How to Stake Crypto with Trezor (2026): Complete Guide

What Is Staking?

Staking is the process of participating in a proof-of-stake (PoS) blockchain network to help validate transactions. In return for locking up (or delegating) your tokens, you earn staking rewards — typically paid in the same cryptocurrency.

There are two broad categories:

Direct staking (on-chain delegation): You delegate your tokens to a validator or staking pool directly on the blockchain. Your tokens never leave your wallet. You retain full custody. Cardano staking works this way.

Liquid staking (via a protocol): You deposit tokens into a smart contract and receive a “liquid staking token” in return (e.g., stETH for staked ETH). The protocol manages the staking. You can often use the liquid token in DeFi while still earning staking rewards. Trezor’s ETH staking via Lido and Everstake works this way.

Both methods are supported with a Trezor hardware wallet. Your private keys stay on the device — all transaction signing still happens on the Trezor.


Coins You Can Stake with Trezor

Coin Method APY (approx.) Provider in Trezor Suite Lock-up?
Ethereum (ETH) Liquid staking 3.5–5% Lido, Everstake No (but unstaking delay)
Cardano (ADA) Native delegation 3–5% Direct (native) No
Solana (SOL) Via third party 6–8% Phantom, Solflare (not native) ~2 days
Cosmos (ATOM) Via third party 14–20% Keplr (not native in Suite) 21-day unbonding
Polkadot (DOT) Via third party 10–15% Nova Wallet (not native) 28-day unbonding

Ethereum and Cardano staking are directly integrated into Trezor Suite. For other chains, you’ll connect your Trezor to third-party apps.


Staking Ethereum (ETH) with Trezor

How It Works

Trezor Suite integrates with Everstake and Lido for ETH staking. Both use liquid staking:

  • Lido: You deposit ETH and receive stETH (staked ETH) in return. stETH rebases daily, meaning your stETH balance increases as you earn rewards. It’s usable in DeFi.
  • Everstake: Similar liquid staking model. Trezor has a partnership with Everstake that makes it a featured option in Suite.
  • Both are non-custodial: your ETH goes into an audited smart contract, not to a centralized company. Your Trezor private keys sign the deposit transaction — Lido and Everstake never hold your keys.

    Step-by-Step: Stake ETH via Trezor Suite

    Before you begin: Make sure you have an Ethereum account added in Trezor Suite with enough ETH to stake. Note that Lido accepts any amount; Everstake may have minimum amounts. Keep a small amount of ETH unstaked to cover future gas fees.

    Step 1: Open Trezor Suite and connect your Trezor device.

    Step 2: Click on your Ethereum account in the left sidebar.

    Step 3: Click the Stake button in the account action bar (or find it in the top navigation).

    Step 4: Choose your staking provider — Lido or Everstake. Both show current APY estimates.

    Step 5: Enter the amount of ETH you want to stake. Review the fee estimate — you’ll pay an Ethereum gas fee for the deposit transaction.

    Step 6: Review the staking summary:

    • Amount to stake
    • Provider
    • Estimated APY
    • Gas fee
    • What you’ll receive in return (stETH or equivalent)

    Step 7: Click Stake and confirm the transaction on your Trezor device. The device will display the transaction details — verify them on the device screen before confirming.

    Step 8: Wait for the transaction to confirm on-chain (typically 1–2 minutes at normal gas prices). Your staked balance will appear in Trezor Suite once confirmed.

    Unstaking ETH

    Unstaking ETH isn’t instant. Ethereum’s proof-of-stake protocol has an exit queue:

  • Via Lido: You can request to unstake stETH. Lido processes withdrawal requests; actual wait times vary from hours to days depending on the exit queue length.
  • Via Everstake: Similar withdrawal process with a variable waiting period.
  • Alternatively, you can sell stETH on decentralized exchanges (Uniswap, Curve) for ETH without waiting for the withdrawal queue — though the exchange rate may not be exactly 1:1.

    ETH Staking Risks

  • Smart contract risk: A bug in the Lido or Everstake contracts could affect your funds. Both are heavily audited, but smart contract risk is real.
  • Slashing risk: If a validator misbehaves, a portion of staked ETH can be “slashed.” Lido socializes slashing risk across its validator set, meaning individual exposure is very low.
  • Liquidity risk: Your ETH is illiquid while in the withdrawal queue. Plan accordingly.

  • Staking Cardano (ADA) with Trezor

    Cardano staking is the most elegant staking experience available with any hardware wallet. Unlike ETH, Cardano delegation doesn’t lock your ADA — you can spend it at any time while it’s staked, and unstaking is instant.

    How Cardano Staking Works

    You delegate your ADA stake to a stake pool. The pool uses your delegation (alongside other delegators) to participate in block production. Rewards are distributed to your wallet every 5 days (one epoch). You retain full ownership — the pool operator cannot access your ADA.

    This is pure on-chain delegation. No smart contracts, no liquid staking tokens, no third-party custody of any kind.

    Step-by-Step: Stake ADA via Trezor Suite

    Step 1: Open Trezor Suite with your Trezor connected.

    Step 2: Click on your Cardano account.

    Step 3: Click Stake or Delegate in the account view. Trezor Suite will display available stake pools.

    Step 4: Browse or search for a stake pool. You can search by:

    • Ticker (e.g., IOHK, ADA2, etc.)
    • Pool name
    • Pool ID

    Look for pools with:

    • High pledge (operator has skin in the game)
    • Reasonable saturation level (under 100% — over-saturated pools give reduced rewards)
    • Low margin fee (the pool’s cut of rewards, typically 0–5%)
    • Good track record (block production history)

    Step 5: Click Delegate on your chosen pool.

    Step 6: Review the transaction. You’ll pay a small ADA fee (~0.17 ADA for the delegation certificate) and a refundable deposit (~2 ADA) for registering your staking key.

    Step 7: Confirm on your Trezor device.

    Step 8: Your delegation is active starting next epoch. Rewards begin appearing after 2–3 epochs (10–15 days). After that, rewards arrive every epoch (~5 days) automatically.

    ADA Staking APY

    Current Cardano staking APY is approximately 3–5% annually, depending on the pool’s performance and saturation. This is relatively stable and predictable compared to DeFi yields.

    Changing or Stopping Cardano Staking

    To change pools: simply delegate to a new pool. Your existing rewards are safe and the switch takes effect next epoch.

    To stop staking: de-register your staking key. You’ll receive your 2 ADA deposit back. Your ADA remains fully accessible throughout.


    Staking Solana (SOL) with Trezor

    Solana staking is not natively integrated into Trezor Suite. However, you can stake SOL by connecting your Trezor to Phantom or Solflare wallet as a hardware wallet signer.

    Process:

  • Open Phantom or Solflare browser extension
    • Add your Trezor as a hardware wallet (both wallets support this)
    • Access your SOL balance through the connected hardware wallet view
    • Use the built-in staking interface in Phantom or Solflare to delegate to validators
    • All transaction signing happens on your Trezor device

    SOL staking APY is typically 6–8%, with a ~2-day cooldown when unstaking.


    Staking Cosmos (ATOM) and Other Chains

    For Cosmos, Polkadot, and similar staking-heavy chains, you’ll need to connect your Trezor to third-party wallets that support hardware wallet signing:

  • Cosmos/ATOM: Use Keplr wallet with Trezor integration
  • Polkadot/DOT: Use Nova Wallet or Polkadot.js with Trezor
  • Avalanche/AVAX: Use Core wallet with Trezor
  • Important: these chains have bonding and unbonding periods. Cosmos has a 21-day unbonding period. Polkadot has 28 days. During unbonding, your tokens are locked and earn no rewards. Plan your staking accordingly — this is not suitable for funds you might need quickly.


    Risks of Staking with a Hardware Wallet

    Staking via Trezor is significantly safer than staking on an exchange, but risks still exist:

    Smart contract risk (ETH liquid staking): Even audited protocols have been exploited. Don’t stake more than you’re comfortable potentially losing.

    Unbonding period risk: If you need liquidity urgently and your tokens are in an unbonding period (Cosmos, Polkadot, etc.), you cannot access them until the period ends.

    Validator/pool performance: If your chosen validator or pool underperforms or goes offline, your rewards will be lower. On slashing-enabled networks (Ethereum, Polkadot), a misbehaving validator can cause slashing events.

    APY variability: Staking yields are not fixed. They vary with network participation rates, token price, and protocol parameters.


    Comparing Staking Options

    Chain APY Custody Lock-up Complexity
    Ethereum (Lido/Everstake) 3.5–5% Non-custodial smart contract Withdrawal queue Medium
    Cardano (native) 3–5% Full self-custody None Low
    Solana (Phantom/Solflare) 6–8% Full self-custody ~2 days Medium
    Cosmos (Keplr) 14–20% Full self-custody 21 days Medium
    Polkadot (Nova) 10–15% Full self-custody 28 days High

    Cardano is the simplest and least risky staking experience with a Trezor. Ethereum staking is accessible and well-integrated in Suite. Higher-yield options like Cosmos require more setup and come with longer unbonding risk.


    FAQ

    Can I stake directly from my Trezor without connecting to any third party?

    For Cardano, yes — the staking is done entirely via Trezor Suite with on-chain delegation, no third party required. For Ethereum, you use Trezor Suite but interact with Lido or Everstake smart contracts. For other coins, you connect to third-party wallets.

    Do I lose control of my crypto when staking with Trezor?

    For Cardano: no, never. Your ADA stays in your wallet. For Ethereum liquid staking: your ETH goes into a smart contract (not a company), and you receive stETH representing your position. For other chains via third-party wallets: depends on the protocol, but hardware wallet signing means your private keys remain on the Trezor.

    What is the minimum amount I can stake?

    For Cardano: no minimum — you can stake any amount of ADA. For Ethereum via Lido: no minimum. For Ethereum via Everstake: check current terms, minimums vary. For other chains: varies by protocol and validator.

    Are staking rewards taxable?

    In most jurisdictions, yes — staking rewards are treated as income when received. Consult a tax professional familiar with crypto in your jurisdiction. This guide is not tax advice.

    Can I stake multiple coins at the same time with one Trezor?

    Yes. You can simultaneously stake ADA via Trezor Suite, ETH via Lido, and SOL via Phantom — all controlled by the same Trezor device. Each operates independently.

    What happens to my staking rewards if I lose my Trezor?

    Your staking position and accumulated rewards exist on the blockchain, not on the device. Recover with your seed phrase on a new Trezor, and all your staking positions and balances will be accessible.


    Related guides:

  • Trezor Suite: The Complete Guide
  • Trezor Safe 3 Review (2026)
  • How to Recover a Trezor Wallet
  • Trezor Passphrase (Hidden Wallet): Complete Guide

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