Trust Wallet: The Complete Guide (2026)

What Is Trust Wallet?

Trust Wallet is a self-custodial, multi-chain crypto wallet available as:

It was founded in 2017, acquired by Binance in 2018, but operates independently with its own team and open-source code. Being open-source means the wallet’s code can be audited by anyone — a significant trust factor.

Trust Wallet supports:


Setting Up Trust Wallet

Step 1: Download the App

Important: Only download from the official site or the verified app store listing. Fake Trust Wallet apps are a known scam vector.

Step 2: Create a New Wallet

Step 3: Back Up Your Secret Phrase

This is the most critical step. Your 12 words are the master key to your wallet.

Trust Wallet will ask you to confirm several words to prove you wrote them down.

Step 4: Set Up Security

Trust Wallet uses your phone’s biometrics (Face ID / fingerprint) or a PIN for quick access. Set this up when prompted — it protects against casual unauthorised access.

Step 5: Your Wallet is Ready

Your wallet address is visible on the main screen. You’re ready to receive crypto.


Navigating Trust Wallet

The main screen shows:

Key actions are in the top right:


Adding Tokens and Blockchains

Trust Wallet supports millions of tokens but only shows common ones by default.

To add a token:

To add a blockchain:

Each blockchain generates its own address — your Ethereum address differs from your Solana address, for example.


Sending and Receiving

Receiving

Always verify you’re on the correct network. USDC on Ethereum has a different address format than USDC on BNB Chain — sending to the wrong network is a common mistake.

Sending

Trust Wallet shows estimated network fees before you confirm. On BNB Chain and Polygon, fees are typically under $0.05. On Ethereum, they can be $2–$20.


Buying Crypto in Trust Wallet

Trust Wallet has a built-in buy feature powered by providers like MoonPay, Ramp, and Transak:

Fees are typically 2–5% for card purchases. For lower fees, buy on an exchange and transfer to Trust Wallet.


Swapping Tokens

Trust Wallet’s built-in swap aggregates prices from multiple DEXes:

Available on Ethereum, BNB Chain, Polygon, Avalanche, and other supported chains. For Solana swaps, the Trust Wallet browser connects to Jupiter.


DeFi with Trust Wallet

Built-in dApp Browser

Trust Wallet includes a Web3 browser for accessing DeFi protocols directly:

Popular protocols accessible via Trust Wallet:

Staking via Earn

Trust Wallet’s Earn section lets you stake directly:

Staking APYs vary — typically 4–12% for major assets.


NFTs in Trust Wallet

Trust Wallet automatically detects and displays NFTs across Ethereum, BNB Chain, Polygon, and Solana:


Trust Wallet Browser Extension

For desktop DeFi, Trust Wallet offers a browser extension (Chrome, Brave, Edge):

The extension is a full EVM wallet with support for all EVM chains. It’s less feature-rich than the mobile app but works well for desktop DeFi.


Trust Wallet vs MetaMask

Feature Trust Wallet MetaMask
Primary platform Mobile Browser extension
Chain support 100+ chains EVM chains only
Built-in swap Yes Yes
Built-in buy Yes Yes
Staking Yes (built-in) No
dApp browser Yes (mobile) Extension connects
Solana support Yes No
Hardware wallet Limited Full (Ledger, Trezor)
NFT display Yes Basic

Trust Wallet is better for mobile users and multi-chain exposure. MetaMask is better for Ethereum power users and hardware wallet integration.


Trust Wallet vs Phantom

Feature Trust Wallet Phantom
Best for Multi-chain mobile Solana ecosystem
Solana support Yes Excellent
EVM support Excellent Yes (secondary)
Bitcoin Yes Yes
Built-in swap Yes Yes (Jupiter for SOL)
Mobile Excellent Excellent
Extension Yes Yes

Security Best Practices

Enable biometric lock — use Face ID or fingerprint to prevent unauthorised phone access.

Never share your 12-word phrase — Trust Wallet, Binance, and no legitimate service will ever ask for it. Anyone who asks has malicious intent.

Verify dApp URLs — before connecting your wallet to any site, confirm the URL is correct. Phishing sites are common.

Use hardware wallet for large amounts — Trust Wallet doesn’t yet have deep hardware wallet integration. For significant holdings, use a Ledger with MetaMask instead.

Be cautious with token approvals — when interacting with DeFi, smart contracts ask for token approvals. Revoke unnecessary approvals at revoke.cash.


Common Issues

Token balance showing 0 after bridging:

Switch to the correct network in Trust Wallet. Tokens bridged to Polygon won’t show while you’re viewing the Ethereum network.

Transaction failed — insufficient funds for gas:

You need the native token of that network to pay gas. On BNB Chain, you need BNB. On Polygon, you need POL.

Spam tokens appearing in wallet:

Trust Wallet imports all tokens it detects. Ignore or hide spam tokens — don’t interact with them or try to sell them (many are honeypots).

Forgot wallet PIN:

If you forget your PIN, you can restore using your 12-word phrase. Uninstall and reinstall Trust Wallet, then restore.


Frequently Asked Questions

Is Trust Wallet owned by Binance — is that a risk?

Binance owns Trust Wallet but does not control your private keys. Your keys are stored on your device, not with Binance. Even if Binance ceased operations, your wallet would work with any compatible app using your seed phrase.

Can I use Trust Wallet on desktop?

Yes — via the browser extension. The mobile app is more feature-rich, but the extension works well for desktop DeFi.

Is Trust Wallet free?

Yes. Trust Wallet itself is free. You pay standard network gas fees for transactions and provider fees when buying crypto.

How many wallets can I have in Trust Wallet?

You can have multiple wallets (each with its own seed phrase) and multiple accounts within each wallet.

Can I import a MetaMask wallet into Trust Wallet?

Yes. Enter your MetaMask 12-word seed phrase in Trust Wallet’s “Import wallet” option. The same Ethereum addresses will appear.


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