What Is Trezor Suite?
Trezor Suite is available in two forms:
Desktop application: Downloadable software for Windows, macOS, and Linux. This is the recommended version for most operations, especially firmware updates and seed recovery. The desktop app runs locally, meaning it doesn’t depend on a web browser and is slightly harder for browser-based attacks to interfere with.
Web app: Available at suite.trezor.io for browser-based access. Functionally equivalent to the desktop app for most operations, but requires a WebUSB-compatible browser (Chrome or Brave recommended). Some operations — including firmware updates — are only possible in the desktop app.
Both versions connect to the same Trezor Bridge software that handles USB communication between the app and your device.
Downloading and Installing Trezor Suite
Step 1: Download From the Official Source
Go to trezor.io/trezor-suite and download the installer for your operating system:
| OS | File Type |
|---|---|
| Windows | .exe installer |
| macOS | .dmg disk image |
| Linux | .AppImage or .deb |
Important: Only download from trezor.io. Fake Trezor Suite sites exist and may contain malware.
Step 2: Verify the Download (Optional but Recommended)
Trezor publishes GPG signatures for every Suite release. Verifying the signature confirms the file is authentic and wasn’t tampered with. The verification steps are on Trezor’s website under the download page.
Step 3: Install
Run the installer and follow the on-screen prompts. On macOS, drag the app to Applications. On Linux, the AppImage is portable — make it executable and run it directly.
Step 4: Install Trezor Bridge
Trezor Suite may prompt you to install Trezor Bridge — a small background service that facilitates USB communication between Suite and your device. This is required for USB connections. Follow the prompt to download and install it.
First Launch: Dashboard Overview
When you first open Trezor Suite, you’ll see the Dashboard. Here’s what you’re looking at:
Portfolio overview: A summary graph showing your total portfolio value over time (1 day, 1 week, 1 month, etc.), the current total value in your chosen fiat currency, and a breakdown by asset.
Account list (left sidebar): All accounts you’ve added, grouped by coin. Each account shows its balance and recent activity.
Quick actions (top right): Buttons for Send, Receive, Buy, Sell, Swap, and Stake.
Device status (top left): Shows whether your Trezor is connected, the device name, and whether updates are available.
Notifications: A bell icon shows pending notifications — firmware updates available, unread transaction history, etc.
Connecting Your Trezor Device
- Plug in your Trezor via USB
- Enter your PIN on the device when prompted (the PIN layout appears on the device screen; numbers on the computer screen are scrambled)
- Trezor Suite will display your portfolio once connected
- If prompted for a passphrase (if you’ve enabled this feature), enter it or confirm on device
The device needs to be connected and unlocked to send transactions and update firmware. For checking balances and browsing history, the device doesn’t need to be connected.
Adding Accounts
Before you can see any balances, you need to add accounts for the coins you hold.
- Select the cryptocurrency
- Trezor Suite scans the blockchain for addresses from your seed with existing history
- Select existing accounts to add, or create a new empty account
- Name the account if desired
Repeat for each cryptocurrency you hold. Trezor Suite supports over 9,000 coins and tokens, including Bitcoin, Ethereum, all major ERC-20 tokens, Solana, Cardano, XRP, and most other popular blockchains.
Sending Cryptocurrency
Sending crypto from Trezor Suite requires your device to be connected and unlocked.
- Select the account you want to send from
The physical confirmation on the device is the core security feature. Even if your computer is compromised, an attacker cannot steal your funds without physical access to your Trezor.
Receiving Cryptocurrency
- Select the account you want to receive into
- Trezor Suite displays a receiving address and QR code
- Share the verified address with the sender
The device verification step is critical. Clipboard-hijacking malware can replace an address on your screen without affecting what’s shown on your Trezor device. Always verify before giving out a receiving address for large amounts.
Managing Coins and Tokens
Adding ERC-20 Tokens
When you add an Ethereum account, Trezor Suite automatically detects ERC-20 tokens held at that address. They appear as sub-accounts beneath the Ethereum account.
To manually add a token:
- Click on your Ethereum account
- Search by token name or contract address
Managing Other EVM Networks
Trezor supports Polygon, BNB Smart Chain, Avalanche, and other EVM chains. When adding accounts, select the specific network. These chains use your Ethereum key — the same private key signs transactions, but addresses exist independently on each chain.
Coinjoin: Bitcoin Privacy Feature
Coinjoin is Trezor Suite’s Bitcoin privacy tool. It’s a technique that combines multiple users’ transactions together, breaking the transaction graph that makes Bitcoin holdings traceable on-chain.
How Coinjoin Works
Multiple users pool their Bitcoin inputs into a single transaction with mixed outputs. After coinjoin, it’s cryptographically difficult to link which inputs correspond to which outputs — increasing transaction and balance privacy.
Using Coinjoin in Trezor Suite
- Go to your Bitcoin account
- Trezor Suite connects you to Wasabi Wallet’s WabiSabi coordinator (Trezor’s coinjoin partner)
- Set the amount you want to coinjoined
- The process runs automatically — it may take hours or days depending on liquidity
Fees: Coinjoin has a coordinator fee (around 0.3%) plus mining fees. Small amounts may not be economical.
Note: Coinjoin is legal in most jurisdictions but may trigger additional scrutiny on some regulated exchanges. Understand your local regulations.
Staking in Trezor Suite
Trezor Suite supports staking directly within the interface for certain coins:
Ethereum Staking
Trezor Suite integrates with Everstake and Lido for ETH staking. Your ETH is staked via a smart contract while remaining non-custodial — you keep control of your keys.
- Go to your Ethereum account
- Choose your staking provider (Everstake or Lido)
- Enter the amount to stake
- Confirm on your Trezor device
Current ETH staking APY typically ranges from 3.5–5% annually, though this varies with network conditions.
Unstaking: Ethereum staking involves an unstaking queue. Withdrawals aren’t instant — expect a waiting period that varies with network demand.
Cardano Staking
ADA staking is natively supported with no lock-up period. Unlike ETH, you never give up custody of your ADA when staking — it stays in your wallet.
- Go to your Cardano account
- Choose a stake pool from the list (search by ticker or pool ID)
- Confirm on device
ADA staking rewards are typically 3–5% APY, distributed every 5 days (one Cardano epoch).
Buy, Sell, and Swap
Trezor Suite integrates third-party providers to let you buy, sell, and swap crypto without leaving the app:
Buy: Purchase crypto with a bank transfer or credit card via providers like Coinbase Pay, Moonpay, Banxa, and others. Crypto is delivered directly to your Trezor address.
Sell: Convert crypto to fiat. Requires identity verification with the provider. Funds go to your bank account.
Swap: Exchange one crypto for another. Trezor Suite uses aggregators to find competitive rates. No KYC typically required for swaps.
To access these features, click Buy, Sell, or Swap in the top action bar and follow the prompts. Trezor Suite shows the exchange rate and fees before you confirm.
Firmware Updates
Keeping your firmware current is important for security and new feature support. Trezor Suite handles all firmware updates.
How to Update
- Connect your Trezor and unlock with PIN
- If an update is available, a notification appears in the top-right area
- Follow on-screen instructions — the device will reboot and update automatically
- Your apps will be reinstalled after the update
Always back up your seed phrase before updating. In the extremely rare event that an update causes a device issue, your seed phrase lets you restore to a new device.
Coin Control
Coin control is an advanced Bitcoin feature that gives you precise control over which unspent transaction outputs (UTXOs) are used in a transaction.
Why Coin Control Matters
Every Bitcoin you receive comes in as a specific UTXO. By default, Trezor Suite selects UTXOs automatically when you send. Coin control lets you manually select which UTXOs to spend — useful for:
- Privacy (avoid combining UTXOs from different sources)
- Reducing fees (select UTXOs that minimize change outputs)
- Accounting (keep certain UTXOs earmarked for specific purposes)
Enabling Coin Control
- Toggle it on
Tor Integration
Trezor Suite includes a built-in Tor toggle for enhanced privacy when connecting to external services. Enabling Tor routes Suite’s network traffic through the Tor anonymity network, obscuring your IP address from Trezor’s servers and blockchain explorers.
To enable: go to Settings > Privacy > Tor and toggle it on.
Note: Tor significantly slows down network requests. Enable it when privacy is a priority; disable it for faster everyday use.
Labels and Metadata
Trezor Suite supports transaction and address labeling. You can add notes to:
- Individual transactions (“Payment to landlord,” “DeFi deposit”)
- Individual receiving addresses (“Used for Coinbase withdrawal”)
- Accounts (“Long-term BTC savings”)
Labels are stored encrypted and can be synced via Dropbox or Google Drive, or stored locally only.
Settings Overview
Key settings to know:
| Setting | Location | What It Does |
|---|---|---|
| Currency | General | Sets your fiat display currency |
| Color theme | General | Light/dark mode |
| Tor | Privacy | Route traffic through Tor |
| Passphrase | Device | Enable/disable passphrase feature |
| Auto-lock | Device | Auto-lock timeout |
| Firmware | Device | Check for and install updates |
| Discreet mode | General | Hides balances from view |
| Early access | Experimental | Beta features |
FAQ
Do I need Trezor Suite to use my Trezor?
No — Trezor works with many third-party apps. You can use MetaMask for Ethereum, Electrum for Bitcoin, and various other wallets that support hardware wallet connections. Trezor Suite is the official, most comprehensive interface, but it’s not the only one.
Is the Trezor Suite web app as secure as the desktop app?
For most operations, yes. The main difference is that the desktop app doesn’t depend on your browser being secure, and firmware updates require the desktop app. For signing transactions, both versions are equivalent — your private keys never leave the device regardless.
Can I use Trezor Suite without an internet connection?
Partially. You can view cached balances and transaction history offline. But to sync current balances, send transactions, or update firmware, an internet connection is required.
Does Trezor Suite store my private keys?
Never. Your private keys are generated and stored exclusively on your Trezor device, inside the Secure Element. Trezor Suite is a display and transaction-building interface — all signing happens on the device.
Why does Trezor Suite sometimes show the wrong balance?
Usually a sync issue. Click the circular sync button next to the account name to force a refresh. If balance issues persist, try removing and re-adding the account — your funds are not at risk from doing this.
Is Trezor Suite open source?
Yes. Trezor Suite’s codebase is available on GitHub. This allows security researchers to audit the code. The Trezor firmware is also open source, which is a significant advantage over closed-source alternatives.
How do I use WalletConnect with Trezor Suite?
From Trezor Suite, you can connect to WalletConnect-compatible DApps. Go to your Ethereum account and look for the WalletConnect option (or connect directly through the DApp’s connect wallet flow and select WalletConnect, then scan with Suite). This lets you use DeFi protocols while keeping your keys on the Trezor.
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