If you searched "where can i find my trust wallet address" or "where is my address trust wallet", this guide walks you through finding your Trust Wallet crypto address and receiving funds safely. I use mobile wallets every day. In my experience most problems come from picking the wrong chain or sharing an address carelessly. This guide is practical and step-by-step — with tips I learned the hard way.
Short answer: open the app, pick the asset, tap Receive. Long answer: the wallet shows an address (string) and a QR code for that asset — but there are a couple of decisions to make before you copy and share it.
How to find it (mobile app):
(Screenshot placeholder: Receive screen with QR and Copy button)
Note: some tokens exist on multiple chains. If a network picker appears, choose the correct chain before copying the address. Otherwise your funds may be lost or require a manual recovery process.
See the general sending steps in Send & receive guide and the multi-chain primer at Multi-chain support.
Different blockchains use different address formats. Below is a quick reference so you can recognize which address belongs to which chain.
| Blockchain / Standard | Typical address prefix / example | Common pitfall |
|---|---|---|
| Ethereum / ERC-20 | 0xabc123... (0x prefix) | Sending ERC-20 to a non-EVM chain |
| BNB Smart Chain / BEP-20 | 0xdef456... (0x prefix) | Looks like Ethereum but chain must match |
| BNB Beacon Chain / BEP-2 | bnb1xyz... | Different prefix; exchanges often require MEMO |
| Bitcoin (BTC) | 1..., 3..., or bc1... | Use correct address type when withdrawing from exchanges |
| Solana (SOL) | 4ZUr... (base58 string) | Wrong chain = lost tokens unless recoverable |
These are common formats you will see in the wallet UI. If a token doesn't appear after receiving, you may need to add a custom token (see troubleshooting below).
Why a test? Because a wrong network often means lost tokens or a long recovery process involving the sending platform's support team. I've learned that the $5 test can save hundreds.
If you're sending from an exchange, double-check whether a MEMO / tag is required. Exchanges often include a MEMO field for BEP-2, Cosmos, or XRP deposits.
BNB can mean two things: BNB on the Beacon chain (BEP-2) and BNB on BNB Smart Chain (BEP-20). They look different.
So how do you find the right one? Tap BNB in the app, then tap Receive. If the app lists networks, pick the one your sender plans to use. If you accidentally give the wrong address, contact the sender/exchange right away. Recovery is sometimes possible but often slow and manual.
For more about BSC and Ethereum differences see BSC guide and ETH & L2 guide.
QR code pros: fast, avoids clipboard malware. QR cons: a malicious QR scanner could rewrite the address (rare, but possible on compromised devices).
Copy/paste pros: simple and universal. Copy/paste cons: clipboard hijacking malware can replace your copied address with the attacker’s. Always verify at least the first and last 4–6 characters in the app before confirming the send.
And always check the destination address on-chain after the transaction is broadcast (paste it into a block explorer). But don't paste sensitive data into unknown websites.
If funds appear on-chain but not in-app, I recommend checking the transaction hash on a block explorer and keeping screenshots for support requests.
But remember: convenience comes with trade-offs. A hot software wallet is great for DeFi and daily swaps, yet it’s not the place to store life savings without additional protection.
Q: Is it safe to keep crypto in a hot wallet? A: Hot wallets are convenient for active use but less secure than cold storage. Use a hardware wallet for large, long-term holdings, and keep smaller amounts in your software wallet for day-to-day DeFi activity.
Q: How do I revoke token approvals? A: You can revoke approvals with third-party tools (connect via WalletConnect) or via block explorer interfaces. See our step-by-step guide: Revoke approvals and allowances.
Q: What happens if I lose my phone? A: If you have your seed phrase backed up, you can restore the wallet on a new device. See Restore / import wallet and Lost phone recovery.
Q: How do I find trust wallet crypto logo address? A: The wallet shows the token icon next to the Receive screen so you can visually confirm the token. Always verify the address string too; icons can be spoofed in screenshots.
Finding your Trust Wallet address is quick once you know where to look: open the app, select the asset, tap Receive, pick the right network, and copy or share the QR. Test first. I recommend adding a small test transaction when using a new counterparty or network.
Ready to send or receive for the first time? Check the step-by-step sending guide at Send & receive and make sure your seed phrase is safely stored with Backup & recovery.
If you want deeper reading after this: explore multi-chain behavior in Multi-chain support, gas practice in Gas fees & optimization, and how to add tokens in Add custom token.