[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":456},["ShallowReactive",2],{"page-\u002Fguides\u002Fwipe-hardware-wallet-before-selling-giving-away\u002F":3},{"id":4,"title":5,"body":6,"description":412,"extension":413,"meta":414,"navigation":451,"path":452,"seo":453,"stem":454,"__hash__":455},"content\u002Fguides\u002Fwipe-hardware-wallet-before-selling-giving-away.md","How to Wipe a Hardware Wallet Before You Sell, Gift, or Retire It",{"type":7,"value":8,"toc":392},"minimark",[9,18,21,37,40,45,105,109,116,119,128,137,141,146,149,152,156,159,162,165,185,189,192,195,198,202,206,209,216,219,233,240,244,247,253,256,268,272,275,282,285,293,296,299,313,324,328,331,334,348,351,355,358,375,379,386,389],[10,11,12,13,17],"p",{},"Short answer: ",[14,15,16],"strong",{},"do not wipe first and hope the rest works out later",".",[10,19,20],{},"If a Ledger, Trezor, or Tangem wallet still controls funds, the safe order is:",[22,23,24,28,31,34],"ol",{},[25,26,27],"li",{},"confirm how you would recover access today;",[25,29,30],{},"move funds if the old wallet or backup is being retired;",[25,32,33],{},"remove any risky old account references;",[25,35,36],{},"wipe the device only after you know the wallet is empty or no longer needed.",[10,38,39],{},"This matters when you are selling an old device, giving it to a family member, retiring a backup wallet, or cleaning up after a wallet upgrade.",[41,42,44],"h2",{"id":43},"quick-decision-table","Quick decision table",[46,47,48,61],"table",{},[49,50,51],"thead",{},[52,53,54,58],"tr",{},[55,56,57],"th",{},"Situation",[55,59,60],{},"Safer move",[62,63,64,73,81,89,97],"tbody",{},[52,65,66,70],{},[67,68,69],"td",{},"You are upgrading to a new wallet and the old seed phrase is still trusted",[67,71,72],{},"Restore or migrate first, verify access, then wipe the old device",[52,74,75,78],{},[67,76,77],{},"The old seed phrase may be exposed or failed a backup check",[67,79,80],{},"Create a brand-new wallet and transfer funds before wiping anything",[52,82,83,86],{},[67,84,85],{},"You want to give a wallet to a friend or family member",[67,87,88],{},"Empty it completely, wipe it with official software, and tell them to treat a new device as the cleaner option",[52,90,91,94],{},[67,92,93],{},"You use Tangem and one card is missing or one access code is forgotten",[67,95,96],{},"Do not assume a reset will cleanly solve it; confirm every remaining device and code before changing anything",[52,98,99,102],{},[67,100,101],{},"You are selling a device online",[67,103,104],{},"Wipe it only after funds are gone and the backup plan is verified; the buyer should still run official authenticity checks",[41,106,108],{"id":107},"what-wiping-actually-does","What wiping actually does",[10,110,111,112,115],{},"Wiping a hardware wallet removes the private keys and settings stored on that device. It does ",[14,113,114],{},"not"," move coins for you.",[10,117,118],{},"That is why wiping can be safe in one case and disastrous in another:",[120,121,122,125],"ul",{},[25,123,124],{},"safe if the wallet is already empty or the same accounts are recoverable somewhere else you control;",[25,126,127],{},"dangerous if the device is still the only working way to sign transactions.",[10,129,130,131,136],{},"If you are not sure whether you should restore the same wallet or make a clean replacement, read ",[132,133,135],"a",{"href":134},"\u002Fguides\u002Freplace-hardware-wallet-same-seed-or-new-wallet","should you restore an old seed phrase to a new hardware wallet?"," first.",[41,138,140],{"id":139},"before-you-wipe-any-hardware-wallet","Before you wipe any hardware wallet",[142,143,145],"h3",{"id":144},"_1-decide-whether-you-are-retiring-the-wallet-or-just-the-device","1. Decide whether you are retiring the wallet or just the device",[10,147,148],{},"These are different.",[10,150,151],{},"If you are keeping the same wallet but replacing the hardware, recover or migrate first. If you are retiring the wallet itself because the seed phrase might be exposed, a card is missing, or the old setup is too messy, create a new wallet and transfer funds before the wipe.",[142,153,155],{"id":154},"_2-verify-the-recovery-path-before-touching-reset","2. Verify the recovery path before touching reset",[10,157,158],{},"This is the step people skip.",[10,160,161],{},"For Ledger and Trezor, confirm the recovery phrase is still available and, where possible, verify it with the official backup-check flow before you reset the device. For Tangem, confirm that the remaining cards or ring still work, that you know the access code for each relevant device, and that you understand whether access-code recovery is enabled.",[10,163,164],{},"Related guides:",[120,166,167,173,179],{},[25,168,169],{},[132,170,172],{"href":171},"\u002Fguides\u002Ftest-hardware-wallet-backup","How to test your hardware wallet backup before you need it",[25,174,175],{},[132,176,178],{"href":177},"\u002Fguides\u002Flost-seed-phrase-wallet-still-works","Lost seed phrase but wallet still works",[25,180,181],{},[132,182,184],{"href":183},"\u002Fguides\u002Fforgot-hardware-wallet-pin","Forgot your hardware wallet PIN?",[142,186,188],{"id":187},"_3-move-funds-first-when-the-wallet-itself-is-being-retired","3. Move funds first when the wallet itself is being retired",[10,190,191],{},"If the old wallet should no longer protect long-term funds, move assets out before the wipe.",[10,193,194],{},"Ledger's official recovery-phrase-change flow is clear about the order: move assets to temporary accounts you control, then reset the device, create a new recovery phrase, add new accounts, and transfer funds back. It also notes the practical transfer order that many users miss: send tokens first, then the native coin needed for fees.",[10,196,197],{},"That same logic applies broadly. If the reason for wiping is compromise risk or messy backup history, treat the wipe as the last step, not the first.",[41,199,201],{"id":200},"brand-by-brand-wipe-rules","Brand-by-brand wipe rules",[142,203,205],{"id":204},"ledger-wipe-only-after-you-know-the-recovery-path","Ledger: wipe only after you know the recovery path",[10,207,208],{},"Ledger says a factory reset removes private keys, applications, and settings. It also says a reset can be used to set up a device as new, restore another Secret Recovery Phrase, or safely transfer the device to someone else.",[10,210,211,212,215],{},"That makes Ledger straightforward ",[14,213,214],{},"if"," you already know whether you are keeping the same wallet or creating a new one.",[10,217,218],{},"Use the safe sequence:",[22,220,221,224,227,230],{},[25,222,223],{},"confirm the Secret Recovery Phrase, Ledger Recovery Key, or Ledger Recover path if relevant;",[25,225,226],{},"move funds first if you are abandoning the old wallet;",[25,228,229],{},"reset from device settings or by three wrong PIN attempts only when you are ready;",[25,231,232],{},"if the device is leaving your possession, do not include any old recovery sheet or handwritten notes.",[10,234,235,236,17],{},"If you are replacing a Ledger because the backup might be compromised, also read ",[132,237,239],{"href":238},"\u002Fguides\u002Fledger-recovery-key-vs-ledger-recover","Ledger Recovery Key vs Ledger Recover",[142,241,243],{"id":242},"trezor-check-the-backup-before-you-wipe","Trezor: check the backup before you wipe",[10,245,246],{},"Trezor's documentation is especially blunt here: make sure you have a valid wallet backup before wiping the device. Its wipe guidance says the wallet data on the device is erased, and its PIN-reset guidance says a factory reset erases everything on the device, including firmware.",[10,248,249,250,17],{},"For a seller or hand-me-down scenario, the important practical point is simple: ",[14,251,252],{},"wipe only after the wallet backup is checked and the funds are not depending on that device anymore",[10,254,255],{},"Trezor also distinguishes between a normal wipe and a factory reset from bootloader mode. Some wipe flows erase the wallet but not the firmware, while bootloader-mode factory reset removes firmware too. The buyer still needs to use Trezor Suite, run the official setup flow, and verify authenticity.",[10,257,258,259,263,264,17],{},"For more on device trust, see ",[132,260,262],{"href":261},"\u002Fguides\u002Fhow-to-verify-hardware-wallet-is-genuine","how to verify your hardware wallet is genuine"," and ",[132,265,267],{"href":266},"\u002Fguides\u002Fshould-you-buy-a-used-hardware-wallet","should you buy a used hardware wallet?",[142,269,271],{"id":270},"tangem-do-not-reset-a-card-set-casually","Tangem: do not reset a card set casually",[10,273,274],{},"Tangem has the easiest device format to hand someone physically and one of the easiest setups to make messy operationally.",[10,276,277,278,281],{},"Tangem's reset guidance says you must transfer coins out before resetting because the reset erases the current private and public keys. It also warns users to keep track of the access code for ",[14,279,280],{},"all"," devices because people sometimes reset every device except one and then realize the last remaining card is useless if its code is forgotten.",[10,283,284],{},"Tangem's access-code article adds two important details:",[120,286,287,290],{},[25,288,289],{},"the access code is stored separately on each card or ring;",[25,291,292],{},"resetting a forgotten access code for one device requires another device from the same wallet set, unless recovery was disabled.",[10,294,295],{},"So if you plan to retire or give away a Tangem set, do not think of it like erasing one old phone. Think of it like unwinding a group of linked signing devices.",[10,297,298],{},"Use the safe Tangem sequence:",[22,300,301,304,307,310],{},[25,302,303],{},"confirm how many cards or rings are still available;",[25,305,306],{},"confirm you know the access code for each device you still need to scan;",[25,308,309],{},"move funds out first if the wallet is being retired;",[25,311,312],{},"reset devices intentionally, knowing the app may prompt you to reset the remaining linked devices too.",[10,314,315,316,263,320,17],{},"If one card is missing or may be in someone else's hands, a fresh wallet and transfer is usually cleaner than trying to keep the old set in service. See ",[132,317,319],{"href":318},"\u002Fguides\u002Flost-or-stolen-hardware-wallet","lost or stolen hardware wallet",[132,321,323],{"href":322},"\u002Fguides\u002Ftangem-wallet-cards-rings","Tangem wallet cards and rings",[41,325,327],{"id":326},"should-you-sell-or-give-it-away-at-all","Should you sell or give it away at all?",[10,329,330],{},"From your side, wiping is about removing your own access. From the next person's side, a used wallet is still a weaker starting point than a new one.",[10,332,333],{},"That is why the honest answer is:",[120,335,336,342],{},[25,337,338,341],{},[14,339,340],{},"yes",", you can wipe an old device before it leaves your control;",[25,343,344,347],{},[14,345,346],{},"no",", that does not make a second-hand hardware wallet as clean or trustworthy as a fresh one from the manufacturer.",[10,349,350],{},"If the goal is helping a friend get started, sending them to a new device is usually the better favor.",[41,352,354],{"id":353},"practical-pre-sale-checklist","Practical pre-sale checklist",[10,356,357],{},"Before an old wallet leaves your house, make sure all of this is true:",[22,359,360,363,366,369,372],{},[25,361,362],{},"The funds were transferred or the wallet was restored and verified elsewhere.",[25,364,365],{},"The recovery phrase, passphrase, backup cards, or other recovery method still make sense for your new setup.",[25,367,368],{},"No old handwritten seed phrase, recovery sheet, or access-code note is being passed along accidentally.",[25,370,371],{},"The device was reset only through official Ledger, Trezor, or Tangem flows.",[25,373,374],{},"You removed old accounts from your companion app if that reduces the chance of sending funds to retired addresses later.",[41,376,378],{"id":377},"bottom-line","Bottom line",[10,380,381,382,385],{},"Wiping a hardware wallet is easy. Wiping it ",[14,383,384],{},"safely"," depends on what happens before the reset.",[10,387,388],{},"Verify recovery first. Move funds when the old wallet should be retired. Then wipe the device through the official app or device settings.",[10,390,391],{},"If the device is going to another person, assume they should still prefer a new Ledger, Trezor, or Tangem instead of trusting your old hardware history.",{"title":393,"searchDepth":394,"depth":394,"links":395},"",2,[396,397,398,404,409,410,411],{"id":43,"depth":394,"text":44},{"id":107,"depth":394,"text":108},{"id":139,"depth":394,"text":140,"children":399},[400,402,403],{"id":144,"depth":401,"text":145},3,{"id":154,"depth":401,"text":155},{"id":187,"depth":401,"text":188},{"id":200,"depth":394,"text":201,"children":405},[406,407,408],{"id":204,"depth":401,"text":205},{"id":242,"depth":401,"text":243},{"id":270,"depth":401,"text":271},{"id":326,"depth":394,"text":327},{"id":353,"depth":394,"text":354},{"id":377,"depth":394,"text":378},"A practical checklist for safely wiping a Ledger, Trezor, or Tangem wallet before you sell it, hand it down, or stop using it.","md",{"publishedAt":415,"updatedAt":415,"schemaType":416,"offers":417,"sourceNotes":437,"faqs":441},"June 23, 2026","Article",[418,424,431],{"referralName":419,"referralUrl":420,"offerCta":421,"offerHeadline":422,"offerDescription":423},"Tangem","https:\u002F\u002Ftangem.com\u002Finvite\u002FQ29LSP","Visit Tangem","Buy a fresh Tangem set instead","If you still need a wallet after retiring an old one, start with a new Tangem set so backup cards and access codes begin cleanly.",{"referralName":425,"showReferralCode":426,"referralUrl":427,"offerCta":428,"offerHeadline":429,"offerDescription":430},"Ledger",false,"https:\u002F\u002Fshop.ledger.com\u002F?r=72ebcfe0d28e","Visit Ledger","Replace an old Ledger with a new device","A fresh Ledger is cleaner than passing around a device with unknown setup history.",{"referralName":432,"referralUrl":433,"offerCta":434,"offerHeadline":435,"offerDescription":436},"Trezor","https:\u002F\u002Faffil.trezor.io\u002Faff_c?offer_id=352&aff_id=135545","Visit Trezor","Start fresh with a new Trezor","If you are done with an old wallet, a new Trezor avoids messy hand-me-down setup and backup confusion.",[438,439,440],"We checked Ledger Support on factory resets and the official reset flow for creating a new recovery phrase or safely transferring a device to someone else.","We checked Trezor's official wipe and PIN-reset documentation, which says wiping erases the wallet on the device and that you should verify the wallet backup before wiping or factory resetting.","We checked Tangem's help-center articles on wallet reset and access-code management, which warn users to move funds first, remember the access codes for every linked device, and understand that codes are stored separately on each card or ring.",[442,445,448],{"question":443,"answer":444},"Does wiping a hardware wallet delete the crypto?","It deletes the private keys stored on the device, not the coins on the blockchain. If you wipe the device before moving funds or before confirming your recovery method, you can lose access permanently.",{"question":446,"answer":447},"Can I sell a wiped hardware wallet?","Technically yes, but a buyer should still prefer a new device from the brand or an authorized seller. Wiping is mainly about removing your own access before the device leaves your control.",{"question":449,"answer":450},"What is the biggest mistake before wiping a hardware wallet?","Resetting first and checking the backup later. The safe order is verify access, move funds if needed, confirm the backup, then wipe.",true,"\u002Fguides\u002Fwipe-hardware-wallet-before-selling-giving-away",{"title":5,"description":412},"guides\u002Fwipe-hardware-wallet-before-selling-giving-away","l4YIvcIZQ-TuS7dYg_fa4igiu3xvaUmFAn9akGfBkLk",1782187567767]