Quick, practical guidance for US users who want to download Trust Wallet, set it up, and use it safely for daily DeFi and token management. I use mobile software wallets every day and have both swapped tokens and recovered wallets during testing, so I describe steps you can follow (and mistakes to avoid).
Who it's good for:
Who might look elsewhere:
Short answer: get it from your device's official store, not third-party sites. Which store depends on your device.
If you want a detailed walkthrough for onboarding and seed phrase safety, visit [/onboarding-setup] and [/security-backup].
Note: the in-app dApp browser on iOS has historically been limited by App Store rules. If you plan to use dApps directly on your phone, see [/enable-dapp-browser-iphone] for options and [/walletconnect] for connecting desktop dApps.
There is no native official desktop app for most mobile-first software wallets. That means two main options if you need desktop access:
Which should you use? WalletConnect. Simple. Secure-er. (Yes, that was informal.)
Creating a new wallet vs restoring an existing one is a choice you'll make on first run. If you already have a seed phrase, choose Import wallet and paste your seed phrase exactly. If creating new:
If you need step-by-step help restoring your wallet later, see [/restore-import-wallet] and [/backup-recovery-seed-phrase].
Sending and receiving tokens is straightforward. Tap Send or Receive, copy your address, and always double-check the network and address prefix. Short addresses can look similar. Watch token standards (BEP20 vs ERC20 vs others).
Swaps: The in-app swap feature offers convenience for quick trades. It often routes trades through on-chain DEXes and shows price impact and slippage settings (you can change slippage in the UI). For complex swaps or better routing, you might prefer a dedicated aggregator on desktop and use WalletConnect.
Staking: Some assets are available for staking inside the app. Staking flows usually show estimated APY, lock periods, and validator details when relevant. If you want full staking control, check [/staking-in-wallet].
dApp access: Android builds typically include an in-app dApp browser. On iOS you will often rely on WalletConnect or deep links. See [/dapp-browser], [/enable-dapp-browser-android], and [/enable-dapp-browser-iphone].
Token management: Adding custom tokens, hiding spam tokens, and tracking portfolio balances are supported. For step-by-step token addition see [/add-custom-token] and [/token-management].
NFTs: The mobile app shows NFTs if supported by the network. You can view and send NFTs, though collection organization may be basic. See [/nft-support].
Gas fees: For EVM-compatible chains the wallet shows gas fee estimates (sometimes EIP-1559 fields on Ethereum mainnet). You can choose faster or slower confirmation. For L2s and chains with different fee models the fees will vary; check [/gas-fees-management] for advanced tips.
This wallet supports multiple blockchains in a single app. On the face of it, switching networks is simple (select a token that lives on a particular blockchain). But what matters is that you pick the correct token standard before sending funds. Accidentally sending ERC20 tokens to a BEP20 address can make recovery difficult.
Built-in cross-chain bridging may be available for some chains, but bridges carry risk (smart contract bugs, bridge operator risk). If you’ll use bridges frequently, read [/cross-chain-bridges] and double-check contract addresses.
For EVM chains, the wallet often lets you add custom RPCs if you work with testnets or private nodes. See [/evm-chains-network-switching].
Phishing is the top practical risk here. Fake apps, deep-link attacks, and copycat websites exist. Check [/phishing-and-fake-apps] for signs and recovery steps.
I installed the app on an Android test phone and on an iPhone, created a fresh wallet on both, and performed these checks:
Screenshots from my test session (placeholders):
What I learned: always preview gas and price impact before confirming swaps, and always test with small amounts first. Small mistakes are cheap. Large ones are not.
Q: Is it safe to keep crypto in a hot wallet?
A: Hot wallets are convenient for daily use but carry more risk than cold (hardware) storage. Use hot wallets for active funds and hardware wallets for long-term holdings above amounts you can't afford to lose.
Q: How do I revoke token approvals?
A: This wallet may not show all approvals directly. Use the step-by-step guide at [/revoke-approvals] (often via WalletConnect) to find and revoke unlimited allowances.
Q: What happens if I lose my phone?
A: Restore your wallet on a new device using your seed phrase. If you did not back up the seed phrase, recovery is not possible — that is standard for non-custodial wallets. See [/lost-device-recovery] and [/backup-recovery-seed-phrase].
Q: How do I get Trust Wallet on PC?
A: Use WalletConnect to link desktop dApps to the mobile app, or run the app inside an emulator (higher risk). Read [/download-install-pc] before attempting.
If you want to get started now, choose your device store and follow the step-by-step install for Android or iOS (linked above). Back up your seed phrase offline before moving any meaningful funds. And if you plan to use dApps on desktop, try WalletConnect first — it keeps your private keys on the phone while letting you interact from your computer.
For deep dives: see the walkthroughs for onboarding and setup, token management, and security & backup. Safe testing: always use small amounts when you try new dApps or swap routes.
Ready to install? Start here: [/download-install].