The Exodus Portfolio Overview
When you open Exodus, the main screen is your portfolio overview — a live snapshot of everything you hold.
What you see:
This overview updates in real time as crypto prices change — no need to refresh or reload.
Adding All Your Assets
To get an accurate portfolio picture, you need to enable every asset you hold.
Enabling Assets
- Browse the full list of 260+ supported assets.
- Toggle on any asset you hold that isn’t already showing.
Once enabled, Exodus scans the blockchain for that address’s balance and adds it to your portfolio total.
Assets Not in Exodus’s List
Exodus supports 260+ assets, but not every token in existence. If you hold something not on the list, it will not appear in Exodus — and the portfolio total will not include it. For a complete picture across all assets including obscure tokens, you may need a supplementary tool (see the comparison section below).
Reading Price Charts
Clicking/tapping any individual asset opens its detail view, which includes a price chart.
Chart Timeframes
| Period | What It Shows |
|---|---|
| 1D | Price over the last 24 hours |
| 1W | Price over the last 7 days |
| 1M | Price over the last 30 days |
| 3M | Price over the last 3 months |
| 1Y | Price over the last 12 months |
| All | Full price history since tracking began |
Tap any point on the chart to see the exact price at that moment. The percentage change display updates to show performance over the selected period.
Reading the Chart
The chart shows price on the vertical axis and time on the horizontal axis. A rising line from left to right means the asset has appreciated over the selected period. Use the 1D view for daily context and the 1Y or All view for understanding your position relative to longer-term price history.
Portfolio Performance Tracking
Exodus tracks the current value of your holdings but focuses primarily on live portfolio valuation rather than cost-basis performance tracking (i.e., it doesn’t natively calculate your profit or loss based on what you paid).
What Exodus Shows
- Current portfolio value in fiat
- 24-hour dollar and percentage change in total portfolio value
- Per-asset price change over selected periods
What Exodus Does Not Show Natively
- Cost basis (what you paid for each coin)
- Realized gains and losses
- Return on investment (ROI) by asset
- Tax lot tracking
For these functions, you need to export your data or use a third-party tool (covered below).
Changing Fiat Currency Display
By default, Exodus may display values in USD. You can change this to over 30 fiat currencies.
On Desktop:
- Select your preferred fiat currency from the dropdown.
- All portfolio values update to reflect the new currency.
On Mobile:
- Select from the available options.
Supported currencies include USD, EUR, GBP, JPY, AUD, CAD, CHF, CNY, KRW, BRL, MXN, and many more.
Portfolio History and Historical Values
Exodus shows historical portfolio snapshots so you can see how your total value changed over time.
On the main portfolio screen, look for a Portfolio Value chart that shows your total holdings value graphed over time. This reflects actual price changes — not deposits and withdrawals — so periods of price appreciation show as upward movements even if you made no new purchases.
Note: Portfolio history in Exodus is device-specific and begins tracking from when you first installed and configured the wallet on that device. If you restore from a recovery phrase on a new device, historical tracking starts fresh.
Exporting Data for Tax Purposes (CSV)
Crypto taxes require you to track every transaction — purchases, sales, swaps, and staking rewards. Exodus provides transaction history export to help with this.
How to Export Your Transaction History
On Desktop:
- Choose the assets you want to export or export all.
- Select a date range if needed.
- Save the CSV file to your computer.
On Mobile:
- Follow the export prompts to email yourself the CSV or save to your device.
What the CSV Contains
The exported CSV typically includes:
- Date and time of each transaction
- Transaction type (send, receive, exchange)
- Asset sent/received
- Amount in crypto
- Approximate fiat value at time of transaction
- Transaction ID (for blockchain verification)
Using the CSV for Taxes
The Exodus CSV can be imported into crypto tax software such as:
| Tax Software | Exodus Import Support |
|---|---|
| Koinly | Yes |
| CoinTracker | Yes |
| TaxBit | Yes |
| Accointing | Yes |
| CoinLedger | Yes |
These tools calculate your capital gains and losses, generate tax reports, and in some cases integrate directly with tax filing software.
Important: Exodus’s export may not capture every taxable event perfectly, especially for complex DeFi interactions or cross-platform activity. Always review the exported data for completeness before filing.
Exodus vs Dedicated Portfolio Trackers
Exodus’s portfolio tracking is solid for its primary purpose — showing you what you hold in your wallet. But dedicated portfolio tracker apps offer capabilities Exodus doesn’t.
| Feature | Exodus | CoinGecko | Delta | Koinly |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Live portfolio value | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| On-chain wallet sync | Yes (Exodus wallets) | Yes (read-only) | Yes (read-only) | Yes |
| Manual entry for other wallets | No | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Exchange account sync | No | Limited | Yes | Yes |
| Cost basis tracking | No | No | Yes | Yes |
| Tax reporting | CSV export only | No | Limited | Full |
| Price alerts | No | Yes | Yes | No |
| Portfolio charts | Yes | Yes | Yes | Limited |
| Free tier | Yes | Yes | Yes | Limited |
When Exodus Tracking Is Enough
Exodus’s built-in tracking is excellent if:
- All your crypto is in Exodus
- You don’t need tax reporting
- You want simplicity without managing multiple apps
- You’re a long-term holder who checks prices occasionally
When to Use a Dedicated Tracker
Consider a supplementary tool if:
- You hold crypto across multiple wallets and exchanges
- You need cost basis and ROI tracking
- You trade frequently and need tax reports
- You want price alerts and advanced analytics
Recommended workflow: Use Exodus for wallet management and daily balance checking. Export to Koinly or CoinTracker for annual tax reporting.
Tips for Better Portfolio Tracking in Exodus
Consolidate your holdings where possible. The more crypto you can bring into Exodus, the more complete your in-app portfolio picture becomes.
Check your portfolio in your local currency. If you live outside the US, switch the display to EUR, GBP, or your local currency for more meaningful daily tracking.
Review weekly, not hourly. Crypto is volatile. Checking your portfolio every hour adds emotional noise without informational value. A weekly review habit is healthier and provides better perspective.
Use the All-time chart for perspective. When prices drop and anxiety creeps in, looking at the full price history of established assets like Bitcoin often provides useful long-term context.
FAQ
Does Exodus show my total profit or loss since I bought?
Exodus shows the current value and 24-hour change, but not your profit or loss based on cost basis. To see how much you’ve made or lost overall, export your transaction history to a tool like Koinly or CoinTracker.
Why does my Exodus portfolio value sometimes differ from CoinGecko or CoinMarketCap?
Price feeds can vary slightly between sources due to different data aggregation methods and update frequencies. Small differences are normal. Large discrepancies (more than 1–2%) are unusual — refresh the app.
Can I connect exchange accounts to Exodus portfolio tracking?
No. Exodus only tracks assets held in your Exodus wallet. Balances on Coinbase, Binance, Kraken, or other exchanges are not included. Use a dedicated tracker like Delta or CoinTracker to aggregate exchange and wallet balances in one view.
How far back does Exodus’s transaction history go?
Exodus’s transaction history reflects on-chain data from the blockchain, so it goes back to the beginning of your wallet’s activity. However, the Exodus interface may limit how far back it displays without a CSV export.
Is the Exodus CSV enough for tax filing?
It is a starting point, but not sufficient on its own for complex tax situations. The CSV does not calculate capital gains — it only provides raw transaction data. Import it into tax software for proper gain/loss calculations.
Related guides:

Leave a Reply