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Trezor.io/Start | Starting Up Your® Device

Trezor.io/Start

Quick start guide — starting up your® hardware wallet safely

Welcome — start here

This page walks you through the essential steps to safely initialize your Trezor hardware wallet: unbox, verify, generate a recovery seed, install firmware, and make your first transaction. Follow each step carefully and never rush when handling recovery material.

1. Unboxing & first checks

  • Inspect the packaging for tamper-evident seals. If seals are broken or the box appears altered, stop and contact official support before proceeding.
  • Confirm the model and serial numbers on the device match any documentation included. Genuine products include clear vendor labeling.
  • Do not connect the device if you believe it was tampered with; contact support for instructions.

2. Initial setup

To initialize your device, connect it to a computer using the supplied USB cable and open the official start page (for demo pages replace with your verified URL). Most vendors provide an online guided setup that walks through device creation and firmware installation.

  1. Connect device and open the official start page — allow any browser permission prompts for device access.
  2. Follow the on-screen prompts to create a new wallet. The device will display the recovery seed words — never reveal these to anyone.
  3. Set a PIN on the device when prompted. A PIN prevents unauthorized use if the device is connected to a host.
Important: Your recovery seed is the *only* way to recover funds if the device is lost or damaged. Write it down on the supplied recovery card (or another secure medium) and store it offline in a safe location. Do not store the seed on cloud storage, email, or photos.

3. Recovery seed & passphrase

During setup, the device will generate a recovery seed (commonly 12, 18, or 24 words). This seed derives all keys for your wallet. Treat it as equivalent to cash:

  • Write the words in order, using a pen and physical medium designed for long-term storage.
  • Consider geographic redundancy (e.g., split storage) and threat modeling — store where it is physically secure from theft, flood, and fire.
  • Optionally enable a passphrase (a 25th secret) for additional account separation — remember that losing the passphrase forfeits access.

4. Firmware & software

Before using your device for transactions, ensure firmware and companion software are up-to-date. Firmware updates often include security hardening and new features.

  • Use only officially published firmware from the vendor. Verify checksums and digital signatures where provided.
  • Install companion software (wallet UI) only from official sources; prefer desktop apps or verified progressive web apps over third-party builds.
  • Enable automatic updates only if you trust the vendor release process; otherwise, update manually after verifying releases.

5. Making your first receive & send

To receive funds, create a new receive address in your wallet UI and verify the address on the device screen before sharing. When sending, always verify the destination address and amounts on the device display and the wallet UI. The device must confirm transaction details — do not rely on host software alone.

6. Ongoing security best practices

  • Keep the device firmware and wallet software updated.
  • Use a strong, memorable PIN and do not reuse it elsewhere.
  • Never enter your recovery seed on a computer or phone — only on the device itself when required.
  • Be cautious of phishing sites: always verify the correct domain and certificate when visiting wallet or vendor pages.

Troubleshooting

Device not powering

Try another known-good USB cable and port. Avoid unpowered USB hubs. If the device still won’t power, contact official support with your serial number and purchase information.

Lost or damaged seed

If you lose your recovery seed and still have access to the device, create a new wallet and transfer funds to the new addresses, then generate and store a fresh seed. If you have lost both the seed and the device, funds cannot be recovered.

Firmware update failed

Do not panic. Follow vendor-provided recovery instructions, which typically involve a firmware recovery mode. Keep logs and contact official support if unsure. Never use third-party recovery methods unless thoroughly vetted.

Advanced topics

For advanced users: learn about passphrase strategies, Shamir Backup (if supported by your model), coin-specific derivation paths, and air-gapped signing using an offline host. These techniques increase safety but also add complexity — document and test your procedures carefully.

Legal & trademark

Trézor, Trezor.io, and related trademarks are the property of their respective owners. This template is for informational purposes and demonstration only. If you plan to publish this page publicly, include accurate trademark attributions and consult legal counsel for compliance.

© Trezor.io/Start — Demo quick-start template. Not an official vendor page.