How to Send and Receive Crypto with Ledger (2026)

Sending and receiving crypto with a Ledger hardware wallet is more secure than using an exchange or software wallet — but there are critical steps you must follow to avoid losing funds. The most important rule: always verify your address and transaction details on the Ledger device screen, not just on your computer.

This guide walks you through receiving and sending for Bitcoin and Ethereum in detail, covers NFT transfers, explains common mistakes, and shows you what to do if something goes wrong.


Why the Device Screen Matters

Before getting into steps, it is essential to understand why Ledger’s physical device screen exists.

When you use Ledger Live on your computer, that computer could theoretically be infected with malware. Sophisticated clipboard-hijacking malware replaces crypto addresses you paste with the attacker’s address. If you rely solely on your computer screen, you might send funds to an address you never intended.

The Ledger device screen is an isolated display driven by the Secure Element chip — it cannot be manipulated by software running on your computer. When the device shows an address, that is the real address. When the device shows transaction details, those are the real details.

The rule: If the address on the Ledger device screen does not match what you intended, do not confirm. Reject the transaction immediately.


Receiving Crypto

Step-by-Step: Receive Bitcoin

  • Open Ledger Live and connect your Ledger device via USB
    • Enter your PIN on the device to unlock it
  • Click on your Bitcoin account in the left sidebar
  • Click the Receive button (arrow pointing down)
  • Ledger Live shows a prompt — make sure your Ledger is connected and the Bitcoin app is open on the device
    • Open the Bitcoin app on your Ledger (navigate to it and press both buttons)
  • Ledger Live now displays a receiving address and QR code
  • On your Ledger device screen, the same address is displayed — compare both visually. They must match exactly.
    • Press the right button on the device to confirm you have verified the address
    • Share the address with the sender (copy it, share the QR code, or both)
  • The incoming transaction appears in Ledger Live as Pending once broadcast, and confirms after the required number of Bitcoin network confirmations (typically 1–3 for small amounts, up to 6 for large amounts)
  • Step-by-Step: Receive Ethereum or ERC-20 Tokens

    The process is identical to Bitcoin, but you open the Ethereum app on the device. Your Ethereum account address receives ETH, all ERC-20 tokens (USDC, USDT, LINK, UNI, etc.), and NFTs on Ethereum — they all use the same address.

    Important: Network Compatibility

    When receiving crypto, make sure the sender is using the correct network. Common mistakes:

    • Sending BEP-20 tokens (BNB Chain) to an Ethereum address — these are different networks even if the address format looks identical
    • Sending SOL to an Ethereum address (impossible, as the formats differ — but worth confirming)
    • Sending XRP to the wrong network

    Always confirm with the sender which network the transaction is being sent on. If in doubt, ask explicitly.


    Receiving Crypto on Mobile (Ledger Live App)

    The process is the same on the Ledger Live mobile app, using Bluetooth to communicate with a Nano X or Stax:

    • Open Ledger Live on your phone
    • Select the account you want to receive to
  • Tap Receive
    • Follow the on-screen prompt to connect your device via Bluetooth
    • Open the relevant coin app on the device
    • Verify the address on both the phone screen and the Ledger device screen
    • Share or scan the QR code

    Sending Crypto

    Step-by-Step: Send Bitcoin

    • Open Ledger Live and connect your Ledger via USB
  • Click on your Bitcoin account
  • Click Send (arrow pointing up)
  • In the Recipient address field, paste the recipient’s Bitcoin address
  • Verify the address — do not rely on autocomplete or assume a copied address is correct
  • Enter the amount to send (in BTC or your local fiat equivalent)
  • To send your entire balance, click Send max (note: this deducts the fee from the total)
  • Choose a fee level: Slow (cheaper, slower), Standard (balanced), or Fast (more expensive, confirms quickly)
    • Custom fee: Advanced users can set a specific sat/vByte fee
    • Review the summary: recipient address, amount, and fee
  • Click Continue
  • Open the Bitcoin app on your Ledger device when prompted
  • On the device screen, verify:
  • – The recipient address (first and last 6+ characters)

    – The amount in BTC

    – The network fee

  • If everything is correct, press both buttons to Approve
    • The transaction is broadcast to the Bitcoin network

    Step-by-Step: Send Ethereum

  • Click on your Ethereum account in Ledger Live
  • Click Send
    • Enter the recipient’s Ethereum address
    • Enter the amount of ETH (or select the ERC-20 token if sending tokens)
  • Review the gas fee — Ledger Live shows estimated fee in USD/ETH
  • Click Continue and then review the transaction details
  • Open the Ethereum app on your Ledger device
    • On the device screen, you will see:

    – Recipient address

    – Amount

    – Max fee (gas limit × gas price)

    • Scroll through the details using the right button
  • Press both buttons to Accept and send
    • The transaction is broadcast — it typically confirms within 15–60 seconds under normal network conditions

    Sending ERC-20 Tokens

    ERC-20 tokens (USDC, USDT, DAI, LINK, etc.) are sent from your Ethereum account. When you click Send in your ETH account, you can choose which asset to send — ETH itself or any ERC-20 sub-account. Note that sending ERC-20 tokens still costs ETH as the gas fee, so always keep a small ETH balance in your account for fees.


    Sending to the Wrong Network: What Happens?

    If you send crypto to an address on the wrong network, the outcome depends on the specific networks involved:

    Scenario What Happens Recoverable?
    Sending ETH to a BNB Chain address Funds may be accessible if the same private key controls both addresses Often yes, with effort
    Sending ERC-20 to a BNB Chain address Similar to above Often yes
    Sending BTC to an ETH address Transaction will fail or be invalid Depends on situation
    Sending to a contract address (not a wallet) Funds may be locked in the contract Rarely recoverable
    Sending SOL to an ETH address Transaction invalid or rejected by the network Usually safe, not broadcast

    For EVM-compatible chains (Ethereum, BNB Chain, Polygon, Avalanche), the same private key controls the same address across all networks. If you send ERC-20 tokens to your BNB Chain address, you may be able to add the token on BNB Chain and access them. Always verify with the recipient or the chain’s documentation before attempting recovery.


    Sending and Receiving NFTs

    Receiving an NFT

    NFTs on Ethereum, Polygon, and other supported chains appear in your account’s NFT gallery automatically in Ledger Live once received. The process is the same as receiving any Ethereum transaction — share your address and verify it on the device.

    Sending an NFT

    • In Ledger Live, open the account that holds the NFT
  • Go to the NFT gallery section of the account
    • Click on the NFT you want to send
  • Click Send
    • Enter the recipient’s address
  • Review and click Continue
    • Open the Ethereum app on your Ledger device
    • Verify the transaction on the device — it will show the contract address and token ID
    • Press both buttons to confirm

    Note: NFT transfers cost ETH in gas fees just like any other Ethereum transaction.


    Common Mistakes to Avoid

    Mistake Consequence Prevention
    Not verifying address on device screen Could send funds to an attacker Always verify on device
    Copying address from an email or message Could be a scam address Request address fresh each time
    Sending wrong asset (e.g. USDT on ERC-20 vs TRC-20) Funds go to wrong network Confirm with recipient which network
    Sending full balance without accounting for fee Transaction fails if insufficient ETH for gas Use “Send max” which auto-calculates, or manually leave fee buffer
    Sending a small test amount but still not verifying Test amount lost to mistake Verify every transaction, including tests
    Not keeping ETH for gas Cannot send ERC-20 tokens Always maintain a small ETH balance
    Sending to a centralised exchange deposit address with memo missing Funds may be lost For XRP, ATOM, and similar coins, always include the required memo/tag

    Memo/Destination Tag Requirements

    Some coins require a memo or destination tag when sending to a centralised exchange. Without it, the exchange may not credit your account. These include:

  • XRP — requires a Destination Tag
  • ATOM — requires a Memo
  • XLM — requires a Memo
  • BNB (to Binance) — may require a Memo
  • HBAR — may require a Memo
  • When sending from Ledger to an exchange, always check if the exchange requires a memo or tag and include it. When receiving from an exchange to your Ledger, you do not need a memo — hardware wallet addresses do not require them.


    Frequently Asked Questions

    Q: Can I send crypto from Ledger without Ledger Live?

    Yes. You can use third-party apps like MetaMask (ETH), Electrum (BTC), or Solflare (SOL) connected to your Ledger. The device still secures all transactions regardless of which interface you use.

    Q: How long does it take for a transaction to arrive?

    Bitcoin: 10–60 minutes (1–6 confirmations). Ethereum: 15–60 seconds under normal conditions. Solana: 1–5 seconds. Times vary with network congestion.

    Q: What if I send to the wrong address?

    Blockchain transactions are irreversible. If you send to the wrong address and do not control that address, the funds are gone. This is why verifying on the device screen is critical.

    Q: How much ETH do I need to keep for gas fees?

    As of 2026, most simple ETH transfers cost less than $1 in gas. Complex DeFi transactions can cost $5–$20 during high congestion. Keeping 0.01–0.05 ETH is generally sufficient for typical use.

    Q: Can Ledger prevent me from sending to a scam address?

    No. The Ledger device verifies that you are knowingly approving a transaction, but it cannot tell you whether the recipient address belongs to a scammer or a legitimate party. Address verification is your responsibility.

    Q: What does “Synchronising” mean in Ledger Live?

    Ledger Live is fetching the latest transaction history and balance from the blockchain. Wait for it to complete before sending or receiving.


    Related guides:

  • Ledger Live: The Complete Guide (2026)
  • Ledger Wrong App Error: How to Fix It (2026)
  • How to Add Accounts in Ledger Live (2026)
  • All Coins Supported by Ledger (2026)

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