Best for

Best hardware wallets for beginners

Your first hardware wallet should be easy to set up without sacrificing security. We ranked devices by beginner-friendliness scores, app clarity, and recovery workflows.

Our top picks focus on classic hardware wallets with a standard recovery phrase and on-device signing. Further down the list, options like Tangem (NFC cards) and Bitkey (seedless, assisted recovery) are also beginner-friendly — but they work differently, so read each review before you choose.

All picks below are actively sold and supported — discontinued models are excluded.

Trezor Safe 3

Trezor Safe 3

Budget Conscious Users
Top Pick

Trezor Safe 3 is a strong value hardware wallet for users who want open-source firmware, USB-C, secure-element protection, privacy features, and optional Bitcoin-only firmware, but it lacks touchscreen, Bluetooth, and strong iOS workflows.

Connectivity:USB-C
Open Source:Mostly open source
Coins:1,000+

$79

OneKey Classic 1S Pure

OneKey Classic 1S Pure

Open source Advocates

OneKey Classic 1S Pure is the battery-free, lower-cost Classic 1S variant for users who want open-source firmware, EAL6+ secure-element protection, Bluetooth/USB-C support, and broad multi-chain coverage without battery-aging concerns.

Connectivity:USB-C, Bluetooth
Open Source:Mostly open source
Coins:30,000+

$79

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Ledger Nano S Plus

Ledger Nano S Plus

Budget Conscious Users

A strong entry-level Ledger signer for desktop and Android users who want broad asset support, USB-C, no battery, and secure-element protection, but it requires trust in Ledger's proprietary firmware and is not suitable for iOS mobile signing.

Connectivity:USB-C
Open Source:Partially open source
Coins:15,000+

$79

Tangem Wallet Cards

Tangem Wallet Cards

Beginners Wanting Simple Setup

Tangem Wallet cards are durable NFC hardware wallets for users who want a simple mobile card experience, optional seedless backups, and low maintenance, but the lack of a screen and closed non-updatable firmware make them less ideal for high-value or advanced cold-storage setups.

Connectivity:NFC
Open Source:Partially open source
Coins:14,000+

$54.9

Trezor Safe 5

Trezor Safe 5

Open source Advocates

Trezor Safe 5 is one of the strongest balanced hardware wallets for users who want open-source firmware, secure-element protection, a color touchscreen, haptic confirmation, privacy tooling, and advanced backup options without relying on Bluetooth or proprietary wallet lock-in.

Connectivity:USB-C
Open Source:Mostly open source
Coins:8,000+

$129

Trezor Safe 7

Trezor Safe 7

Security Conscious Users

Trezor Safe 7 is Trezor's premium flagship for users who want auditable secure-element architecture, post-quantum firmware authentication, Bluetooth, wireless charging, a large touchscreen, and optional Bitcoin-only firmware, but it is expensive and not air-gapped.

Connectivity:USB-C, Bluetooth 5+, Qi2 wireless charging
Open Source:Mostly open source
Coins:9,000+

$249

Not sure which fits? Take the quiz or read our head-to-head comparison for this use case.