Official hub • Ledger.com

Get Started with Ledger – Official Ledger.com/Start Hub

Welcome to your step-by-step introduction to setting up and using a Ledger hardware wallet. This guide is structured with clear headings (H1, H2, H3, H4) and practical steps so you can confidently secure and manage your crypto assets.

Why choose Ledger for your crypto security?

Ledger hardware wallets protect your private keys in a secure, offline environment. Unlike software wallets that keep keys on an internet-connected device, Ledger devices isolate keys so hackers can't access them remotely.

Core benefits

Quick reminder: Ledger's official onboarding and resources are available at https://www.ledger.com/start. Bookmark it for firmware, guides, and safety updates.

Before you start — what you'll need

Prepare the essentials before unboxing a Ledger device:

Step-by-step setup: from unbox to managed

1

Unbox and check authenticity

Inspect packaging and tamper-evident seals. Use Ledger's official authenticity checks and documentation on the Start Hub: https://www.ledger.com/start.

2

Install Ledger Live

Download Ledger Live from the official site, install it on your computer or mobile device, and follow the on-screen prompts to create a new wallet or restore an existing one.

Download: https://www.ledger.com/start
3

Initialize your device

Power on the device, select “Set up as new device” (or restore if you have an existing recovery phrase), then choose a PIN. Record the 24-word recovery phrase on the supplied recovery card — physically and privately.

4

Install apps for your coins

Within Ledger Live, open the Manager and install the apps (Bitcoin, Ethereum, etc.) for the assets you want to hold. Ledger Live displays compatible apps and instructions from the official hub: Ledger Start.

5

Receive and verify

Create an account in Ledger Live for a specific coin, obtain the receiving address from your device (verify it on the device screen), then send a small test transaction first.

Best practices & safety (must-read)

Secure your recovery phrase

Treat your 24-word recovery phrase like the master key to your funds. Never store it digitally, never share it, and never enter it into a website or app. Use a fire- and water-resistant backup solution if possible.

What not to do

If you ever doubt something, go to the official Start Hub: https://www.ledger.com/start — it contains firmware checks, guides, and support channels.

Common tasks: sending, staking, connecting DApps

Send and receive

Sending requires confirming the transaction on your Ledger device. Always verify the address on the device screen before approving.

Staking & DeFi

Ledger supports staking for several PoS assets and can connect to DeFi apps through Ledger Live or via trusted third-party integrations. Always use Ledger Live or the DApp’s official integration guidance from the Start Hub.

Connecting DApps

When connecting a DApp, use the browser extension or WalletConnect option trusted by Ledger and confirm all actions directly on your device.

Troubleshooting & support

Firmware updates

Keep firmware up to date via Ledger Live. Firmware updates improve security but make sure you follow the official update flow at the Start Hub: Ledger Start.

Lost device but you have recovery phrase

If your device is lost or damaged but you have your recovery phrase, you can restore funds on a new Ledger device or a compatible wallet that supports BIP39/BIP44 recovery standards. Always verify the restore steps with official documentation.

Suspected compromise

If you believe your recovery phrase was exposed, move funds immediately to a new wallet with a new recovery phrase. Consult Ledger’s official guidance for safe migration: Ledger Start.

Official resources & quick links

The following are direct entry points to the official onboarding resources. Use them to verify steps or download tools:

Visit the Official Ledger Start Hub

Final checklist — are you ready?

  1. Device authentic and sealed.
  2. Ledger Live installed from the official source.
  3. PIN chosen and memorized (but not written electronically).
  4. 24-word recovery written on physical backup and stored securely.
  5. Small test transaction completed before larger transfers.