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Trust: Crypto & Bitcoin Wallet
DApps Platform, Inc.
Rating 4.5star icon
Editor's summary
Editor rating
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4.5

One-line summary Trust Wallet is easy to recommend for its broad multi-chain support and genuinely approachable self-custody experience, but I’d hesitate if your workflow depends heavily on flawless WalletConnect and consistently fast dApp approvals.

  • Installs

    50M+

  • Developer

    DApps Platform, Inc.

  • Category

    Finance

  • Content Rating

    Everyone

  • Latest version

    8.24.1

  • Package

    com.wallet.crypto.trustapp

In-depth review
Trust Wallet feels like a crypto app built for the real world rather than for people who enjoy wrestling with wallets. After spending time with it as an everyday mobile wallet, that was the strongest impression it left on me. It is not trying to be a niche power-user tool first. It is trying to be the wallet you can install, fund, understand, and keep using without feeling like every action is a small technical exam. The setup experience is straightforward, and that matters more in crypto than almost anywhere else. Trust Wallet does a good job of making self-custody feel accessible instead of intimidating. Creating or importing a wallet is cleanly presented, and the app constantly reinforces the idea that your recovery phrase is the real key to your funds. That’s basic wallet behavior, of course, but Trust handles it with enough clarity that even less experienced users should understand the responsibility they are taking on. In daily use, the app generally stays out of your way, which is one of the best compliments I can give a finance app. Its biggest strength is breadth. If your holdings are spread across multiple chains, Trust Wallet is genuinely convenient. Managing major assets alongside smaller tokens in one place is much easier here than in a single-chain wallet. I found it especially useful as an all-purpose portfolio companion: a place to hold mainstream coins, keep an eye on long-tail tokens, and interact with Web3 services without constantly switching apps. That broad support also gives the app a “main wallet” quality. It feels less like a specialist tool and more like a hub. The second thing Trust Wallet gets right is interface design. The app is readable, mostly uncluttered, and easy to navigate. Sending and receiving crypto is not buried behind jargon-heavy screens. Token management is simple enough that adding assets and checking balances doesn’t become a chore. For an app handling a lot of complexity under the hood, it rarely feels messy. That matters because crypto wallets often become unusable long before they become insecure; if people cannot understand what they are looking at, they make mistakes. Trust Wallet does a respectable job of lowering that risk through plain, familiar flows. A third strength is the sense of control it gives the user. This is a self-custody wallet, and the experience reflects that. Your keys stay with you, and the app makes that feel like a feature rather than a burden. There’s also a reassuring amount of flexibility for people who want to go beyond the basics, such as connecting to dApps, managing custom assets, and using it as a bridge into broader Web3 activity. For someone who wants a wallet that can start simple and grow with their needs, Trust Wallet makes a strong case for itself. That said, it is not frictionless. The most noticeable rough edge in my use was around dApp connectivity and transaction approval flow. When things work, they work well enough. But when they don’t, the experience becomes annoying fast. WalletConnect-style interactions can feel inconsistent, and contract approval prompts are not always as quick or dependable as they should be. In a regular wallet session that is only a minor irritation. In a time-sensitive DeFi transaction, it is the sort of hesitation that can make you abandon the attempt and try again later. Another weakness is that some parts of the app can feel a little opaque when balances, token visibility, or asset details do not refresh the way you expect. Most of the time, the wallet presents a clean snapshot of your holdings. But every so often, the display can create uncertainty rather than confidence, especially with less common tokens or more complex assets. Experienced crypto users will probably shrug and troubleshoot. Newer users may wonder whether the issue is visual, network-related, or something worse. Fees and trading convenience are also areas where expectations need to be managed. Trust Wallet can help you move, hold, swap, and explore, but it does not magically remove blockchain costs or the friction of on-chain activity. If you come in expecting exchange-like simplicity and pricing, you may be disappointed. This is still a wallet, and it still lives in the reality of network fees, smart contract permissions, and the occasional failed or delayed action. The app explains some of this better than many wallets, but not well enough to prevent all confusion. Who is it for? Trust Wallet is best for people who want a broad, mobile-first crypto wallet that can handle multiple chains without demanding expert-level knowledge on day one. It is also a good fit for users who want one app for holding assets, checking tokens, exploring dApps, and doing occasional swaps or staking-like activity without juggling several wallets. If you want self-custody but do not want the wallet itself to feel intimidating, Trust Wallet is one of the more approachable options. Who is it not for? If you need absolute smoothness in every Web3 connection flow, or if your usage is heavily centered on fast DeFi execution, you may run into enough small interruptions to get frustrated. Likewise, if you want the simplicity of a custodial platform where recovery, support, and transaction handling feel more hand-held, Trust Wallet may still feel too responsibility-heavy. Overall, Trust Wallet earns its reputation by doing the hard part well: making a powerful, multi-chain self-custody wallet feel usable every day. It is not perfect, and its connectivity hiccups can be genuinely irritating, but the core experience is solid. For most people who want a dependable all-rounder in crypto, this is a wallet I would be comfortable keeping installed and actively using.
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