Trezor® Wallet — Quick Start & Login Guide
A clean, modern guide to unboxing, initializing, securing, and logging in to your Trezor hardware wallet. Focused on clarity, safety, and practical next steps for new and returning users.
Get ready — before you begin
Choose a private, well-lit space and use a trusted computer. Keep a pen and the provided recovery card (or a secure metal backup) handy. Do not take photos of your recovery phrase, and avoid entering it into any website or cloud service.
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1
Unbox & inspect
Verify packaging and tamper-evident seals are intact. If anything looks altered, pause and contact the seller or Trezor support. Keep the original box for warranty or resale.
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2
Visit the official start page
Manually type
trezor.io/startinto your browser — don’t follow links from emails or chats. The official onboarding site provides verified software, firmware checks, and step-by-step guidance. -
3
Connect & update firmware
Connect your Trezor using the supplied cable. If prompted, update firmware only through the official workflow. Verified firmware fixes improve security — updates should be applied promptly, but only from trusted sources.
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4
Set a strong PIN
Choose a PIN that is easy for you to remember but difficult for others to guess. The device uses randomized on-screen number placement during PIN entry to protect against keyloggers and visual tampering.
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5
Write down your recovery seed
The recovery seed (typically 12 or 24 words) is the single most important backup. Write the words in order on the supplied card or a metal backup. Never store the seed digitally (photos, cloud, text files).
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6
Optional: use a passphrase
A passphrase adds a hidden wallet layer to your seed. It increases security but also complexity — losing the passphrase makes its funds unrecoverable. Use passphrases only if you understand how to manage them securely.
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Install and use Trezor Suite
Trezor Suite (desktop app) is the official interface for account management. Download it from the start page. Use it to add accounts, view addresses, and sign transactions; always verify receiving addresses on your device screen before transferring funds.
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8
Perform a small test transaction
Before sending large amounts, send a small test transaction and confirm it is received. This practical test confirms your setup is correct and your addresses are verified.
Security best practices
Treat your recovery seed like a high-value physical asset. Keep multiple secure backups in geographically separated locations. Prefer hardened metal backups for long-term storage. Keep firmware up to date only through official channels, minimize browser extensions during setup, and never disclose seed words to anyone — no support agent, no website, no social contact.
Operational security (OpSec)
Avoid public or untrusted computers for critical actions. If you suspect a machine is compromised, use a different trusted device. Periodically review security processes, especially before moving larger amounts of cryptocurrency.
Recovery & restoring
To restore a Trezor from seed: on the device choose "Recover wallet" instead of initializing a new wallet, then enter your seed words exactly in order. If you used a passphrase when creating hidden wallets, you must enter the exact passphrase to access those hidden accounts.