This page explains how coin support works on the Nano S and how to check whether a specific cryptocurrency or token will work with your device. I’ve tested multiple coins over several months and I’ll show practical steps, common pitfalls, and links to deeper guides (so you can follow a step-by-step path). Short answer: major blockchains are supported, but the management method varies. Some coins are handled directly in the companion app, and others require a third-party wallet.
Why does this matter? Because how a coin is supported affects daily use (sending, receiving, staking), firmware requirements, and recovery methods. Ask yourself: do you want everything inside one app, or are you comfortable using a mix of trusted third-party wallets?
The Nano S stores private keys inside a secure element on the device. That secure element never reveals the keys; it only signs transactions. Apps (small programs) are installed on the device to handle different blockchains. Each app implements the signing logic for one blockchain family (Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, etc.).
A few practical consequences:
If you want to understand installation and app manager screens, see the step-by-step setup guide here: [/nano-s-setup-step-by-step] and [/apps-manager].
| Cryptocurrency / token type | Typical support on Nano S | Where to manage (examples) |
|---|---|---|
| Bitcoin (BTC) | Native app + third-party wallets | Ledger Live, Electrum, Sparrow |
| Ethereum (ETH) + ERC-20 tokens | Ethereum app; many ERC-20 tokens via Ledger Live or third-party | Ledger Live, MetaMask, MyEtherWallet |
| Solana (SOL) | Typically via third-party wallets | Phantom, Solflare (Ledger integrations) |
| Cardano (ADA) | Ledger Live and third-party wallets (check compatibility) | Ledger Live, Yoroi |
| Monero (XMR) | Third-party GUI required | Monero GUI + Ledger bridge |
| XRP, Tezos, Polkadot, Cosmos | Many supported either natively or via third-party | Ledger Live or chain-specific wallets (Keplr, Polkadot.js) |
(Placeholder image: coin-compatibility-diagram alt text)
This table is a practical map, not a definitive list. Always check the latest compatibility page for any given token or network: see [/supported-coins-compatibility].
Step-by-step visuals are available in the setup guide: [/setup-guide] and [/apps-manager-problems] if you hit errors.
Not every coin gets full native support. Third-party wallets fill the gaps and provide important features like staking, NFTs, or Solana support. Examples you’ll likely see:
What I’ve found is simple: use the official companion app for day-to-day accounts when supported, and add third-party wallets when you need features not yet present. For a bundled list of integrations, see [/wallet-integration-hub] and individual guides like [/metamask-integration] or [/phantom-integration].
Multisig setups improve security, but they add complexity. The Nano S can be used as a cosigner with wallets that support hardware-wallet cosigners (for example Electrum or Specter). The main compatibility checklist:
Multisig helps mitigate single-point-of-failure risk, but setup is human-error sensitive. Be methodical.
But remember: confirming addresses on the device screen is the single most effective safeguard against phishing and compromised computers.
Who this device fits:
Who should consider other options:
Every setup has trade-offs. Choose based on the coins you own and how often you transact.
Q: Can I recover my crypto if the device breaks?
A: Yes. As long as you have your seed phrase (recovery phrase), you can recover funds with a compatible hardware or software wallet. See [/recover-from-seed] and [/sweep-recover-software-wallets].
Q: What happens if the company behind the device goes bankrupt?
A: Your crypto is non-custodial — ownership follows the private keys stored in your seed phrase. You can recover using other compatible wallets. See [/lost-device-company-bankrupt].
Q: Is Bluetooth safe for a hardware wallet?
A: The Nano S uses a wired connection (USB); Bluetooth introduces a different risk profile. For a general discussion of connectivity trade-offs, see [/usb-otg-bluetooth] and [/connectivity-security].
Q: Should I use a passphrase (25th word)?
A: A passphrase adds security and complexity. It can protect against seed-phrase theft, but if you forget the passphrase you lose access. Read [/passphrase-25th-word] and plan backups carefully.
If you want to confirm whether a specific coin or token will work with your Nano S, start with the companion app's Manager, then consult chain-specific wallets listed above. I recommend testing any new integration with a small deposit first. And always keep firmware and companion apps updated (but verify update authenticity).
Next actions:
If you need help with a specific coin not showing or a third-party integration, check the related troubleshooting pages or ask a targeted question in the FAQ section above.