A compact, slide-style presentation that explains what the Trust Wallet browser extension is, how to set it up, key features, security best practices, and links to official resources.
The Trust Wallet Browser Extension is a non-custodial desktop wallet that brings the power of Trust Wallet into your web browser. It allows you to manage private keys locally, connect to Web3 dApps, sign transactions, swap tokens, and manage NFTs directly from the browser. This combines the convenience of a browser wallet with the self-custody model Trust Wallet is known for. (Official extension and overview pages provide download links and feature lists.)
Suitable for users who want desktop access to multi-chain assets, dApp interactions, and developer integrations — all while keeping the private keys on the user’s device rather than a centralized custodian.
Install from the official extension stores. Trust Wallet supports Chromium-based browsers (Chrome, Brave, Edge) via the Chrome Web Store and has listings for other browsers in official places. Always prefer official pages when installing to avoid fake extensions.
Open the Trust Wallet browser extension page and click "Download Extension" or go to the Chrome Web Store listing to add the extension to your browser.
Create a new wallet (record your seed phrase offline) or import an existing wallet using your seed/private key. Never share your seed phrase with anyone.
Visit a dApp and connect using the standard in-page wallet connection UI (e.g., WalletConnect/Provider prompts). Confirm transactions securely inside the extension.
The extension supports dozens of blockchains and millions of tokens, letting you manage assets across EVM chains and other supported networks. It also provides token swap functionality and NFT viewing for supported networks.
It’s a non-custodial wallet — private keys remain on your device and are encrypted with a password. The extension aims to collect minimal data and provides tools for importing/exporting wallets securely.
Trust Wallet provides developer docs and APIs so dApps can integrate with the wallet for smooth sign-in and transaction flows. Developers can test locally and follow official guidelines to connect their dApps.
Review dApp approvals regularly and revoke allowances you no longer use via on-chain allowance managers or the wallet UI.
Keep a "hot" wallet for daily interactions and a separate "cold" wallet for long-term holdings. This reduces exposure if one account is compromised.
Before interacting with a new dApp or contract, use testnets and small amounts to verify the flow and gas behavior.
A: No — it is non-custodial; private keys are encrypted on your device.
A: Yes — the extension allows wallet imports and compatibility with common formats.
Use these links to download, verify, and learn more from Trust Wallet's official channels. Avoid third-party mirrors and unofficial store links.