Wallet Compatibility — Which Software Wallets Work with Ledger
Short version: a broad set of desktop, browser-extension, and some mobile wallets are compatible. Which wallets work with Ledger depends on the chain and the connection method (USB, WebUSB/WebHID, U2F, Bluetooth or an air-gapped flow). I tested multiple integrations over several months and found that common pairings include browser wallets for Ethereum and EVM chains, Bitcoin desktop wallets (via USB), and chain-specific wallets for Solana and Cardano. If you search which crypto wallet works with Ledger, expect to see names like MetaMask, Electrum, MyEtherWallet (MEW), Phantom, and Cardano extensions on that list — each with different trade-offs.
(If you need a quick compatibility checklist, see the comparison table below.)
If you want the technical picture: the hardware wallet holds private keys inside a secure element and signs transactions on-device. Third-party wallets create and format the transaction, then send it to the hardware wallet for signing. That signing step happens off-chain — the device never exposes private keys.
Connection methods matter. Desktop/browser wallets use WebUSB, WebHID, or U2F. Some models also support Bluetooth for mobile use, while air-gapped workflows export partially-signed transactions (PSBT) and then you transfer signatures into the broadcasting wallet (slow but very secure). I believe understanding the communication channel is half the security story.
For practical guidance on firmware and attestation before connecting, see the firmware update guide and hardware-wallet-security-architecture.
The official app (the mobile/desktop manager made for the device) handles firmware updates, app installation, and a large set of coins natively. Third-party wallets expand support to tokens, DeFi dApps, multisig, and chain-specific features that the official app may not include.
Pros of the official app: integrated firmware updates, direct support for many native coin apps, and a clear update flow. Cons: some tokens and niche chains require third-party wallets. So which wallets work with Ledger varies: using the official app covers many use cases, but you’ll reach for browser extensions and desktop wallets when you need DeFi, NFTs, or advanced Bitcoin features.
See more in ledger-live-guide and using-ledger-with-wallets.
Here’s a factual feature matrix from my testing and documentation checks.
| Wallet | Desktop | Mobile | Multi-signature | Chains / Focus | Connection method |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Official manager app | Yes (desktop & mobile) | Yes | No | Many native coins | USB / Bluetooth |
| MetaMask (extension + mobile) | Yes (extension) | Yes | Limited (use Gnosis Safe for multisig) | Ethereum & EVM chains | WebUSB / Bridge |
| Electrum | Yes (desktop) | Limited | Yes | Bitcoin | USB / PSBT |
| MyEtherWallet (MEW) | Yes (web) | Limited | No | Ethereum | WebUSB / WebHID |
| Phantom | Yes (extension) | Yes | No | Solana | WebUSB / Browser adapter |
| Yoroi | Yes (extension) | Yes | No | Cardano | USB (browser) |
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Notes: that table shows broad capability differences, not a seal of approval. In my experience, MetaMask is the go-to for EVM DeFi apps and works with Ledger for signing, while Electrum remains a desktop favorite for advanced Bitcoin features like multisig and PSBT workflows. For chain-specific needs (Solana, Cardano), use the wallet native to that chain and verify hardware-wallet integration before moving large sums.
For wallet-specific walkthroughs, see metamask-guide, electrum-guide, and phantom-solana-integration.
Which wallets are compatible with Ledger Nano S? The Nano S primarily uses USB and was designed with desktop/browser workflows in mind. So mobile support varies: some users connect via OTG cables, others prefer models with Bluetooth. But: Bluetooth introduces a different threat model. In my testing, Bluetooth is convenient (mobile DeFi), but for long-term cold storage I lean toward wired or air-gapped flows.
Read about connection risks at bluetooth-usb-nfc-security.
Want more security than a single hardware wallet? Multisig spreads keys across devices or people — for example, 2-of-3 where two signatures are required to spend. Electrum and other Bitcoin wallets support multisig with hardware wallets. What I've found: multisig adds real safety for sizable holdings, but it also increases complexity for inheritance planning and recovery.
If you’re considering multisig, review multisig-for-ledger and cold-storage-strategies.
If you need a walkthrough with screenshots, see setup-ledger-step-by-step and the setup-guide.
Do not buy from unofficial sellers. Do not type your recovery phrase into a website. Back up your seed phrase on metal, think through passphrase (25th word) usage (see passphrase-25th-word-guide), and test a small transaction before moving large balances. I once recovered a small wallet using the recovery seed on another device to validate the process — that test saved me stress later.
For common pitfalls, read common-mistakes-phishing and buying-safely-and-supply-chain.
Q: Can I recover my crypto if the device breaks? A: Yes — use your recovery phrase on a compatible hardware wallet or software that supports your derivation path. See recover-if-device-lost.
Q: What happens if the company goes bankrupt? A: Your private keys are yours. As long as you have your recovery phrase and the community maintains compatible tools, you can restore your accounts. See company-bankruptcy-what-happens.
Q: Is Bluetooth safe for a hardware wallet? A: Bluetooth is safe within certain threat models. For daily mobile use it’s convenient. For long-term cold storage I recommend wired or air-gapped processes. See bluetooth-usb-nfc-security.
Which wallets work with Ledger? Many do — but each crypto wallet has trade-offs. Choose a pairing that matches the chains you hold, your threat model, and how often you transact. What I've found in months of hands-on testing: start small, verify firmware, and practice a restore before committing large balances.
If you want a guided setup, begin with the setup-ledger-step-by-step and then consult ledger-live-guide and wallet-specific guides like metamask-guide or electrum-guide.
Ready to try a test connection? Follow the step-by-step guides and keep your recovery phrase offline and metal-backed. And if anything looks suspicious, stop and review the links above.