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Pontem wallet extension setup and usage guide



Pontem wallet extension setup and usage guide

Download the specific browser module from the Chrome Web Store or your browser’s add-on repository. Verify the publisher identity–only Install Pontem Wallet on Chrome the version marked as “verified” with over 10,000 users. After installation, locate the newly added icon in your browser’s toolbar (top-right corner). Click it once to initialize the core program. You will be prompted to create a fresh 12-word recovery phrase. Write this sequence on paper, store it offline, and never screenshot it. Confirm the phrase by selecting the words in correct order.


Next, rename your primary vault to something memorable (e.g., “Main Funds” or “Dev Account”). Set a strong local password–minimum 12 characters, mixing uppercase, numbers, and symbols. This password unlocks the session on your current device. Do not reuse the recovery phrase for this password. Once unlocked, the interface displays your public address (a long string starting with “0x”). Copy this address to receive test tokens from a faucet or transfer assets from a centralized exchange. To switch networks (mainnet vs. testnet), open the settings panel and select the target environment from the dropdown. The active network name appears at the top of the main screen.


For transaction signing, navigate to a decentralized application (dApp) like a market or a swapping interface. Click “Connect” on the dApp; your manager will pop up a request asking to share your public address. Approve this. When you initiate a transfer or buy, the manager asks you to review the gas fee and total value. Check the token symbol and amount–scammers often hide decimal shifts. Confirm the action by entering your local password. The transaction ID (hash) will appear on screen; paste it into a block explorer to track confirmation. Always revoke dApp connections from the settings menu after you finish.

Pontem Wallet Extension Setup and Usage Guide

Download the build from the official Chrome Web Store listing for “Pontem” to avoid counterfeit copies. Verify the publisher is “Pontem Network” and check the total number of users–above 300,000 is a positive signal. Reject any request to download a ZIP file from a third-party site.


After installation, click the puzzle piece icon in your browser toolbar, pin the Pontem icon, then click it. Select “Create a new wallet” and store the 12-word seed phrase on a hardware-based password manager (like a Ledger Stax or a dedicated flash drive), never on a cloud service or a screenshot. Use a strong passphrase of at least 12 random characters as a second layer–without it, the seed alone is useless if copied.


To fund the account, copy your Aptos address (starting with “0x”) from the main interface. Transfer at least 0.1 APT from a centralized exchange like Binance or Kraken. For testing, use the Aptos testnet faucet (faucet.devnet.aptoslabs.com) and switch the network in the wallet’s settings from “Mainnet” to “Testnet” by toggling the network dropdown–ignore the “Devnet” option unless you are a developer.


When interacting with a decentralized application, click “Connect” on the dApp and approve the prompt in the Pontem pop-up. Always verify the domain name–malicious sites mimic legitimate dApps like Liquidswap or Tortuga. Reject any transaction that requests more than one token approval unless you are performing a batch swap; single approvals reduce exposure to compromised contracts.


For swapping tokens within the wallet, open the “Swap” tab, select the input token (e.g., APT) and output token (e.g., USDC), and review the slippage tolerance–set it to 1% for stable pairs or 3% for volatile ones. Confirm the estimated gas fee (usually 0.001 APT) and the router used (Pontem’s own AMM). Cancel the transaction if the execution time exceeds 10 seconds, indicating network congestion or a failed route.


To stake APT, navigate to the “Staking” section, choose a validator with a commission rate below 10% and 100% uptime over the last 30 days–check this data on Aptos.aneka.io or similar explorers. Stake a minimum of 10 APT to earn rewards, which compound automatically. Unstaking requires a lock period of 5 epochs (approximately 10 hours); plan exit accordingly to avoid missing a market move.


If the browser crashes or the device is lost, restore the wallet on a fresh Chrome profile using the 12-word seed. Do not use the same passphrase as the previous setup–create a new one to invalidate the old encrypted store. After restoration, reapprove all token allowances on dApps, as these are lost during the recovery process. Test a small transaction (0.1 APT) before moving large amounts.

Downloading the Pontem Wallet Extension from Official Sources

Only download the application from the official Chrome Web Store listing. The correct direct URL is https://chromewebstore.google.com/detail/ followed by the unique identifier phkbamefinglkjbjiiljoicahlpnlfmg. Verify this string precisely before proceeding; any deviation indicates a counterfeit copy.


Open Google Chrome or any Chromium-based browser (Brave, Edge, Opera).
Navigate to the Chrome Web Store using the aforementioned URL.
Confirm the publisher name is "Pontem Foundation" and the listing shows over 50,000 users with a verified badge.
Click the blue "Add to Chrome" button and approve the permissions dialog that appears.


For Mozilla Firefox users, the official release resides exclusively on the Firefox Add-ons store at addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/pontem/. Do not use third-party sites like "extensions.io" or direct downloads from GitHub, as these are not signed by Mozilla and will not receive automatic security updates.


Check the download count: Genuine copies on Chrome Web Store accumulate millions of installations. A listing with fewer than 1,000 installs or zero reviews is likely malicious.
Inspect update dates: The "Last updated" field must show a date within the last 90 days. Abandoned versions become vectors for exploitation.
Review permissions: The legitimate module requests access only to "read and change your data on a specified set of sites" (Aptos-compatible domains) and "storage" for session keys. Refuse any prompt asking for camera, microphone, or broader internet access.


After installation, open chrome://extensions/?id=phkbamefinglkjbjiiljoicahlpnlfmg to cross-reference the installed version number with the one displayed on the Web Store. Version 2.0.8 is the current stable build as of October 2024. If mismatches occur, uninstall immediately and repeat the process.


Never use search engine ads to locate the download. Phishing ads frequently appear for "Aptos crypto app" or "Move language wallet" that copy the official icon but lead to a data-stealing clone. Bookmark the Web Store URL beforehand or use the direct link from the official Pontem Network website (pontem.network) under the "Developers" dropdown.

Creating a New Wallet or Importing an Existing Seed Phrase

Press "Create New" to generate a 24-word mnemonic phrase. This phrase is the sole key to your funds; store it offline on a metal plate or fireproof paper. Never photograph it, paste it into a note-taking app, or type it on any device connected to the internet.


For import, locate the 12 or 24-word sequence from your previous application. Enter each term in the correct order into the designated fields. The system will validate the checksum immediately; if an error appears, double-check capitalization and spacing–one typo rejects the entire phrase.


A newly generated seed will lead you to a fresh empty balance. Importing an existing seed will restore every address and token associated with that mnemonic on the supported networks. Be aware that assets on chains not yet integrated will remain invisible until support is added.


After entering the phrase, set a strong local password. This password encrypts the seed on your local device and is required each time the application locks or the browser restarts. Use a minimum of 12 characters combining uppercase, lowercase, numbers, and symbols. Avoid reusing passwords from other services.


If you imported a seed previously used with another tool, verify that the first derived address matches your records. Discrepancies usually indicate a different derivation path (commonly m/44'/60'/0'/0/0 for Ethereum-compatible chains). The application uses the standard path automatically, but you can confirm in the settings panel.


Once the seed is confirmed and password set, the interface will display your primary address. Make a small test transaction before moving significant value. Send 1-2 units of the native coin to the displayed address from an external source, then attempt to send that amount back out. This confirms both custody and outbound signing work correctly.

Securing Your Wallet: Backing Up the Seed Phrase and Setting a Password

Immediately after creating your vault, locate the 12-word recovery mnemonic provided by the interface. Write these words down exclusively on a physical medium–never store them in a cloud service, email draft, or screenshot folder. For maximum resilience, split the sequence into two separate fireproof steel plates and keep them in distinct, geographically separate locations. Test your backup by entering the first four words into an offline recovery tool; if even one character is incorrect, your assets are unreachable. Set a local session password of at least 16 characters, mixing uppercase, lowercase, numerals, and symbols, and ensure it is distinct from any other password you use. Do not enable biometric unlock if your device lacks a dedicated security chip (e.g., a TPM or Secure Enclave).


For risk mitigation, implement a tiered approach: use a hardware ledger for daily operations and the current secure environment for lower-frequency tasks. Assign a 30-minute auto-lock timer. Under no circumstances should you enter the recovery seed into any browser tab or application, even if it appears to be from the official developer; phishing sites often mimic the exact onboarding flow. Encrypt your written backup using a known cipher (e.g., XOR with a personal key) before storing it, or use a passphrase derived from your own arbitrary sentence–this adds a 25th word layer to the BIP39 standard. If you must store a digital copy, use a VeraCrypt container on an air-gapped machine booted from a live USB. The table below outlines recommended storage tiers:



Storage Method
Security Level
Recommended Use


Fireproof steel plate, two locations
Highest
Primary backup of seed phrase


Encrypted VeraCrypt volume on air-gapped system
High
Secondary digital backup (short-term)


Paper in a bank safe deposit box
Medium
Third redundancy only


Q&A:
I just installed the Pontem wallet extension on Chrome. After creating a new wallet, it shows a seed phrase. What’s the safest way to store these 12 words without putting them on my computer or phone?

The safest method is to write the 12-word seed phrase on paper with a pen. Store that paper in a secure location like a fireproof safe or a bank deposit box. Avoid taking a screenshot, saving it in a text file, or typing it into any online service. If you lose access to the extension, those words are the only way to recover your wallet and funds. For extra protection, you can engrave the words on a metal plate to guard against fire or water damage.

Every time I try to connect Pontem wallet to a DApp on Aptos, it asks me to switch network. What network should I be on for test transactions?

For testing on the Aptos blockchain, you need to select the "Testnet" network inside the Pontem wallet extension. Open the extension, click the network dropdown at the top (usually showing "Mainnet" by default), and choose "Testnet". Some DApps may automatically prompt a network switch; you can approve that request. After switching, you can get free test APT tokens from an Aptos testnet faucet. For real transactions, switch back to "Mainnet".









When I try to import my existing wallet from another app using the seed phrase into Pontem, it asks for a derivation path. I don’t know what that is. Which option should I pick?

Pontem wallet typically uses the standard Aptos derivation path: `m/44'/637'/0'/0'/0'`. During the import process, if the extension offers a dropdown with options like "Aptos (Standard)" or "BIP44", select the one that matches `m/44'/637'/0'/0'/0'`. If you see a field to enter a path manually, paste that exact path. This ensures your addresses and balances match your original wallet. If you pick the wrong path, Pontem will generate different addresses from the same seed phrase, and you won’t see your funds. You can always remove the imported wallet and try again with the correct path.

I installed the Pontem wallet extension on my Chrome browser, but I don't see the wallet icon on my toolbar. How do I pin it so it's always visible?

The extension icon is often hidden by default in the Chrome extensions menu, which is the puzzle piece icon at the top right of your browser. To pin the Pontem wallet, click on that puzzle piece icon to see a dropdown list of all your extensions. Find the Pontem wallet (it has a blue logo), and click the small pin icon next to it. Once pinned, the wallet icon will stay visible on your toolbar. If you still can't see it after that, check that the extension is enabled in `chrome://extensions` (type this into your address bar) and that you have it toggled on.

When I try to connect my Pontem wallet to a DApp (like a DeFi exchange), it asks me to approve a transaction that looks different from a regular token send. What is the difference between a "sign" request and a "send transaction" request, and which one should I be careful with?

A "send transaction" request is for actually moving coins or tokens on the blockchain, which costs gas fees and changes your balance. The DApp will show you the exact amount of tokens being sent and the target wallet address. A "sign" request (often called a "signature" or "sign message" request) is for proving you own the wallet without moving any funds. This is used for things like logging into a website or verifying your identity. However, some malicious sites use deceptive "sign" requests to trick you into signing a transaction that approves a smart contract to spend your tokens. You should treat any signing request with caution if you cannot clearly see what message or contract you are signing. If the message looks like a jumble of random letters and numbers (a hex string), or if it promises rewards or free tokens in exchange for your signature, reject it immediately. A legitimate, safe signing request will show you a clear, readable message or a specific "approve" action for a token you want to use.