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Setup and features of enkrypt wallet guide



Setup and features of enkrypt wallet guide

Install the Enkrypt browser extension only from the official website or verified store pages to avoid phishing clones. Upon launching, the system immediately prompts you to generate a 12-word recovery phrase; store this offline in a fireproof safe or a metal seed plate, never in a digital note or cloud storage. The interface defaults to the Ethereum mainnet, but you can add networks like Polygon, BNB Chain, or Avalanche in under ten seconds via the network dropdown menu in the top-left corner.


The built-in exchange aggregator lets you swap tokens directly from the extension, pulling quotes from multiple decentralized exchanges to minimize slippage. For managing assets across different blockchains, use the "Portfolio" tab to view balances in fiat equivalents, while the transaction log shows exact gas fees in USD for every sent token. When interacting with decentralized applications, the "Connect" button reveals a granular permissions panel where you can approve specific token allowances or revoke access entirely without leaving the dApp interface.


To harden security, enable the "Require confirmation for swaps" toggle in settings, and set a custom gas limit for high-value transfers to avoid failed transactions during network congestion. The extension supports hardware wallet pairing via Ledger or Trezor–plug in the device, select "Connect Hardware Wallet" from the main menu, and confirm the derivation path; the keys never leave the hardware module. For privacy, the "Hide balances" option obscures all asset figures with asterisks until you click the eye icon, preventing shoulder surfers from spotting your portfolio.

Setup and Features of Enkrypt Wallet Guide

Download the Enkrypt extension exclusively from the Chrome Web Store or Firefox Add-ons site, not from third-party mirrors. During initial boot, select "Create a new wallet" and secure your 12-word recovery phrase using a steel plate or a hardware vault, as digital screen captures or cloud backups are prone to compromise. The generated password acts as a local encryption key for your device’s storage, distinct from on-chain private keys.


After creation, fund the wallet by copying the Ethereum or Polkadot address and sending assets from an exchange–avoid using the same address repeatedly for privacy tokens like USDT on Stellar. The built-in swap aggregator checks KyberSwap and Uniswap liquidity pools automatically, but manual slippage adjustment to 0.5% prevents failed trades on volatile pairs.
Use the "Multi-Chain Token Manager" to add custom RPCs for networks like Arbitrum Nova or Base; input the chain ID (e.g., 42170 for Nova) directly from Chainlist.org to avoid phishing endpoints. The integrated fiat on-ramp via Banxa requires a verified ID with a passport scan–delays occur if the photo’s flash exposes glare.


Navigating the app’s settings: disable the "Automatic Gas Estimation" in the Gas Tracker tab and set a custom base fee of 30 Gwei for Ethereum mainnet to bypass peak-hour spikes. For NFT management, the gallery view only displays assets from the active network–toggle to Polygon or Solana to refresh metadata if your collectible appears frozen. The built-in tax report generator exports CSV files filtered by year and token type, but it omits native tokens purchased via direct withdrawal; manual logging of those entries avoids audit discrepancies.

How to Install and Create Your First Enkrypt Wallet Across Browsers

Open your target browser (Chrome, Firefox, Brave, or Edge) and navigate to the official extension store. For Chrome and Brave, use the Chrome Web Store; Firefox users must access the Firefox Browser Add-ons page. Search for "Enkrypt" by KILT Protocol and verify the developer is "KILT Foundation." Click "Add to [Browser Name]" and confirm the installation prompt. A pop-up immediately requests permissions for reading and changing data on websites–this is standard for wallet extensions and allows transaction signing without keystrokes.


After installation, click the Enkrypt icon pinned to your toolbar. The initial screen displays three onboarding routes: "Create new wallet," "Import wallet" (for recovery phrases from other solutions like MetaMask or Keplr), and "Connect ledger" (hardware device pairing). Choose "Create new wallet" to receive a 12-word secret recovery mnemonic. Write these words physically on paper using the offline copy tool provided–do not screenshot, email, or store them in cloud services. The interface then demands you confirm 3 random words from the seed to prove recording was successful.


Set a wallet password meeting these criteria: minimum 12 characters, combining uppercase letters, numbers, and special symbols. This password encrypts the local store of your private keys; losing it without the seed phrase locks you out permanently. Enkrypt auto-selects Ethereum Mainnet as the default network, but you can immediately toggle to Polygon, BNB Smart Chain, or 15+ other chains via the network dropdown. The default account, labeled "Account 1," displays a 0xe4… hex address and a zero balance. Click the "Receive" button to copy this address for your first token deposit.


For cross-browser synchronization, export your wallet via "Settings > Export Wallet" to obtain an encrypted JSON file protected by your password. Install Enkrypt in a second browser, choose "Import wallet," upload the JSON file, and enter the same password. Verification: both browsers will show identical account addresses and balances. Critical limitation–this method does not sync transaction history or network preferences; you must adjust network settings manually on each browser. Always test the synchronization by reloading the extension after import.

Q&A:
How do I actually set up the Enkrypt wallet for the first time on my browser, and what happens to my existing Ethereum wallet if I already have one?

To set up Enkrypt, you first install the browser extension from the Chrome Web Store or the official Enkrypt website. After installation, click the extension icon and select "Create a New Wallet." You will be asked to set a strong master password—this encrypts your local data and must be entered each time you open the wallet. Then, Enkrypt generates a 12 or 24-word seed phrase. Write this down on paper and store it offline; do not take a screenshot or save it digitally. The wallet then creates a default Ethereum account and a Bitcoin account. If you already have an existing Ethereum wallet (like MetaMask), you can import it by selecting "Import Wallet" and entering your existing seed phrase or private key. Enkrypt does not overwrite your old wallet; it adds it as a separate account within the same interface. The wallet supports multiple accounts and networks (Ethereum, Polygon, BSC, etc.) simultaneously, so your old balances appear automatically once the network is selected.

I see Enkrypt supports Bitcoin and Solana too. How does the multi-chain feature work in practice? Do I need separate seed phrases for each chain?

Enkrypt uses a single seed phrase to generate separate key pairs for each blockchain it supports. When you create a wallet, the same 24-word seed produces an Ethereum address, a Bitcoin address, a Solana address, and addresses for other chains like Polygon and Avalanche. You do not need separate seed phrases. In the wallet interface, you simply toggle between networks using a dropdown menu at the top. Each network shows its own balance, token list, and transaction history. For example, if you receive SOL on Solana, it appears only when you switch to the Solana network. The wallet also manages contract addresses for each chain automatically—so USDC on Ethereum and USDC on Polygon are listed as separate assets. One thing to note: while the seed is shared, private keys for each chain remain isolated. This means compromising one chain’s private key does not automatically compromise others, although if your master password or seed is exposed, all chains are vulnerable.

What happens to my Enkrypt wallet if my browser crashes or I switch to a different computer? Is the seed phrase the only way to recover it?

Yes, the 24-word seed phrase is the single recovery method. Enkrypt does not store your keys on any server; everything is local to the browser extension’s storage. If your browser crashes or you uninstall the extension, your wallet data is erased from that browser. To recover enkrypt wallet on a new device, you install Enkrypt again, select "Import Wallet," and enter your seed phrase. The wallet will regenerate all your addresses and balances. However, there is a nuance: any custom network configurations (like adding a testnet or a custom RPC) are not saved in the seed phrase. You will need to add those manually after recovery. Also, your transaction history is tied to the blockchain itself—it is not stored in the wallet locally. So after recovery, your previous transactions will still appear on the block explorer, but the wallet’s local transaction log starts empty. I recommend writing down both your seed phrase and any custom network settings if you rely on them.

Can I connect Enkrypt to decentralized apps like Uniswap or OpenSea, and does it work the same as MetaMask?

Yes, Enkrypt injects a Web3 provider into your browser, so it works with most dApps that expect MetaMask or WalletConnect. When you visit a dApp like Uniswap, you click "Connect Wallet," and Enkrypt appears as "Enkrypt" or "Enkrypt Wallet" in the list of options. After selecting it, you approve the connection request. The interaction is similar to MetaMask: you sign transactions, approve token allowances, and switch networks inside the dApp. However, there are a few differences. Enkrypt does not automatically switch to the correct network for every dApp—sometimes you need to change the network manually in the wallet before connecting. Also, some newer dApps that rely on EIP-1193 standards may not detect Enkrypt if they specifically look for the `ethereum` object injected by MetaMask. In that case, you can enable "MetaMask compatibility mode" in Enkrypt’s settings, which makes the wallet appear as MetaMask to those dApps. For non-EVM chains like Solana, Enkrypt works with Solana dApps using its own provider, but you cannot use it for Solana dApps on the same browser tab as an Ethereum dApp—you need separate tabs.