Abstract A longāterm, consistent satellite record of cloud droplet number concentration (Nd) is essential for understanding aerosolācloud interactions and their climate effects. However, the Aqua MODISāretrieved Nd exhibits an unexpected and substantial increase over the nearāglobal oceans after 2022, contradicting the expected decline from continued emission reduction efforts. Here we demonstrate that this surge is not physical but largely an artifact of sensor orbital drift, which alters viewing geometry and solar illumination. By leveraging concurrent SuomiāNPP VIIRS observations unaffected by drift, we developed an empirical correction that removes this artificial signal and quantified global mean Nd artificial biases of +2.4 cmā3 in 2023 and +5.0 cmā3 in 2024. These biases substantially distort the Nd trends, reversing the previously decreasing global Nd trend into an apparent strong rise after 2022. These findings highlight the critical need to correct for such artifacts when constructing satelliteābased climate data records.