Skip to main content
Skip to main content
Polkadot logo

Participating in Crowdloans on Kusama and Polkadot

Parachains run in parallel on Polkadot and Kusama, connected via auctions. Learn how crowdloans allow users to support parachain teams without giving up control of their tokens.

By PolkadotAugust 23, 2021

By Bill Laboon, Director of Education and Community at Web3 Foundation

Parachains are the diverse layer-1 blockchains that run in parallel on the Polkadot and Kusama networks. Parachains connect to Polkadot or Kusama by leasing a parachain slot on the Relay Chain. Apart from the slots for system parachains, which are reserved for functionality that benefits the ecosystem as a whole, projects wishing to obtain a parachain slot need to participate in one or more parachain slot auctions. The design of Polkadot and Kusama allows supporters and potential users of the parachains to help parachain teams secure a slot by contributing their DOT or KSM (respectively) via the crowdloan mechanism.

Safe participation in crowdloans

The crowdloan is an on-chain way of helping parachain teams raise the token bond required to participate in a parachain slot auction. This mechanism ensures that tokens contributed to a crowdloan are used only for their intended purpose, namely, winning a parachain slot. The parachain project itself does not receive or have any control of these tokens and cannot transfer, stake, participate in governance, or perform any other functionality with them. The original token holder will always get back the tokens used to contribute to a crowdloan. Thus, there is no risk to the participating user that their KSM or DOT will be taken by the project, or used for any other purposes.

How the crowdloan process works

In a crowdloan, DOT or KSM contributed by supporters is managed using an automated process written into the code of the network. In technical terms, the DOT or KSM are allocated to the auction for the parachain by the runtime logic of the chain using the “crowdloan.contribute” extrinsic. This is a special type of transaction that allows token holders to contribute to a crowdloan without having to transfer or give up custody of their tokens to any third party.

After the parachain lease period is over, or the potential parachain fails to win a slot within a specified time period, the DOT or KSM are returned to their owners by the runtime. For most participants this will look like an automatic process. Behind the scenes, this refund process can be initiated by any user calling the “crowdloan.refund” extrinsic for that crowdloan and paying the transaction fee (although the parachain project owner is incentivized to do this themselves, in order to return their deposit as quickly as possible).

From a technical perspective, participating in crowdloans always involves using the “crowdloan.contribute” extrinsic. If you participate via Polkadot-JS, this will appear in the top right corner of the screen after you have entered the amount and selected “contribute”, and before you sign and submit the transaction. See here for a step-by-step guide to participating in a crowdloan using Polkadot-JS.

If using a different wallet or platform, it is important to do your own research and to ensure that you are participating in a legitimate crowdloan.

The risks of transferring DOT or KSM

Rather than simply using the crowdloan module, some parachain projects are using, or have already used, additional mechanisms to source their parachain bids that consist of directly sending KSM to accounts owned by the parachain project. Note that raising tokens in this way is not considered a crowdloan – a crowdloan by definition uses the crowdloan pallet and its associated functionality.

Although there are legitimate reasons to use these alternative ways of raising an auction bond, one should be aware that there are certain risks in participating in such a mechanism.

Using the transfer extrinsic, ie, transferring DOT or KSM to an address, means that the tokens have been irrevocably sent; whoever owns the receiving address can send the tokens back, keep them, or do anything else with those tokens, as they are now the owner of them. The decision is entirely in their hands. If you decide to take part in a mechanism that requires a transfer of DOT or KSM to an address (using the transfer extrinsic), you should deeply research and trust the project, and be aware of the risks involved.

Current status

Auctions and crowdloans are currently running continuously on both Polkadot and Kusama. You can follow the status of auctions and crowdloans on Kusama here and on Kusama’s Twitter page. You can follow the status of Polkadot crowdloans here and on Polkadot's Twitter page.

Watch a video showing how to participate in crowdloans via Polkadot.JS-Apps here.

Still have questions?

For further information about crowdloans on Polkadot and Kusama, please see the Polkadot Wiki page on the topic: https://wiki.polkadot.network/docs/learn/learn-crowdloans



From the blog

Polkadot Ecosystem Ignites 2025: A Year of Unprecedented Decentralization, DeFi Breakthroughs, and Global Builder Momentum

A quarter-by-quarter recap of Polkadot’s 2025 milestones, from record-breaking decentralization and DeFi growth to Polkadot 2.0 and global builder momentum.

Proof of Personhood: How Polkadot proves you're real without KYC

Proof of personhood lets you prove you're a unique human without giving up privacy. Polkadot's Project Individuality uses tattoos and video games to fight bots and enable fair airdrops for millions.

Pudgy Party: The Web3 game that hides the blockchain

Pudgy Party hit 900,000 downloads in six weeks by hiding the blockchain entirely. Built on Mythos Chain, players get custodial wallets and zero gas fees without realizing it. The game proves Web3 gaming works when blockchain infrastructure becomes invisible.

Polkadot at TechCrunch Disrupt 2025: The only blockchain in the room

Polkadot showed up at TechCrunch Disrupt 2025 as the only blockchain sponsor. With nearly 10,000 booth visitors and strong coordination across ecosystem teams, the event proved valuable for positioning Polkadot in Web2 conversations.

Why most blockchains can't handle AI (and what changes that)

Most blockchains can't handle AI's computational demands. High costs, limited speed, and storage constraints require purpose-built modular infrastructure instead.

Onboarding 21,000 users with Nova Shots: What we learned & how we move forward

How do you bring thousands of esports fans onchain without asking them to buy anything first? At three BLAST Counter-Strike events, Nova Wallet onboarded 21,000 new users through free interactive gameplay, processing 2.8 million transfers on Polkadot.

Meet the first cohort: The 5 teams selected for the DeFi Builders Program

Velocity Labs announces 5 teams selected for the DeFi Builders Program Cohort 1, building innovative financial applications on Polkadot Hub.

5 tech outages that prove decentralization can't wait

From AWS to CrowdStrike, major outages are increasing. Discover why centralized infrastructure keeps failing and how decentralization offers a solution.

Real World Assets on Polkadot: Your comprehensive guide to RWA

Real-World Assets bring physical value onto blockchain. Learn what RWAs are, how tokenization works, and why Polkadot is best for RWA projects.

Q3 2025 Polkadot DAO recap: Supply cap, treasury decisions & what's next

Here's what happened in Polkadot governance during Q3 2025: a permanent supply cap, millions in treasury funding decisions, and notable proposal rejections that exposed growing pains in how the DAO evaluates non-technical work.

Building AI on Polkadot: Why centralized compute is the wrong foundation

Build AI on Polkadot with verifiable data, cryptographic privacy, and native interoperability. 90% cost savings, no vendor lock-in, production-ready.

What Does Web3 Music Success Actually Look Like?

The Decentralized Mic brought together builders and investors actively shaping the future of Web3 music to discuss what's working, what's broken, and where the industry is headed next.

xs