MetaMask vs Coinbase Wallet — Feature comparison
Short version first: which is better? It depends on what you do with crypto. If you live in desktop DeFi and need advanced RPC and developer controls, MetaMask is the typical go-to. If you use your phone most of the time and want a mobile-first dApp browser with a simpler onboarding flow, Coinbase Wallet often feels smoother. Which answer is right for you? That depends on your priorities and how you balance convenience against control.
Head-to-head feature table
| Feature |
MetaMask |
Coinbase Wallet |
| Form factors |
Browser extension + mobile app |
Mobile app + browser extension |
| Primary focus |
EVM-compatible DeFi & developer workflows |
Mobile-first user experience and dApp browser |
| dApp connectivity |
Injected provider on desktop; mobile dApp browser and WalletConnect support |
Mobile dApp browser and WalletConnect; deep links/QR for desktop |
| Built-in swap |
Yes — aggregator + slippage controls |
Yes — in-app swaps and price quotes |
| Staking |
Connect to staking dApps / services |
Connect to staking dApps / services |
| Hardware wallet support |
Integrates with Ledger/Trezor via extension |
Varies by platform; check settings |
| Backup & recovery |
Seed phrase; device sync options |
Seed phrase; optional device features vary |
| Token & NFT UI |
Token list + custom token add; NFT viewing on mobile |
Token list + token discovery; NFT viewing on mobile |
![MetaMask vs Coinbase Wallet UI - screenshot placeholder]()
Installation and onboarding (extension vs mobile)
MetaMask installs as a browser extension and also ships a mobile app. The extension injects a provider into web pages at window.ethereum, which is why most DeFi sites detect MetaMask automatically. On mobile, MetaMask offers an in-app dApp browser. If you want step-by-step setup for the extension or phone, see install-extension and install-mobile.
Coinbase Wallet is mobile-first and includes a built-in browser for dApps, plus an extension option for desktop. The mobile onboarding often uses clearer wording and guided steps for seed phrase backup. Both wallets require you to write down a seed phrase and store it offline. No shortcuts.
Daily usage: dApps, swaps, and WalletConnect
Which is better MetaMask or Coinbase Wallet for daily DeFi work? MetaMask is more common on desktop dApps because of the injected provider. That reduces friction when you open a lending protocol or a DEX. Coinbase Wallet can feel simpler on phone. It provides the same essential flows: connect, sign, approve, swap.
Both support WalletConnect for apps that don’t detect your extension. WalletConnect is a QR/deep-link bridge that sends requests to your mobile wallet for signing. Want to learn how to connect? See walletconnect-and-mobile-browser and connect-to-dapps.
How about swaps? Built-in swap features in both wallets use aggregator routing and let you set slippage and review quotes. If you swap often, check the quote breakdown and gas estimate before confirming. I have used the swap UI daily; it saves a tab, but it also adds a middle layer between you and raw DEX rates. Pay attention.
Multi-chain support and network handling
Both wallets support connecting to multiple EVM-compatible networks via custom RPC. That means you can add Polygon, BSC, Avalanche, or an L2 by entering an RPC URL and chain ID. Switch networks often? MetaMask makes network switching feel like changing tabs; Coinbase Wallet’s UX is more mobile-optimized. For how-to steps to add networks, see [add-custom-network], [how-to-add-polygon], and [add-optimism-arbitrum].
If you plan to hold tokens on many chains, test small transfers first. I once sent tokens to the wrong network address format and it took time to recover. Ouch.
Staking, bridges, and DeFi flows
Neither wallet is a staking marketplace by itself. Staking and liquid staking are usually done through DeFi services or dedicated validators you connect to via dApps. Both wallets make it easy to connect to Lido, Curve, or a validator interface; they don’t necessarily provide built-in validator selection in the same way a full staking client would. See [staking-and-liquid-staking] for options and [bridging-cross-chain] for bridging considerations.
Be cautious with bridges. They’re powerful but carry smart contract risk. Ask: do you trust the bridge’s security model and audits? And yes, bridging mistakes have cost users funds.
Security, backup, and recovery
Key facts. These are software (hot) wallets. That means private keys live on your device unless you pair a hardware wallet. Both use a seed phrase for recovery. Both let you set device-level locks (PIN or biometrics) on mobile. If you want hardware-level security, pair with a Ledger or Trezor — MetaMask integrates directly with those hardware wallets via the extension. For hardware guides see [connect-ledger] and [hardware-best-practices].
But remember: human error is the usual failure mode. I once approved an unlimited token allowance for a scam contract. I had to use a revoke tool and accept that a test token was gone. Always check approvals (see [revoke-approvals]) and don’t paste your seed phrase anywhere.
Cloud backups reduce recovery friction but add a threat vector. If a wallet offers encrypted cloud backup, weigh convenience against attack surface. See [backup-and-recovery-options] for details.
Token and NFT management
Both wallets show token balances and let you add custom tokens by contract address. Mobile apps usually display NFTs better than extension UIs. Spam tokens and spam NFTs are common. If you see a token you didn’t add, hide it or ignore it. For step-by-step token tasks, see [token-management] and [nft-management].
Gas fees, Layer 2s, and transaction settings
MetaMask exposes more raw gas controls and supports custom gas and EIP-1559 priority fee settings. That matters if you use Layer 2s or want precise fee control. Coinbase Wallet simplifies gas options for mobile users, which helps new users avoid mistakes but can hide advanced controls.
If you trade on L2s frequently, set up and test the L2 [layer2] RPC and understand how gas differs. You can save a lot on fees this way.
Who is this for: pick by use case
MetaMask — who it fits:
- Desktop-first DeFi users and developers
- People who want direct injected-provider connectivity to dApps
- Users who plan to pair a hardware wallet
MetaMask — who should look elsewhere:
- You only use mobile and want minimal friction for dApp browsing
- You prefer an ultra-simplified UX without many advanced settings
Coinbase Wallet — who it fits:
- Mobile-first users who want an integrated dApp browser
- People who value a guided onboarding and simpler UI
Coinbase Wallet — who should look elsewhere:
- You need deeper desktop developer tools or injected provider ubiquity
- You want advanced gas tuning and developer RPC workflows
FAQ
Q: Is it safe to keep crypto in a hot wallet?
A: Hot wallets are convenient for daily DeFi but carry higher risk than offline storage. Keep only what you actively use in a hot wallet and move long-term holdings to a hardware wallet. See [hardware-best-practices].
Q: How do I revoke token approvals?
A: Use the wallet's connected sites list to disconnect dApps and use a revoke tool to cancel unlimited allowances. See [revoke-approvals] for step-by-step guidance.
Q: What happens if I lose my phone?
A: If you have your seed phrase, you can restore the wallet on another device. If you used a cloud backup, follow the provider steps to restore. If you lost a device with an unlocked wallet and no seed phrase saved, recovery is much harder. See [backup-and-recovery-options].
Final take and next steps
Which wallet is better, Coinbase or MetaMask? There is no universal winner. MetaMask favors desktop DeFi workflows and developer-friendly features. Coinbase Wallet favors mobile-first ease and a cleaner onboarding path. Try both with small amounts and pick the one that matches how you use DeFi day to day.
Want to test them safely? Follow a step-by-step install guide: install-extension for desktop or install-mobile for phone setup. Start small, check approvals, and pair a hardware wallet for larger balances. Good habits beat feature lists every time.