancy is explained.

Compare equivalent routes

Create separate rows for routes with different settlement windows, margin rules, chain IDs, innings exposure, account modes, or privilege assumptions. Normalize those fields before comparing odds, fees, speed, yield, or convenience. A larger headline number does not compensate for a different product.

Test the smallest practical size first when the action is reversible. Measure accepted price, credited balance, order state, transaction receipt, lineup confirmation, or settlement result. Scale only after the observed route matches the documented one.

Keep a compact audit record after the action. Include the inputs that were known beforehand, the fields that changed, the final accepted or confirmed state, and any difference between expected and observed behavior. This turns one review into useful evidence without pretending that yesterday's rule, market, account configuration, lineup, or contract state is guaranteed to remain current.

Worked decision example

The user independently computes or verifies the address-and-amount leaf against the onchain root, checks calldata, and rejects an unexpected unlimited token approval.

The example is intentionally procedural. It does not promise a profitable or safe outcome; it shows how the checklist converts an ambiguous headline into a reproducible decision with a pass condition.

Failure modes and invalidation

A valid proof from an unofficial site can target the wrong contract or request unrelated approvals. A matching project logo and allocation number are not contract verification.

A second common failure is changing the thesis after the original trigger disappears. Keep the invalidation written beside the plan. If the state changes, close the old decision and create a new one rather than editing history.

When waiting is the correct result

The default pass rule is to do not sign when the official source, chain, distributor, token, root, or requested permissions disagree. Waiting protects the integrity of the comparison and preserves the option to act when the missing field becomes verifiable.

Merkle airdrop claim verification checklist is complete only when the final action, no-action result, and supporting evidence are logged. Recheck first-party rules before future use because product and protocol controls can change.

Primary references

These first-party or authoritative references frame the checklist. Recheck their live versions before acting.

Continue this cluster

Continue with closely related checks in the airdrop claim contract verification cluster.