A concise presentation for users, teams, or stakeholders explaining what the Trust Wallet browser extension is, why it matters, and how to use it safely.
The Trust Wallet browser extension is a secure, self‑custody crypto wallet that runs inside Chromium‑based browsers (Chrome, Brave, Edge, and others). It brings the familiar Trust Wallet mobile experience to your desktop, enabling direct interaction with decentralized applications (dApps), token swaps, NFT management, and multi‑chain asset viewing without exposing private keys to external servers.
Browser extensions make Web3 accessible where most users already spend time: in their browser. For power users, extensions reduce friction for frequent dApp interactions, speed up transaction flows, and provide a desktop interface for portfolio oversight. The Trust Wallet extension is designed to be intuitive for mobile users migrating to desktop workflows while also giving advanced configuration options for experienced users.
The extension supports a wide range of blockchains — Ethereum and EVM‑compatible networks, Bitcoin, Solana, and more — enabling one wallet to manage assets across ecosystems. This eliminates the need to juggle multiple wallets for different chains.
It injects a web3 provider into pages you visit, letting decentralized apps request signatures, read balances, and request transactions. This means you can use dApps directly in the browser while keeping your private keys on your local device.
The extension includes integrated token swap functionality, a token explorer, and NFT viewing so users can manage their portfolio and perform common actions without leaving the extension interface.
Trust Wallet follows a self‑custody model: your seed phrase and private keys remain on your device. This gives you full control — and full responsibility. Always store your recovery phrase offline and never share it.
Only install the extension from official channels (the Trust Wallet website or the Chrome Web Store link provided by Trust Wallet). Scammers create fake extensions and pages to harvest phrases or request approvals that drain wallets. Be skeptical of unsolicited links and social media posts.
Visit the official Trust Wallet download or browser extension page, then click the Chrome Web Store link for your browser. Add the extension and follow the on‑screen prompts.
You can create a new wallet (and write down the recovery phrase) or import an existing Trust Wallet mobile wallet by entering the recovery phrase. After importing, confirm balances and ensure token visibility by adding tokens or enabling the correct networks.
When a dApp requests a connection, Trust Wallet will show a popup requesting approval. Check the domain carefully, verify the transaction details, and only approve interactions you intend to make.
For testing or specialized networks, the extension allows adding custom RPC endpoints. Use reputable endpoints (or host your own node) and avoid unknown or untrusted RPCs.
Add custom tokens by contract address when they don’t appear automatically. For NFTs, review metadata and provenance on recognized marketplaces before interacting.
Developers can consult Trust Wallet’s developer documentation and GitHub repositories for integration patterns, wallet‑connect flows, and extension specifics.
While browser extensions are convenient, they are not as secure as cold (offline) hardware wallets. Consider splitting holdings: keep spending amounts in the extension and larger sums in hardware wallets.
Attackers often use phishing websites, fake extension updates, or social media impersonation. Always cross‑check URLs, and follow official announcement channels for updates or critical notices.
Official resources referenced and useful starting points are linked below.