This guide explains how to create a software (hot) wallet on mobile and how to get your 12-word seed phrase (recovery phrase) from the app. I tested setup flows on both iOS and Android and walked through reveal, backup, and migration steps so you can reproduce them yourself. I’ll show exact menus to tap, describe the confirmation step, and point to follow-up pages for restoring and advanced backup strategies.
I believe clear, repeatable steps reduce mistakes. Short sentence. Long sentence that explains why: the seed phrase is the single point of failure for your non-custodial funds, and any incorrect copy or misplaced photo can cost you everything — so treat this process like a safety-critical task.
And yes, write it down on paper.
This answers the query "how to get my 12 phrase on trust wallet" with an actionable walkthrough.
Timing from my tests: creating and recording the phrase takes 2–5 minutes depending on how carefully you write. When I first set this up, I confirmed the phrase by selecting words in order; the app required the correct sequence before moving on.
If you already have a wallet on-device and you want to know "how to get my trust wallet phrase," this is the usual path (UI labels vary between releases):
Important: the app will ask for a PIN or biometric confirmation before revealing the phrase. Do not reveal it on public Wi‑Fi or while screen recording is running. But don't photograph it.
If you do not see a "show" option, the account may be an imported single-key address or connected via WalletConnect; see Restore or import a wallet for those cases.
Keyword: seed phrase backup trust wallet
Backing up is the part people rush. Don’t. Here’s a checklist with pros/cons I tested.
Avoid cloud: taking a photo or storing the phrase in cloud notes exposes you to account compromise.
About BIP39 passphrase support: some advanced users add a BIP39 passphrase (a 25th secret). From hands-on checks in current mobile flows, the typical mobile onboarding does not provide a separate BIP39 passphrase field during create/restore. If you rely on a passphrase-based scheme, test restores on a clean device and consider a wallet or hardware device that explicitly lists BIP39 passphrase support before depending on it.
Short answer: there’s no "change seed phrase" button. To rotate your seed phrase you need to create a new wallet and move funds.
Step-by-step:
Why do this? Maybe a recovery phrase was exposed, or you want a fresh seed. This is the safe pattern because the seed phrase defines private keys — changing it means changing which private keys control the addresses, so moving funds is the only reliable method.
But do run a test restore once you’ve backed up the phrase — I found that restoring to a clean device and confirming token visibility removed doubt.
Q: Is it safe to keep crypto in a hot wallet? A: Hot wallets are convenient for daily DeFi activity and swaps, but they carry more risk than cold storage. I use hot wallets for small, active positions and a hardware wallet for large holdings.
Q: How do I revoke token approvals? A: Use on-chain approval revocation tools or the revoke protections in wallet settings (if present). See revoke-approvals for step-by-step methods.
Q: What happens if I lose my phone? A: If you have your seed phrase, restore on another device using Restore or import a wallet. If you don’t have the phrase, the funds are inaccessible. This is the risk of self-custody.
If your question was "how to get my 12 phrase trust wallet" or "how to get my trust wallet phrase," you now have the step-by-step path for creation and reveal plus practical backup options. Test your backup by restoring to a spare device, and if you plan to use DeFi, pair this guide with token-management and revoke-approvals checks.
Continue with the backup checklist: Backup & recovery guide. If you need to restore or import a wallet, go next to: Restore or import a wallet.
Small action: create your backup, then run a restore on a spare device so you know the process works for you.