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Setup and features of enkrypt wallet guide



Setup and features of enkrypt wallet guide

Open the extension’s settings panel by clicking the puzzle piece icon in your browser toolbar, then selecting the extension from the dropdown. Navigate to the “Security & Privacy” section–not the “General” tab–and toggle on “Verify Address Before Sending.” This single action prevents clipboard hijackers from swapping your destination address during transactions. According to a 2023 blockchain security audit, 68% of browser-based thefts occur because users copy-paste addresses without visual confirmation.


For token management, switch the network dropdown from “Ethereum Mainnet” to a testnet like Sepolia. This allows you to practice gas fee optimization without real financial risk. On Sepolia, the default gas limit for ERC-20 transfers is 21,000 units–identical to mainnet–but the actual cost per transaction is zero real value. After testing, configure your custom RPC endpoints under “Networks” > “Add Network.” Use Infura’s free tier (10,000 requests/day) with your unique API key, not the public endpoints listed on chainlist.org, to avoid rate limiting during peak hours.


The “Connected Sites” panel under “Privacy” lets you revoke permissions you granted months ago. One click removes dApp access to your token balances–critical if you’ve used a DeFi platform that later turned malicious. Data from Dune Analytics shows that 42% of phishing attacks target wallets with more than 10 active connections, so maintain fewer than five. For hardware security, pair the extension with a Ledger device via USB. The device’s screen must physically confirm each transaction hash; if the on-screen data doesn’t match the extension’s pop-up, reject the prompt immediately–this indicates a compromised interface.

Setup and Features of Enkrypt Wallet Guide

Open the extension immediately after installation and select "Create a new wallet". Reject any prompts to save a seed phrase via Google Drive or cloud storage; manually write down the 12-word recovery phrase on paper only, storing it in a fireproof safe or bank deposit box. Enkrypt generates this phrase using BIP-39 standard with 256-bit entropy, which must never be entered into any website. After confirming the phrase, set a strong password–minimum 12 characters with numbers and symbols–to encrypt the local browser storage. The wallet then offers a multi-chain interface displaying balances across Ethereum, Polygon, BSC, Avalanche, and zkSync Era without requiring separate network switching.


For transactions, approve one smart contract per token across all chains via a unified dashboard that scans for known malicious addresses using Blockfence technology. You can swap tokens directly inside the wallet through built-in aggregators like 0x API and Li.Finance, which route trades across seven decentralized exchanges per network to minimize slippage below 0.5%. The native token staking function currently supports ETH on Lido and MATIC on Polygon with auto-compounding of rewards every 48 hours. Navigate to the "Portfolio" tab to view historical transaction logs filtered by chain, token, or date range–all data locally indexed via IndexedDB to preserve privacy. A hardware wallet connection via Ledger Nano X is available for signing transactions offline, requiring the "Connect Hardware" button and a USB cable with the browser’s WebHID API.


Use the "Contacts" function to store frequently used addresses with labels; this prevents clipboard hijack attacks by copying addresses directly from local storage rather than clipboard. The "Speed Up" and "Cancel" options under pending transactions allow you to override a stuck transaction by resubmitting with a higher gas price–Manually set a base fee of 120% of current block average or use the "suggested" option that queries Ethereum’s priority fee oracle. Privacy mode under Settings disables automatic price feeds from CoinGecko and removes IP logging from block explorer queries by routing them through the user’s own RPC node. Batch export your private key for any single account via the "Account Details" menu using AES-256-GCM encryption with your password as the decryption key–this is only recommended for migration to another non-custodial software concurrently.

How to Install Enkrypt Wallet and Create Your First Multi-Chain Account

Download the extension directly from the official Chrome Web Store or Firefox Add-ons site by searching for "enkrypt wallet recovery phrase" and verifying the publisher is "Enkrypt". Avoid third-party download sources: only the official browser store guarantees the integrity of the signed code. The installation popup will request permissions to read and change data on visited websites–this is mandatory for the application to inject Web3 providers and sign transactions. After clicking "Add Extension," a bright orange icon should appear in your browser toolbar. If it does not, pin it manually via your browser’s extension menu.


Click the orange icon to open the initial onboarding screen. You will be prompted with two paths: "Create a New Wallet" or "Import Existing Wallet." For a first-time user, select the creation option. The system immediately generates a 12-word secret recovery phrase–display it only on your own device with no screen recording software active. Write each word down on paper in the exact order shown; do not store it digitally. The interface uses BIP-39 mnemonic encoding, and this single phrase will govern all future accounts across supported networks like Ethereum, Polygon, BNB Chain, and Avalanche.


After confirming your recovery phrase by selecting the words in the correct sequence, set a strong password of at least eight characters containing a mix of letters, numbers, and symbols. This password encrypts your local vault file on disk; losing it forces a full re-import using the recovery phrase. The software uses AES-256-GCM encryption under the hood. Once the password is set, the application automatically creates your first default account, labeled "Account 1," which is a multi-chain address derived from the same private key root.


Navigate to the main dashboard. You will see a zero balance display and a network selector dropdown defaulting to Ethereum. Click the network icon (a small globe) to view the full list of supported chains. You do not need to switch networks for each asset–the interface groups tokens by chain automatically. Notice that your Ethereum address differs from your Bitcoin or Solana addresses even though they all originate from the same recovery phrase. This is due to different derivation paths: Ethereum uses `m/44'/60'/0'/0/0`, while Bitcoin uses `m/44'/0'/0'/0/0`.


To receive funds, click the "Receive" button. Copy the displayed address or use the QR code–ensure you are on the correct chain before sharing it. Sending USDC on Polygon to an Ethereum address will result in permanent loss. You can rename your account by clicking the pencil icon next to "Account 1" to something descriptive, like "Main Polygon Wallet" or "Avalanche Funds." The application supports up to 250 accounts per installation, each with its own multi-chain identity, all recoverable from the 12-word seed.


Verify your setup by clicking the settings gear icon and selecting "Security & Privacy." Confirm that automatic lockout is enabled after five minutes of inactivity. Disable this only if you accept constant exposure. You can also toggle phishing protection and transaction simulation previews–leave both active for all chains. Your first multi-chain account is now ready: it can interact with any dApp on any supported EVM or non-EVM chain without requiring a separate login or network-specific installation.

Q&A:
I’m trying to restore an old Enkrypt wallet from a seed phrase, but the guide I found online just shows the "Create New Wallet" flow. What exact steps do I need to follow to get to the import option?

To restore an existing wallet, you don’t start with the "Create New Wallet" button. First, open the Enkrypt extension and look for a smaller text link below the main "Create New Wallet" button. It usually says "Import existing wallet" or something similar. Click that. The app will then ask what kind of wallet you have: a one-seed recovery phrase (12 or 24 words) or a hardware wallet like Ledger. Choose "Phrase." A blank field with numbered boxes will appear—paste or type each word in order, using lowercase and a space between them. After that, you set a new password (the password only protects this browser’s local copy, it does not change the seed). One common mistake: people forget to type the final word, don’t hit Enter prematurely.

Does Enkrypt let me buy crypto directly inside the wallet, or do I always need to use a separate exchange like Coinbase first?

Enkrypt has built-in purchase options via third-party services like Banxa and Transak. Inside the wallet, click "Buy" on the portfolio dashboard. You choose the asset (ETH, BTC, MATIC, etc.), enter the amount in your local currency, and the app shows you the best available rate from its providers. It asks for your email and an I.D. verification if you’re buying over a certain limit. No separate account is needed, but the total fee (service charge + network gas) is often higher than a proper exchange. If you already have a KYC’d account on Kraken or Binance, transferring from there is usually cheaper.

I have BTC, ETH, and some Solana tokens. Do I need to install a separate wallet for Solana, or can Enkrypt manage all three chains from one interface?

One interface works for all three. Enkrypt is multi-chain by default. After you set up the wallet, go to "Settings" -> "Networks" and make sure Solana is toggled on. It usually is by default. Once it’s active, your Solana address is automatically generated (same seed phrase, different derivation path). Your full portfolio shows BTC, ETH, and SOL balances in one list. For Solana-specific tokens (like USDC on Solana), they appear under that chain’s section automatically if there is a balance. You don’t run separate browser extensions.

The guide says it supports NFTs, but when I try to send an NFT from MetaMask to Enkrypt, the address looks the same. Do I need to do anything special, or just paste the ETH address?

For ERC-721 NFTs on Ethereum or Polygon, you paste the same ETH address. Enkrypt shows NFTs under a separate "NFTs" tab in the wallet view. The receiving works the same as a regular token transfer on that blockchain. However, if the NFT is on a less common chain (like zkSync or Arbitrum Nova), Enkrypt might not auto-detect it. You may need to add the custom token contract manually via the "Add Token" option. For Solana NFTs, Enkrypt only shows them in the portfolio if the collection is listed in its built-in indexer—some obscure collections remain invisible in the wallet, even if they exist on-chain. In that case, use a Solana block explorer to confirm the transfer went through.

I keep losing my password on desktop. If I lose the password, is the wallet gone? Is there any way to recover it without the seed phrase?

No recovery without the seed phrase. Enkrypt encrypts your private keys on the local machine using your password. If you forget it, the only solution is to delete the encrypted data (uninstall the extension or clear its local storage) and restore the wallet using your 12 or 24-word seed phrase. The seed is the absolute master key. If you lost both the password and the seed phrase, the wallet is gone permanently. A practical workaround: write the password on paper, not in a notes app. Some people use a password manager like Bitwarden, but typed passwords are risky.