A Ledger hardware wallet secures DeFi activity by keeping private keys offline while connecting to MetaMask, Phantom, Rabby, and Ledger Wallet’s built-in dApp browser. In 2026, Ledger supports native staking for 14+ assets, Clear Signing (now an Ethereum Foundation standard) for transaction verification, and hardware-secured perpetual trading via Hyperliquid. Blind signing is still required for some Solana and EVM dApp connections.
DeFiLlama tracks more than 7,000 protocols spread across 503+ blockchains in 2026. Cross-chain activity grew 52% in a single year.
That growth means more opportunity. It also means a larger surface area for things to go wrong.
Most DeFi users still interact through hot wallets, where private keys sit on an internet-connected device. A hardware wallet removes that exposure while still giving you full access to crypto staking, trading, NFTs, and dApps.
This guide covers how Ledger hardware wallets connect to DeFi and how to use a Ledger hardware wallet for DeFi & NFTs. It also covers the real tradeoffs around blind signing, the new perpetual trading feature, NFT management, and the security practices that actually matter day to day.
Sourcing Note: This guide is based on official Ledger documentation (support.ledger.com, ledger.com/academy, developers.ledger.com), official third-party integration guides from MetaMask, Phantom, and Rabby, and published DeFi protocol documentation. All staking yields, supported assets, and feature details verified as of June 25, 2026.
Table of Contents
Current 2026 Ledger Device Lineup
| Model | Price | DeFi-Relevant Features |
| Nano S Plus | $79 | Basic dApp access via MetaMask, no NFC, button navigation |
| Nano X | $149 | Bluetooth, mobile dApp access, EAL5+ |
| Nano Gen5 | $179 | Touchscreen, NFC, Transaction Check, Clear Signing on a readable screen |
| Flex | $249 | Full dApp browser, Qi charging, Transaction Check |
| Stax | $399 | NFT lockscreen display, the largest screen for reviewing complex contracts |

Images sourced from the official Ledger website.
For complete setup instructions on any model, see the Ledger hardware wallet setup guide.
Why Use a Ledger Hardware Wallet for DeFi?
Protection Against Wallet Drainers
Wallet drainer scripts exploit broad token approvals signed without a full understanding of what was actually authorized.
A hardware wallet does not prevent malicious approvals on its own. Protection depends on you actually reading what Clear Signing, or a transaction simulator, shows you before approving.
Security Against Phishing Attacks
Phishing sites mimic legitimate dApp interfaces to trick users into connecting wallets and signing malicious transactions.
A hardware wallet’s offline key storage limits the damage. A phishing site can request a signature, but it cannot extract your private key directly.
Smart Contract Approval Verification: Clear Signing
Clear Signing displays transaction details in plain language directly on the device’s tamper-resistant Secure Screen, instead of raw, unreadable transaction data.
The feature is built on the ERC-7730 standard, which Ledger originally pioneered.
In 2025, Ledger introduced the Generic Parser. This removed the need for custom dApp plugins, letting Clear Signing work across a much broader range of applications automatically.
In 2026, Ledger transferred governance of Clear Signing to the Ethereum Foundation. That move turned it from a Ledger-exclusive feature into an open, industry-wide security standard.
In April 2026, the standard advanced again to ERC-7730 V2, adding cross-chain compatibility and smoother integration. The Ethereum Foundation, WalletConnect, Fireblocks, Sourcify, Trezor, and Cyfrin all back the updated version.
The stakes here are not abstract. A blind signing exploit on Phantom Wallet in May 2025 cost 80 victims a combined $1.5 million. A fraudulent NFT minting site exploited a signature prompt that failed to clearly show the transaction’s true intent.
Blind signing vulnerabilities have caused damage well beyond that single case. Bybit lost roughly $1.5 billion in 2025. WazirX lost approximately $235 million. Both incidents trace back to the same underlying weakness.
Safer Access to Decentralized Applications
Ledger Wallet’s built-in dApp browser offers a curated, verified connection path to DeFi protocols, reducing your exposure to fake or spoofed dApp URLs.
Connecting through the dApp browser, or a verified WalletConnect session, is safer than connecting through a search result or a social media link.
Hardware Wallet vs Software Wallet for DeFi

| Factor | Hardware Wallet (Ledger) | Software Wallet (Hot Wallet) |
| Private key storage | Offline, inside Secure Element | Online, on internet-connected device |
| Transaction verification | Clear Signing on a tamper-resistant screen, where supported | Display can be manipulated by malware on the device |
| Resistance to remote attacks | High, since keys never leave the device | Lower, since device compromise can expose keys |
| Blind signing exposure | Required for some Solana and third-party EVM connections | Often the default experience |
| Convenience | Slightly slower, due to the physical confirmation step | Faster, no extra hardware needed |
| Real-world incident example | No documented remote key extraction | December 2025 Trust Wallet Chrome extension supply chain attack stole roughly $7 million from about 2,596 wallets |
How Ledger Works with DeFi Applications

Ledger Wallet’s Built-in dApp Browser
The dApp browser inside Ledger Wallet is the primary way most users access DeFi protocols, staking platforms, DEXs, and NFT marketplaces in 2026.
Available platforms include Lido, Kelp DAO, and Stader Labs for staking, PancakeSwap and other DEXs for trading, and OpenSea for NFTs.
Connections happen through WalletConnect, with each dApp accessed via a verified manifest rather than an arbitrary external link.
Ledger Connect Kit: The Technology Behind the Scenes
Connect Kit is the underlying JavaScript library that third-party dApp frontends use to integrate Ledger device support into their own interfaces.
You will not interact with Connect Kit directly. It runs quietly behind MetaMask, Rabby, and other external wallets whenever they connect to a Ledger device. Worth knowing it exists, not something you need to manage yourself.
Ledger + MetaMask Integration
MetaMask paired with a Ledger device is the most common way to access the broader EVM DeFi ecosystem.
Every transaction signed through MetaMask still requires physical confirmation on the Ledger device, regardless of what MetaMask itself displays.
Ledger + Rabby Wallet
Rabby is open source, with third-party audits from Least Authority and PeckShield. It supports native hardware wallet pairing, including Ledger.
The wallet offers automatic chain switching, eliminating the “wrong network” errors that frequently trip up MetaMask users.
Swap fees on Rabby sit at approximately 0.25%, compared to MetaMask’s roughly 0.875%. That difference adds up for frequent traders.
Rabby supports EVM chains only. It does not handle Bitcoin, Solana, or other non-EVM ecosystems.
Ledger + Phantom Wallet
Phantom is the primary path for Solana DeFi access with a Ledger device.
Blind signing must be enabled in the Solana app’s device settings for most Phantom integrations to function. The full tradeoffs of this requirement are covered in the dedicated section below.
Ledger + Solflare
Solflare is an alternative Solana-compatible wallet with native Ledger support, offering similar functionality to Phantom for SPL token management and staking.
The Blind Signing Tradeoff: What Every Ledger DeFi User Needs to Know

This is the section most competing guides either skip or gloss over. Given the stakes, it deserves direct, upfront attention rather than a footnote.
What Blind Signing Means in Practice
Blind signing means approving a transaction without the device displaying full human-readable details. You are trusting the connected app’s interface, rather than verifying independently on the device screen.
Clear Signing is the alternative: full transaction details rendered in plain language on the Secure Screen before you approve anything.
Where Blind Signing Is Currently Required
On Solana, most third-party app integrations, including many Phantom and Solflare interactions, require blind signing to be enabled in the Solana app’s device settings.
On Ethereum and other EVM chains, many third-party dApps without ERC-7730 metadata support still require blind transaction signing.
Clear Signing coverage is expanding quickly, following the Generic Parser in 2025 and ERC-7730 V2 in April 2026. It is not yet universal across every dApp and every chain.
How to Enable Blind Signing Safely, When It’s Unavoidable
Unlock your device, open the relevant app (Solana or Ethereum), go to Settings, and enable blind signing only when a specific, trusted integration actually requires it.
Disable it again afterward if you are not using it continuously. This narrows the window where you are exposed.
Reducing Risk When Blind Signing Is Active
- Verify the dApp URL independently before connecting. Bookmark official URLs instead of navigating through search results or social media links.
- Cross-check contract addresses against an official source, such as a block explorer, before approving anything.
- Approve only the exact amount needed for a transaction, rather than granting unlimited spending approval.
- Use a transaction simulator or Web3 firewall tool as an additional layer where one is available.
- Treat any blind-signed transaction with extra scrutiny. The device cannot independently confirm what you are approving in that mode.
Perpetual Trading on Ledger
What Launched
In May 2026, Ledger launched Perpetual Trading inside Ledger Wallet, partnering with Yield.xyz to give eligible users access to Hyperliquid leveraged trading directly from a self-custodial hardware wallet.
Ledger frames the feature as bringing hardware-grade security to one of crypto’s fastest-growing trading segments, letting users trade leveraged positions without giving up control of their private keys.
How It Works
The feature is accessed directly within Ledger Wallet’s dApp ecosystem, connecting to Hyperliquid’s perpetual futures markets through the Yield.xyz integration.
Transactions still go through the device’s standard signing flow. The leverage mechanics happen on Hyperliquid’s side; the signing security comes from your Ledger device.
Risk Disclosure: This is leveraged trading and carries substantial risk of loss. Perpetual contracts are not suitable for beginners or casual holders. Leverage amplifies both gains and losses, and liquidation can result in the loss of your entire position. This section is informational, not financial advice.
Who This Feature Is For
Perpetual trading on Ledger suits experienced traders who already understand perpetual futures mechanics and want that activity backed by hardware-level key security.
It is not a recommended starting point if you are new to either DeFi or leveraged trading. The complexity compounds quickly for beginners.
Best DeFi Protocols Compatible With Ledger
Staking and Liquid Staking
Lido offers ETH liquid staking with no minimum, accessed through the Lido dashboard inside Ledger Wallet’s Discover section. Rewards accrue daily as a growing stETH balance.
Stader also offers ETH liquid staking with no minimum.
Kiln runs ETH pooled staking with a 0.05 ETH minimum.
Jito provides Solana liquid staking through jitoSOL, combining the standard ~7 to 8% SOL staking yield with an additional 1 to 2% MEV-derived boost. jitoSOL stays tradable and usable elsewhere in DeFi while it remains staked.
Decentralized Exchanges
Uniswap is the largest Ethereum DEX by volume, accessible by pairing MetaMask or Rabby with your Ledger device.
PancakeSwap is available directly through Ledger Wallet’s dApp browser.
Jupiter is Solana’s primary DEX aggregator. Beyond swaps, it offers limit orders, dollar-cost averaging, and perpetual futures up to 100x leverage. The JUP token governs liquidity programs.
Raydium is a hybrid AMM and limit order DEX on Solana, with concentrated liquidity pools for liquidity providers.
Lending and Yield
Aave is the leading multi-chain lending protocol, accessible through MetaMask or Rabby paired with Ledger.
Curve Finance focuses on stablecoin trading and lending infrastructure.
Morpho layers peer-to-peer optimized lending on top of existing lending pools.
Kamino is a Solana yield optimizer that automatically manages liquidity positions across staking rewards, trading fees, and MEV rewards.
Yield Tokenization
Pendle lets you separate and trade future yield from principal, a more advanced strategy for users comfortable with yield-bearing asset mechanics.
Restaking
EigenLayer extends the security of already-staked ETH to additional services through Ethereum restaking.
NFT Marketplaces
OpenSea is accessible directly through Ledger Wallet’s dApp browser.
Supported DeFi Platforms and Networks
| Protocol | Category | Primary Network | Access Method |
| Lido | Staking | Ethereum (+ BSC, Polygon, Arbitrum, Optimism) | Ledger Wallet dApp browser |
| Stader | Staking | Ethereum | Ledger Wallet dApp browser |
| Kiln | Staking | Ethereum | Ledger Wallet dApp browser |
| Jito | Liquid Staking | Solana | Phantom / Solflare (blind signing required) |
| Uniswap | DEX | Ethereum, L2s | MetaMask / Rabby |
| PancakeSwap | DEX | BNB Chain | Ledger Wallet dApp browser |
| Jupiter | DEX Aggregator | Solana | Phantom / Solflare (blind signing required) |
| Raydium | DEX | Solana | Phantom / Solflare (blind signing required) |
| Aave | Lending | Ethereum, L2s | MetaMask / Rabby |
| Curve Finance | DEX / Lending | Ethereum, L2s | MetaMask / Rabby |
| Morpho | Lending | Ethereum | MetaMask / Rabby |
| Kamino | Yield | Solana | Phantom / Solflare (blind signing required) |
| Pendle | Yield Tokenization | Ethereum, L2s | MetaMask / Rabby |
| EigenLayer | Restaking | Ethereum | MetaMask / Rabby |
| OpenSea | NFT Marketplace | Ethereum, Polygon | Ledger Wallet dApp browser |
How to Connect Ledger Hardware Wallet to MetaMask
Step 1: Install Ledger Wallet
Download from ledger.com only. If you have not yet completed initial device setup, follow the full process in the setup guide first.
Step 2: Install the Ethereum App
Inside Ledger Wallet, go to My Ledger, then App Catalog, then Ethereum, and select Install.
Step 3: Connect Your Ledger Device
Connect via USB-C, which is recommended for the initial MetaMask pairing, or Bluetooth on supported models. Open the Ethereum app on the device itself.
Step 4: Link to MetaMask
Open the MetaMask browser extension or mobile app. Click the account icon, then Add account or hardware wallet, then Ledger, then Connect Hardware Wallet. Select your Ledger-derived Ethereum address from the list and import it.
Step 5: Verify the Address
Confirm the imported address in MetaMask matches what the device itself shows. Always verify the receive addresses on the device screen before sharing them, not just inside the app.
Step 6: Sign Transactions Securely
Every MetaMask transaction now requires physical confirmation on the Ledger device. On Clear Signing-supported transactions, review the full human-readable details on the Secure Screen before approving. For transactions that require blind signing, apply the safety practices from the dedicated section above.
How to Stake Crypto Using a Ledger Hardware Wallet
The Full Current Staking Asset List
| Asset | Method | Minimum | Notes |
| Ethereum (ETH) | Liquid staking via Lido, Stader, or Kiln | No minimum (Lido/Stader); 0.05 ETH (Kiln) | Third-party, not native |
| Solana (SOL) | Native staking via Ledger Wallet | None | Blind signing not required for native staking |
| Cardano (ADA) | Native staking via Ledger Wallet | None | |
| Polkadot (DOT) | Native staking via Ledger Wallet | None | |
| Cosmos / Osmosis (OSMO) | Native staking via Ledger Wallet | None | |
| Tezos (XTZ) | Native staking via Ledger Wallet | None | |
| Near (NEAR) | Native staking via Ledger Wallet | None | |
| Polygon (POL) | Native staking via Ledger Wallet | None | |
| Tron (TRX) | Native staking via Ledger Wallet | None | |
| Hedera (HBAR) | Native staking via Ledger Wallet | None | |
| Injective (INJ) | Native staking via Ledger Wallet | None | |
| MultiversX (EGLD) | Native staking via Ledger Wallet | None | |
| Onomy (NOM) | Native staking via Ledger Wallet | None | |
| Persistence (XPRT) | Native staking via Ledger Wallet | None | |
| Quicksilver (QCK) | Native staking via Ledger Wallet | None |
Rewards are not guaranteed and fluctuate with network and validator conditions. This is not financial advice.
Ethereum Staking: The Liquid Staking Model
Ledger does not offer native ETH staking. This is a common misconception worth correcting directly.
Staking happens through third-party liquid staking providers, Lido, Stader, or Kiln, accessed via the Discover section inside Ledger Wallet.
The process: Install the relevant app from the catalog, then open the provider’s dashboard inside Ledger Wallet. Select your ETH account, choose an amount, and sign the staking transaction on your device.
In return, you receive a liquid staking token, such as stETH, representing your staked position. That token stays usable elsewhere in DeFi while it continues earning rewards.
Unstaking stETH back to ETH happens in one of two ways. A direct swap is faster but can carry slippage on large amounts. The provider’s withdrawal queue avoids slippage but takes longer.
Solana Staking: Native and Liquid Options
Native SOL staking is available directly within Ledger Wallet, with no minimum amount.
For liquid staking with MEV-boosted yield, Jito’s jitoSOL is accessible through Phantom or Solflare paired with a Ledger device. This third-party integration requires blind signing.
Step-by-Step Native Staking Tutorial

Step 1: Open Ledger Wallet
Connect and unlock your device.
Step 2: Choose Your Asset
Navigate to the account for the asset you want to stake, for example, SOL or ADA.
Step 3: Select Delegate or Stake
Choose a validator or staking pool. The app displays minimum amounts and estimated APY where available.
Step 4: Confirm on Device
Review the staking transaction on your device screen and confirm.
Step 5: Monitor Rewards
Track accumulated rewards within Ledger Wallet’s account view over time.
How to Trade Crypto Securely With Ledger
Swapping Through Ledger Wallet
The built-in swap feature uses third-party liquidity aggregators. It’s convenient, but it typically carries higher fees than going directly through a dedicated DEX.
Trading Through MetaMask or Rabby
Connect your Ledger device for hardware-signed swaps on Uniswap, Aave, Curve, and other major DEXs.
Rabby’s lower swap fees, roughly 0.25% versus MetaMask’s roughly 0.875%, make it worth considering if you trade frequently.
Connecting to DEXs Directly
Some DEXs, PancakeSwap among them, are accessible directly through Ledger Wallet’s dApp browser without needing a separate wallet extension.
Transaction Verification Process
Always review the Clear Signing summary, where one is available, before confirming anything.
For transactions that require blind signing, apply the verification practices from the dedicated section above.
Security Checklist Before Any Trade
- Bookmark the official dApp URL. Never navigate there through search results or social links.
- Verify the contract address against an official source or block explorer.
- Confirm the exact token amount and recipient before signing.
- Avoid unlimited token approvals where a capped approval option exists.
- Double-check that the network shown matches the chain you intended to use.
Using a Ledger Hardware Wallet for NFTs

NFT Storage Explained
NFTs are not literally stored on your device. Ownership is recorded on-chain. Your Ledger device holds the private key that controls and signs transfers of that NFT.
Supported NFT Networks
Ethereum, Polygon, and other EVM chains are accessible through OpenSea and similar marketplaces, via MetaMask, Rabby, or Ledger Wallet’s dApp browser.
Solana NFTs are accessible through Phantom or Solflare.
Viewing NFTs in Ledger Wallet
NFT collections can be viewed within the Ledger Wallet app for supported networks.
The Ledger Stax goes further, displaying NFT artwork directly on its E Ink lockscreen, even when the device is powered off. The full feature breakdown lives in the complete Ledger hardware wallet guide.
Sending NFTs Safely
Always verify the recipient address on the device screen before confirming a transfer.
NFT transfers are irreversible, and a small test transfer is not always practical given gas costs. Address verification on the device is your primary safeguard here.
Avoiding NFT Scams
Fake minting sites are a common attack vector. The May 2025 Phantom blind signing incident, which cost users $1.5 million across 80 victims, is a direct example of this pattern.
Unsolicited NFT airdrops can contain malicious approval requests disguised as claim transactions. Never interact with an unexpected NFT without independently verifying where it came from.
Never approve a transaction tied to an NFT listing or mint you did not personally initiate.
Ledger Hardware Wallet Supported Blockchains for DeFi
| Blockchain | Staking | NFTs | DeFi Support | Ledger Compatible |
| Bitcoin | No | No | Limited | Yes |
| Ethereum | Yes (third-party) | Yes | Extensive | Yes |
| Solana | Yes (native) | Yes | Extensive | Yes |
| Cardano | Yes (native) | Limited | Limited | Yes |
| Polygon | Yes (native) | Yes | Extensive | Yes |
| Avalanche | No | Yes | Moderate | Yes |
| BNB Chain | No | Yes | Extensive | Yes |
| Arbitrum | No | Yes | Extensive | Yes |
| Optimism | No | Yes | Extensive | Yes |
| Base | No | Yes | Growing | Yes |
| Cosmos / Osmosis | Yes (native) | Limited | Moderate | Yes |
| Polkadot | Yes (native) | Limited | Limited | Yes |
| Near | Yes (native) | Limited | Limited | Yes |
| Sui | No | Yes | Growing | Limited, via third-party wallet |
| Aptos | No | Yes | Growing | Limited, via third-party wallet |
Common Security Risks When Using DeFi

| Risk | What It Is | Ledger-Specific Mitigation |
| Wallet Drainers | Malicious contracts that drain approved tokens after a broad approval is signed | Review Clear Signing details where available; revoke unused approvals regularly |
| Fake Airdrops | Unsolicited tokens or NFTs designed to lure you into a malicious claim transaction | Never interact with unexpected assets; verify sources independently |
| Malicious Smart Contracts | Contracts that perform different actions than their interface suggests | Clear Signing shows true contract behavior where ERC-7730 metadata exists; treat blind-signed contracts with extra caution |
| Approval Exploits | Unlimited spending approvals exploited later, sometimes long after the original transaction | Approve exact amounts where possible; use a revocation tool periodically |
| Phishing Websites | Fake dApp interfaces designed to capture signatures or seed phrases | Bookmark official URLs; never enter a seed phrase into any website |
| Social Engineering | Attackers impersonating support staff or contacts, often using breached customer data | Ledger support will never ask for your recovery phrase under any circumstances |
The December 2025 Trust Wallet Chrome extension supply chain attack harvested encrypted mnemonics and stole approximately $7 million from roughly 2,596 wallets. It’s a clear illustration of the real-world stakes behind software wallet compromise, exactly the category of risk hardware wallets are built to reduce.
Best Security Practices for Ledger DeFi Users
- Verify every transaction on the device screen, not just in the connected app.
- Protect your recovery phrase with physical, offline storage only. Never digital.
- Use separate wallet accounts to keep active DeFi funds apart from long-term holdings.
- Revoke unused token approvals on a regular schedule using a revocation tool.
- Keep Ledger OS and app firmware updated through official channels only.
- Stick to trusted, bookmarked dApps rather than navigating through search results or social links.
- Test new protocols or unfamiliar integrations with a small transaction first.
- Enable blind signing only when a specific, trusted integration requires it, and disable it again afterward.
For a complete technical breakdown of Ledger’s security architecture, see the dedicated Ledger hardware wallet security guide.
Ledger Wallet vs MetaMask for DeFi
| Feature | Ledger Wallet (+ Hardware Device) | MetaMask (Software Only) |
| Key Storage | Offline, Secure Element | Online, software-based |
| DeFi Access | Built-in dApp browser, plus pairs with MetaMask or Rabby | Native, broadest third-party dApp support |
| NFT Support | Viewing, plus Stax lockscreen display | Viewing only |
| Native Staking | 14+ assets | Not native; relies on connected protocols |
| Hardware Protection | Yes, when paired with a Ledger device | None, unless paired with a hardware wallet |
| Transaction Verification | Clear Signing on Secure Screen, where supported | Software-rendered display only |
| User Experience | Two-step: app plus device confirmation | Single-step, faster but less secure |
MetaMask alone offers convenience and the broadest native dApp ecosystem, but its private keys remain software-based.
Pairing MetaMask with a Ledger device combines MetaMask’s ecosystem reach with hardware-level key protection. That combination, not picking one or the other exclusively, is what most security-conscious DeFi users actually choose.
Ledger Hardware Wallet Pros and Cons for DeFi
Advantages
- Offline private key storage, isolated from internet-connected devices
- Multi-chain support spanning 14+ natively stakeable assets, plus broad EVM and Solana DeFi access
- Clear Signing, now an Ethereum Foundation-governed open standard, for transaction verification where supported
- Native NFT viewing, with lockscreen display on the Stax
- Hardware-secured perpetual trading through the 2026 Hyperliquid integration
Limitations
- A learning curve for users new to hardware wallets and two-step transaction confirmation
- Upfront hardware cost, ranging from $79 to $399
- Blind signing is still required for some Solana and third-party EVM integrations, so Clear Signing protection is not yet universal
- A slightly slower transaction flow than a pure software wallet, due to the physical confirmation step
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Ledger safe for DeFi?
Yes, with an important caveat. Ledger’s offline key storage and Clear Signing, now an Ethereum Foundation standard, protect against remote key theft and many malicious transactions. Blind signing is still required for some Solana and third-party EVM integrations, where transaction details aren’t fully verifiable on-device. Safe practices remain essential even with a hardware wallet.
Can I use Ledger with MetaMask?
Yes. Install the Ethereum app on your device, then connect it to MetaMask through the hardware wallet connection option. Every subsequent MetaMask transaction will require physical confirmation on your Ledger device, combining MetaMask’s dApp ecosystem with hardware-level key protection.
Can Ledger store NFTs?
Ledger devices hold the private keys that control NFT ownership recorded on-chain. The NFTs themselves are not literally stored on the device. The Ledger Stax can display NFT artwork directly on its E Ink lockscreen, even when powered off.
Which Ledger is best for DeFi?
The Ledger Flex or Stax are the strongest choices for active DeFi users in 2026. Both offer Transaction Check, full Clear Signing on a readable touchscreen, and direct access to Ledger Wallet’s dApp browser. The Nano Gen5 is a strong budget-conscious alternative with the same core security.
Can I stake crypto with Ledger?
Yes. Ledger Wallet supports native staking for 14+ assets, including Solana, Cardano, Polkadot, Polygon, Tron, and Near. Ethereum staking is also available through Lido, Stader, or Kiln via the dApp browser.
Does Ledger support Ethereum staking?
Not natively. Ledger does not offer built-in ETH staking. You can stake ETH through third-party liquid staking providers instead: Lido, Stader, or Kiln, accessed via the Discover section inside Ledger Wallet. You receive a liquid staking token like stETH in return.
Does Ledger support Solana staking?
Yes, natively. SOL staking is available directly within Ledger Wallet, with no minimum amount required. For liquid staking with additional MEV-derived yield, jitoSOL is accessible via Phantom or Solflare paired with a Ledger device.
Is Ledger better than a hot wallet for DeFi?
For private key security, yes. A Ledger device keeps keys offline regardless of which software interface you connect through, while a pure hot wallet keeps keys on an internet-connected device at all times. The December 2025 Trust Wallet Chrome extension breach stole funds from thousands of wallets through a compromised software extension. It illustrates exactly the risk hardware wallets are designed to reduce.
Final Verdict
Active DeFi users who want hardware-level key security, without giving up access to staking, swaps, lending, and NFTs, are the clearest fit.
Multi-chain holders who need broad coin and protocol support beyond a single ecosystem also benefit substantially.
Users newly engaging with perpetual trading, who want that activity secured by hardware signing rather than a pure software wallet, are another strong match.
Best Ledger Devices for DeFi Users
| Use Case | Recommended Device |
| Best overall DeFi value | Nano Gen5 ($179) |
| Best for active trading and dApp use | Flex ($249) |
| Best for NFT collectors | Stax ($399) |
| Budget-conscious, occasional DeFi use | Nano S Plus ($79), paired with MetaMask |
Security Recommendations Summary
- Treat blind signing as an exception requiring extra caution, not a routine setting.
- Use Clear Signing-supported flows wherever a protocol offers them.
- Revoke unused approvals on a recurring schedule.
- Keep DeFi-active funds and long-term holdings in separate accounts.
DeFi activity inherently involves more frequent transaction signing than simple cold storage. More signing means more opportunities for error.
A Ledger device does not eliminate that risk. It meaningfully narrows the attack surface compared to a pure software wallet, provided you follow the safe practices in this guide consistently.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or trading advice. Cryptocurrency and DeFi activities, including staking and leveraged perpetual trading, carry a high risk of loss, including the potential loss of your entire capital. Yields are not guaranteed. Using a hardware wallet improves security but does not remove all risks. You are fully responsible for verifying transactions and understanding what you approve. Information is accurate as of June 25, 2026, but may change. Always do your own research (DYOR) and verify details from official sources before taking any action. The author accepts no liability for any losses.