Trezor % Wallet @

You can buy, sell and trade currencies through Trezor’s open-source desktop application, Trezor Suite. Some advanced features require a bit of technical know-how.

Trezor’s wallets stand out from the competition with security features such as Shamir Backup, which can help you recover your assets if your device gets lost, broken or stolen. However, Trezor devices lack some functionality offered by competitor Ledger or software wallets that connect easily to decentralized applications, or dapps.

Trezor's standard version, Model One, supports 1,289 cryptocurrencies, while its advanced touch-screen version, Model T, supports 1,456 compatible coins.

You can buy, sell and trade currencies through Trezor’s open-source desktop application, Trezor Suite. Some advanced features require a bit of technical know-how. The device requires third-party software to manage NFTs, or non-fungible tokens, as well as stake coins, and staking is available only with the Model T. Trezor also does not have a mobile app.

Pros & Cons

Pros:

  • Highly secure offline storage.

  • Touch screen available for fully on-device entry.

Cons:

  • No native staking or NFT management.

  • No Bluetooth connection or mobile app.

How we review crypto wallets

NerdWallet’s comprehensive review process evaluates and ranks products that allow U.S. customers to store, send and receive cryptocurrency. Our aim is to provide our independent assessment of providers to help arm you with information to make sound, informed judgments on which ones will best meet your needs. We adhere to strict guidelines for editorial integrity.

We conduct firsthand testing and observation, and the results fuel our proprietary assessment process that scores each provider’s performance across more than 15 factors. The final output produces star ratings from poor (1 star) to excellent (5 stars).

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