Bitcoin Wallets

A Bitcoin wallet doesn't hold coins — it holds the keys that control them. This hub explains the wallet types, compares hot and cold storage, helps you choose a hardware wallet, and walks through setting one up safely.

Quick Answer

A Bitcoin wallet stores the private keys that let you spend your coins, not the coins themselves. Wallets split into hot (online, convenient) and cold (offline, secure); software, hardware, and multisig are the main forms. For everyday spending use a hot wallet with a small balance; for savings use a hardware (cold) wallet and back up its seed phrase offline.

Wallet Guides

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Frequently Asked Questions

Does a Bitcoin wallet actually store my coins?

No. Your coins live on the Bitcoin blockchain; the wallet stores the private keys that prove ownership and let you spend them. That's why backing up your keys (the seed phrase) matters more than backing up the app.

What's the safest type of Bitcoin wallet?

For larger amounts, a hardware (cold) wallet is the standard, because it keeps your keys offline and signs transactions without exposing them to the internet. A small hot wallet is fine for everyday spending.

Do I need a hardware wallet if I only have a little Bitcoin?

Not necessarily. For small amounts you're learning with, a reputable mobile or desktop wallet is reasonable. A hardware wallet earns its cost once you hold an amount you'd be upset to lose.

Can I have more than one Bitcoin wallet?

Yes, and many people do — a hot wallet for spending and a cold wallet for savings, for example. Each wallet has its own keys and seed phrase, so back up each one separately.

This is general educational information, not financial advice or a product endorsement. You are responsible for your own keys and backups — if you lose your seed phrase, no one can recover your Bitcoin for you.