Coin Buyer GuideCoin Buyer Guide
Guides

What Happens If Your Hardware Wallet Company Shuts Down?

Your coins do not disappear if Ledger, Trezor, or Tangem has company trouble, but your recovery path depends on the backup model you chose.

Reviewed byCoin Buyer Guide editorial teamReview methodology

This question sounds scarier than it usually is. Your coins live on the blockchain, not inside Ledger, Trezor, or Tangem headquarters. The real risk is whether you can still prove control with the backup model you chose.

Short answer

  • If you have a standard seed phrase and any passphrase you use, a company shutdown usually does not trap the coins.
  • If your wallet uses Trezor's newer SLIP39 backup, recovery is still possible, but you need compatible recovery support.
  • If you use Tangem seedless, the company is not holding your funds, but your escape route depends more on backup cards or an optional seed phrase than on cross-brand portability.

Quick decision table

Your setupIf the company disappears, what matters most?Main risk
Ledger with a 24-word recovery phraseThe phrase, the passphrase if you use one, and a compatible walletPhishing, missing words, or a forgotten passphrase
Trezor with BIP39 or SLIP39 backupThe correct backup type and enough shares if you use multi-shareAssuming every wallet restores SLIP39 when many only handle BIP39
Tangem seedless cardsHaving a working card set and the access codeNo normal cross-brand restore path if you relied only on seedless cards

Why the company usually is not the real point of failure

A hardware-wallet company can disappear and still not take your coins with it. What controls the coins is the recovery data: seed phrase, SLIP39 shares, passphrase, or Tangem card set.

A shutdown can still be inconvenient. Support can vanish, app updates can stop, and buying the same device again may become harder. But self-custody ownership does not come from customer support. It comes from the keys and backups you already control.

When Ledger and Trezor users are usually fine

Ledger's support says Secret Recovery Phrases are generic and can technically be entered into another wallet that follows the BIP39 standard. Ledger Academy also explains why BIP39 matters: it standardized seed phrases so supported wallet providers can restore the same accounts.

Trezor makes a similar point from the other direction. Its wallet-backup documentation says BIP39 is widely supported and can be recovered even without a Trezor device. The main catch is that newer Trezor devices often default to SLIP39 single-share backups. Those are still standardized, but not every wallet restores them as smoothly as BIP39.

So the practical rule is simple: if you want maximum vendor independence, know exactly which backup format you are using before you fund the wallet heavily.

Where Tangem changes the decision

Tangem says a non-custodial wallet means no company or third party can freeze your funds or recover them on your behalf. That is the good news.

The tradeoff is different portability. If you use Tangem in seedless mode, think in terms of remaining backup cards and your access code, not in terms of typing words into any wallet you want later. If broad cross-brand recovery matters to you, study the tradeoffs in Can You Restore a Hardware Wallet Backup on a Different Brand? and Seedless Wallets: Are They Safe?.

What to do before this becomes urgent

  1. Identify your backup type right now: BIP39 words, Trezor SLIP39, Tangem cards, or a Tangem seed phrase setup.
  2. Test the backup while the wallet still works with How to Test Your Hardware Wallet Backup Before You Need It.
  3. Record any passphrase separately and accurately. A company shutdown will not help you remember it.
  4. If replacement speed matters, read Should You Buy a Second Hardware Wallet as a Backup?.

How we checked this guide

We reviewed Ledger support on recovering from a failed device, Ledger Academy's BIP39 explanation, Trezor's official wallet-backup documentation covering BIP39 and SLIP39, and Tangem's official non-custodial and seed-phrase import material before publishing.

Bottom line

A hardware-wallet company shutting down is usually a recovery-planning problem, not an ownership problem. If you know your backup format, protect the passphrase, and test recovery before an emergency, you are much less dependent on any single brand.

Wallet shortlist

Pick by fit, not hype

Use Wallet Finder

Easiest mobile setup

Tangem

Best for: Beginners, mobile-first self-custody, and readers who dislike seed-phrase workflows.

Tradeoff: No device screen; you confirm actions in the mobile app.

Visit Tangem

Screen + app ecosystem

Ledger

Best for: Readers who want a dedicated device screen and broad app support.

Tradeoff: More traditional setup, with recovery-phrase responsibility.

Visit Ledger

Open-source leaning

Trezor

Best for: Readers who prefer a traditional hardware wallet and transparent design philosophy.

Tradeoff: Less mobile-first than Tangem and more setup responsibility than beginner wallets.

Visit Trezor

Free checklist

Before buying a wallet, check these 7 things

Use the wallet buying checklist to compare backup risk, device access, recovery plan, and where Tangem, Ledger, or Trezor fits.

Open checklist

Recommended next step

Where to go from here

Weekly newsletter

Get the Coin Buyer Guide digest

A practical weekly email with new wallet, exchange, card, tax, and crypto security guides — plus useful industry notes. No hype.

Wallet deals

Current wallet offers

Checked May 2026

Easy mobile self-custody

Tangem

Good fit if you want a card or ring wallet, a simple mobile setup, and a seedless backup option.

Visit Tangem

Screen + Ledger Live ecosystem

Ledger

Good fit if you want a dedicated hardware device, Ledger Live, and a broader app ecosystem.

Visit Ledger

Open-source leaning hardware wallet

Trezor

Good fit if you prefer a traditional seed-phrase wallet with a strong open-source reputation.

Visit Trezor