How to Create Coinbase Wallet — Quick Start Guide

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How to Create Coinbase Wallet — Quick Start Guide

This quick start teaches you how to create Coinbase Wallet, how to get Coinbase Wallet address information, and how to open a Coinbase Wallet on mobile or in your browser extension so you can start using DeFi. I use software wallets every day, and in my experience the onboarding flows are straightforward — but small mistakes can cost time or money. Read the steps slowly. Test with tiny amounts first.

For a deeper independent review see Coinbase Wallet review and to understand the difference between this non-custodial software wallet and the exchange account see coinbase-vs-coinbase-wallet.

Who this wallet is best for (and who should look elsewhere)

  • Best for: users who want a non-custodial mobile-first wallet to connect with dApps, swap tokens quickly, and manage a multi-network crypto portfolio.
  • Not ideal for: people holding large amounts of crypto who want maximum cold storage security (see move-crypto-to-hardware-wallet).

Who should look elsewhere? If you need a hardware-backed private key or enterprise-grade custody, a software (hot) wallet isn’t the right long-term single place for large holdings.

Step by step: How to create Coinbase Wallet (mobile)

Step-by-step guide (mobile):

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  1. Install the official mobile app from your device store and open it.
  2. Tap Create a new wallet.
  3. Set a strong app passcode and enable biometrics if offered (Face ID/Touch ID).
  4. The app will show a seed phrase (recovery phrase). Write it down on paper and keep it offline. Do not screenshot.
  5. Optionally enable encrypted cloud backup (tied to iCloud/Google Drive) — read the risks below.
  6. Accept any permissions and finish onboarding. Complete a small receive test (0.0001 ETH or equivalent) before moving larger sums.

And test a small transaction first. Start small.

Onboarding screen — placeholder

Step by step: How to create Coinbase Wallet (browser extension)

Step-by-step guide (extension):

  1. Install the browser extension from your browser’s store.
  2. Click the extension icon and choose Create a new wallet.
  3. Create a password for the extension. This encrypts local data.
  4. The extension will generate a seed phrase. Write it down, verify it, store it offline.
  5. Configure network list and permissions for sites you’ll use.

The extension injects a provider into your browser (so dApps can request connections). But be careful which tabs you approve.

How to get Coinbase Wallet address and send funds

  • Find your address: open the app or extension, select the account and tap Copy address or Show QR. For a step-by-step visual see find-coinbase-wallet-address.
  • To receive: always confirm the network first (Ethereum mainnet vs an L2). Sending tokens to the wrong chain can lock funds.
  • To send: paste the recipient address, set gas fee (EIP-1559 fields on EVM networks), set slippage if swapping, and confirm.

Mistake I made once: selecting the wrong network before pasting an address. It costs time to recover (sometimes impossible). So pause and confirm.

Backup, recovery, and cloud backup trade‑offs

Backup options you'll see:

  • Seed phrase (recovery phrase): the canonical backup. Write it down and store multiple copies offline.
  • Optional encrypted cloud backup: convenient (restores via iCloud or Google Drive) but expands the attack surface.

But there’s a trade-off. Convenience is tempting. If you enable cloud backup, you reduce friction for recovery but increase exposure to account-level compromise on your device provider.

For detailed recovery steps see backup-and-recovery-coinbase-wallet and if you need to recover or remove a wallet on a lost device see recover-or-delete-coinbase-wallet.

Connecting to dApps: in-app browser vs WalletConnect

What are the options?

  • Mobile in-app browser: connect directly inside the wallet app (fast and self-contained).
  • WalletConnect: scan a QR or approve a session to link the wallet to desktop dApps.
  • Browser extension: the dApp sees an injected provider (common for desktop use).

When a dApp asks to connect, check the domain, the requested chain, and the requested token approvals. Approve only what you expect. For more on connections see walletconnect-with-coinbase-wallet.

Daily workflow: swaps, staking, gas and token approvals

If you plan to swap tokens daily, the built-in swap aggregator saves time compared with opening an external DEX. In my experience the routing is fine for common pairs, but I still check slippage and price impact.

  • Swaps: choose slippage tolerance and review the aggregator route. Test with a tiny amount first.
  • Staking: many protocols require connecting to a dApp (Lido, Aave, etc.). The wallet itself often only facilitates the transaction; validator selection happens inside the protocol.
  • Gas fees: the wallet exposes EIP-1559 fields (base fee and priority fee). You can accept recommended values or set custom priority fees for speed.

Token allowance note: approve only the amount you want to spend when possible. To clean up old approvals see revoke-token-approvals-coinbase-wallet.

Security checklist and common mistakes

  • Write your seed phrase on paper. Not in cloud notes.
  • Enable biometric lock on mobile for daily convenience.
  • Use small test transactions when interacting with new dApps.
  • Check the chain ID before sending funds (avoid cross-chain mistakes).
  • Revoke stale token approvals periodically.

If you want stronger security, consider transferring large holdings to a hardware wallet (see coinbase-wallet-vs-hardware-wallet).

FAQ

Q: Is it safe to keep crypto in a hot wallet? A: Hot wallets are convenient for active DeFi use. They are less secure than offline hardware keys. Use hot wallets for daily access and smaller balances; store long-term funds offline.

Q: How do I revoke token approvals? A: Use on-chain revocation tools (in-wallet or external) to revoke approvals by reviewing allowances and submitting a revoke transaction. See revoke-token-approvals-coinbase-wallet.

Q: What happens if I lose my phone? A: Restore the wallet using your seed phrase on a new device (or recover from an encrypted cloud backup if you enabled it). See recover-or-delete-coinbase-wallet for step-by-step instructions.

Q: How do I get Coinbase Wallet private key? A: You can export private keys for specific accounts if you need them (risky). Prefer seed phrase restores instead. See get-coinbase-wallet-private-key for details.

Conclusion & next reads

Creating and opening a Coinbase Wallet is a short process, but the security steps you take right after setup determine how safe your crypto will be. I recommend writing your seed phrase offline, enabling biometrics for convenience, and testing with small amounts before committing larger sums. But remember: a hot wallet trades convenience for exposure.

If you want a full feature breakdown, read our Coinbase Wallet review. For security-focused advice see coinbase-wallet-security-features and for daily trading workflows see coinbase-wallet-daily-workflow-for-traders.

Want help with a specific step? Check the installation and onboarding guide (coinbase-wallet-installation-onboarding) or the quick recovery page (recover-or-delete-coinbase-wallet).

Happy testing. Stay safe out there.

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