Exodus Web3 Wallet | Exodus® Browser Extension with Ledger®

A practical presentation: features, integration steps, security, and recommended workflows.

Overview

What is Exodus Web3 Wallet?

Exodus Web3 Wallet is a user-friendly wallet experience offering an on-ramp to decentralized applications (dApps), token management, and portfolio visibility. The Exodus Browser Extension acts as a bridge between your browser and Web3 websites, and it can pair with hardware wallets like Ledger® to secure private keys offline.

Why combine Exodus extension with Ledger?

Combining a software wallet extension with a Ledger hardware device gives you convenience plus the highest level of custody for private keys. The extension supplies UX and dApp connectivity, while the Ledger device signs sensitive transactions offline—reducing exposure to browser-based exploits.

Key Features

Core capabilities

  • One-click dApp connection and wallet switching.
  • Portfolio and asset tracking across multiple chains.
  • Built-in token swaps and fiat on/off ramps (where supported).
  • Seamless Ledger integration for hardware-secured signing.
  • User-friendly recovery flow and seed management.

Security highlights

The most important security principle is: your private keys should never be exposed to the Internet. When using Ledger with Exodus, keys remain on the device. The Exodus extension only requests signatures and displays transaction previews, while Ledger cryptographically signs them.

Step-by-step Setup

1) Install the Exodus Browser Extension (recommended browsers: Chrome/Edge/Brave/Firefox)

Install the official extension from the browser store, then follow the on-screen setup to create or restore a wallet.

2) Prepare your Ledger device

Ensure your Ledger firmware and Ledger Live apps are up-to-date. Install the relevant blockchain app (e.g., Ethereum, Solana) on Ledger via Ledger Live.

3) Pair Exodus extension with Ledger

In the Exodus extension, choose "Connect hardware wallet" or "Use Ledger". Follow the prompts: connect the USB/USB-C or use Bluetooth (if supported), open the correct app on Ledger, and allow the connection. Confirm addresses on the device.

4) Approving transactions

When a dApp requests a transaction, the extension shows details; the Ledger device displays the fine-grained data for you to verify and sign. Only approve transactions that match what you expect.

Best Practices & Workflows

Daily usage

Use the Exodus extension for browsing dApps and viewing balances. For any transaction involving value transfer or contract interactions, prefer signing with Ledger. Keep small "hot" balances in the extension-only accounts for convenience, while storing the majority of funds on Ledger-protected accounts.

Backup & recovery

Store your Ledger recovery phrase and any Exodus recovery information securely and offline. Use a fireproof safe, steel backup, or secure custody solution for high-value holdings. Never photograph or upload recovery seeds to the cloud.

Tip:

Regularly update browser, extension, and Ledger firmware. Enable OS-level protections like disk encryption and a screen lock.

Troubleshooting

Common issues

  • Ledger not detected — try a different cable/port and ensure the blockchain app is open on the device.
  • dApp won't connect — refresh the page, disconnect other wallet extensions, or clear the extension’s dApp permissions.
  • Transaction fails — double-check gas settings, contract approval, and confirm the network selected on Ledger and the extension match.

When to contact support

Reach out to official support channels if you suspect device compromise or software bugs. Never share private keys, recovery phrases, or 2FA codes via support chat.

Privacy & Compliance

Exodus and Ledger prioritize user sovereignty: wallets are non-custodial, so users control their keys. Privacy features vary by blockchain; for regulatory or tax obligations consult local regulations and maintain careful records for transactions.

Prepared for: General audiences. This guide is educational and not financial advice.