Ledger unveils Wallet 4.0 as it shifts from cold storage to full crypto platform

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Ledger is rolling out Wallet 4.0, a broad upgrade to its all-in-one crypto app that aims to make self-custody feel more like a trading platform without dropping the company’s hardware-first security model.

The update begins with a limited release now, with additional features scheduled to arrive in April 2026. Ledger says the new version brings faster navigation, upgraded portfolio tools, expanded earn features, clearer swap fees, and real-time transaction notifications, while keeping sensitive actions tied to a Ledger signer.

The release builds on a product shift Ledger first unveiled at Ledger Op3n in Paris on October 22 and 23, 2025, when the company rebranded Ledger Live as Ledger Wallet and introduced the Nano Gen5 touchscreen signer. That move signaled a broader repositioning for Ledger from a hardware wallet maker to a platform combining devices, app-based services, and secure digital identity tools.

Wallet 4.0 is designed to make that platform more usable. Ledger says the app now features a redesigned home screen with market intelligence, including trending tokens and the Fear and Greed Index from CoinMarketCap, plus revamped portfolio analytics and a rebuilt earn section that shows users what assets can generate rewards and how those positions are performing. New users can also download the app before their hardware arrives, though private key generation and transaction signing still require a Ledger device.

Ledger wants to narrow the convenience gap between self-custody and centralized crypto apps while keeping signing on dedicated hardware. That matters in a market where wallet providers are increasingly competing on trading, swaps, yield access, and discovery rather than just cold storage.

Ledger says it has sold more than 8 million devices globally, and the company has repeatedly framed its newer wallet stack as the next stage of growth beyond one-time hardware sales.

Ledger expanded further into the US this month by appointing former Circle executive John Andrews as CFO and opening a New York office, moves the company described as part of a larger push in its biggest market. That expansion comes after reports earlier this year that Ledger was exploring a possible US listing, underscoring why recurring revenue from trading and services is becoming more important to its story.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Estefano Gomez. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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