Toncoin is growing fast, but keeping it safe means getting it off exchanges and into cold storage. We tested the top hardware wallets with native TON support — Ledger Nano X, Tangem, and Keystone 3 Pro — so you can pick the one that fits your setup.
Toncoin (TON) has been on a tear. The Open Network now hosts everything from DeFi to Telegram mini-apps, and if you're holding TON tokens, the worst place to keep them is on an exchange. Cold storage isn't optional — it's the difference between owning your coins and hoping an exchange doesn't get hacked.
The problem? Not every hardware wallet supports TON. Trezor, for example, still doesn't.4 So we looked at the three devices that actually work with TON today, tested them against real wallet integrations, and ranked them by what matters most: security, ease of use, and how well they play with the TON ecosystem.
| Pick | Best for | Connectivity | TON Integration |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ledger Nano X | Versatility & multi-chain | Bluetooth, USB-C | MyTonWallet, Ledger Live |
| Tangem Wallet | Simplicity & portability | NFC | Tangem app, Tonkeeper |
| Keystone 3 Pro | Maximum security (air-gapped) | QR codes, USB-C | Tonkeeper |
Ledger is the name everyone knows, and for good reason. The Nano X supports over 5,500 assets, and TON was added officially through Ledger Live, making it one of the most straightforward setups for Toncoin.1
Why it works for TON: You install the TON app via Ledger Live, then connect to MyTonWallet (the leading desktop/web wallet for TON) for transaction signing. The Bluetooth connectivity means you can use it with your phone too — no dongles needed.
The trade-off: The Nano X isn't cheap, and if you only hold TON, you're paying for multi-chain support you might not need. But if you diversify across chains (Ethereum, Solana, Bitcoin), this is the one wallet that does it all.
Bottom line: The best all-rounder for anyone holding TON alongside other crypto.
Tangem takes a completely different approach. It's a credit-card-sized metal wallet with no battery, no screen, and no cables. You tap it to your phone via NFC, and that's it.2
Why it works for TON: Tangem has dedicated TON support built into its app. You create a wallet, tap the card, and your Toncoin is secured by the secure element chip inside the card. It integrates with Tonkeeper for managing tokens and interacting with TON dApps.
The trade-off: No screen means you're trusting your phone's display to show the correct transaction details. For large amounts, some people prefer a device with its own screen. Also, if you lose the card and your backup, the coins are gone — no seed phrase recovery (unless you get the 3-card set).
Bottom line: Perfect for daily use and smaller amounts. The most portable option by far.
Keystone is the security-first option. It's an air-gapped device — it never connects to your computer or phone via cable or Bluetooth. All transactions are signed via QR codes.3
Why it works for TON: Keystone has an official integration with Tonkeeper, the most popular mobile wallet on TON. You create the transaction in Tonkeeper, scan a QR code with the Keystone, sign it, and scan another QR code to broadcast. The private key never touches an internet-connected device.
The trade-off: The QR-code workflow is slower than plugging in a cable or tapping a card. And the device itself is larger and pricier than the others. It's overkill if you're moving small amounts regularly.
Bottom line: The gold standard for large TON holdings. If you're storing serious value, this is the one.
| Feature | Ledger Nano X | Tangem Wallet | Keystone 3 Pro |
|---|---|---|---|
| Connectivity | Bluetooth, USB-C | NFC | QR codes, USB-C |
| Screen | Yes (OLED) | No | Yes (touch) |
| Battery | Rechargeable | None (passive) | Rechargeable |
| TON wallet integration | MyTonWallet | Tonkeeper, Tangem app | Tonkeeper |
| Multi-chain | 5,500+ assets | 50+ assets | 40+ chains |
| Ease of setup | Moderate | Very easy | Moderate |
| Best for | All-round use | Portability | High-value storage |
We started with a simple question: which hardware wallets actually support Toncoin today? That ruled out Trezor immediately.4 From there, we looked at three factors:
All three picks passed. Each has a different trade-off, which is why we ranked them by use case rather than a single score.
If you hold Toncoin, get a hardware wallet. Which one depends on how you use TON:
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