This guide walks through installing and setting up the MetaMask mobile app (metamask wallet mobile). I tested installation on both iOS and Android, connected to a handful of DeFi dApps, used WalletConnect, and ran a couple of swaps. My goal: get you up and running with practical, secure defaults — not hype.
What you’ll get from this page: clear, step-by-step setup, a short security checklist, daily-usage tips (mobile metamask browser vs WalletConnect), and links to deeper how-tos like revoke approvals and token management.
Short version: the mobile app is a hot wallet (software wallet). That means it’s great for daily DeFi activity but not for long-term custody of large balances. Keep a hardware wallet for real savings.
Minimum requirements:
Risks to accept up front:
And yes, you should plan a backup strategy before you touch any funds.
How to install the metamask wallet app:
Tip: Android gives you more freedom for external APKs, but that also means more risk. Stick to the official stores.
Step-by-step — create a new wallet:
Step-by-step — restore an existing wallet:
If you have a single seed phrase controlling multiple accounts, restoring the seed restores all those accounts (they are deterministic).
For more on import and recovery: see import-and-recovery.
There are two primary ways to use dApps from your phone: the in-app browser and WalletConnect.
Which to use? I use the in-app browser for quick trades (it’s faster). I use WalletConnect when I’m visiting a dApp through a link or when the site recommends WalletConnect.
Swaps:
Staking:
Token detection: the app auto-detects popular ERC-20 tokens on the networks you use. Add custom tokens manually if they don’t show.
NFTs: the wallet can show NFT collections, but mobile views can get noisy. If an NFT isn’t visible, use the contract address and token ID to add it manually (see nft-management).
Spam tokens and NFTs are common. Hide unknown tokens or remove them from the UI; they don’t remove on-chain balances.
Security settings to enable during or right after setup:
Under the hood: the wallet stores private keys encrypted on the device. When you create transactions you approve locally; the app signs them then sends to the network via an RPC node. If you add a custom RPC you’re pointing the app at a different node for network data (see custom-rpc).
Use hardware wallets for large balances. You can pair hardware devices with the mobile app for transaction signing (see connect-ledger).
If anything seems off (unexpected approval request, strange QR codes, or links from email), stop and check phishing-scams-and-email-frauds.
Best for:
Look elsewhere if:
Is it safe to keep crypto in a hot wallet?
Short answer: safe for small, active balances. Not safe for long-term storage of large amounts. Move savings to a hardware wallet or use multi-sig for shared custody.
How do I revoke token approvals?
Open the approvals page in the app or use a trusted approvals-revoke tool (see revoke-approvals). Revoke any unlimited allowances and only approve the exact amount you need.
What happens if I lose my phone?
Restore on a new device using your seed phrase or private key. If you lose both the phone and the seed phrase, funds are unrecoverable. I’ve seen people lose thousands by delaying a paper backup. Don’t be that person.
| Feature | MetaMask mobile app | Browser extension | Hardware wallet |
|---|---|---|---|
| Form factor | Mobile-first app | Desktop browser | Physical device |
| In-app dApp browser | Yes | No (browser is host) | No |
| WalletConnect | Yes | Yes | Can pair |
| Built-in swap | Yes | Yes | No |
| Biometric lock | Yes | N/A | N/A |
| Hardware wallet pairing | Yes (pair) | Yes | Native |
Installing the MetaMask wallet mobile app is straightforward, but the security work starts at setup. Write down your seed phrase, enable biometrics, and practice small transactions first. In my experience the mobile browser and WalletConnect cover most daily DeFi needs, but always treat token approvals and unfamiliar dApps with suspicion.
Ready to continue? If you want desktop parity, see Set up on desktop. For step-by-step recovery, go to import-and-recovery. And if you plan to move larger amounts, read about hardware wallets and pairing options.