Vulnerabilities

Chrome Sandbox Escape Earns Researcher $250,000

A researcher has been given the highest reward in Google’s Chrome bug bounty program for a sandbox escape with remote code execution.

Chrome security

A researcher has earned a $250,000 bug bounty from Google for a Chrome vulnerability that can be exploited to escape the web browser’s sandbox. 

The vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2025-4609, was reported to Google on April 22 by a researcher who uses the online moniker ‘Micky’. The issue was patched in mid-May with a Chrome 136 update, and details have now been made public by Google.

The security flaw, which impacts Chrome’s Mojo inter-process communication system, has been assigned a ‘high severity’ rating by Google. 

The researcher said his PoC exploit achieved a sandbox escape and system command execution — he opened the calculator app to demonstrate the exploit — with a success rate of 70-80%. 

Exploitation of these types of security holes typically requires the targeted user to visit a malicious website. 

$250,000 is the maximum reward that Google is prepared to pay out for a Chrome sandbox escape vulnerability, but the amount can only be earned for a submission that includes a high-quality report with demonstration of remote code execution. 

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Google described CVE-2025-4609 as a “very complex logic bug and high quality report with a functional exploit, with good analysis and demonstration of a sandbox escape”.

Google said earlier this year that it paid out a total of $12 million through its bug bounty programs in 2024 and the highest single reward was $110,000.

Related: Google Pays Out $55,000 Bug Bounty for Chrome Vulnerability

Related: Google Discloses Data Breach via Salesforce Hack

Related: Vulnerabilities Exposed Phone Number of Any Google User

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