A clean desktop wallet experience for managing Tether without noisy exchange-style screens.
Desktop wallet for Tether
USDT Wallet for Desktop
Store, send, and receive USDT from a focused wallet built for everyday desktop use.
Designed around clear balances, direct transfers, and wallet controls that stay easy to read.
Desktop control for serious USDT storage
Shared approvals
Protect high-value USDT transfers with a clear 2-of-3 approval flow before funds leave the wallet.
Route every transfer
Choose TRC20, ERC20, or BEP20 with the destination chain shown before confirmation.
Local key vault
Private keys stay encrypted on your desktop, never inside a browser session.
Transfer monitor
Track outgoing transactions, confirmations, and risk checks from one focused view.
Recovery discipline
Guided backups, seed verification, and export checks before you rely on the wallet.
Security first
Address review, session locking, and transaction warnings reduce costly mistakes.
One wallet.
Every desktop.
Standalone for macOS, Linux, and Windows. No accounts, no servers — everything runs local.
Before you install
Which USDT networks are planned?
TRC20, ERC20, and BEP20 are the primary desktop flows planned for the wallet interface.
Does the wallet keep private keys locally?
The desktop concept is built around encrypted local key storage and session locking instead of browser-based custody.
Will there be checks before sending?
Yes. The send flow is designed to show network, address, fee, and confirmation state before a transfer is approved.
Is this an exchange account?
No. The interface is shaped as a focused wallet, not a trading terminal or exchange dashboard.
Can I use one wallet for TRC20, ERC20, and BEP20?
The planned interface keeps network choice explicit, so every transfer shows which chain is being used before you send.
What happens if I choose the wrong network?
The wallet flow should warn before confirmation, but users still need to verify that the recipient supports the selected network.
Will the desktop app require a browser extension?
No. The concept is a standalone desktop wallet with its own download builds for Windows, macOS, and Linux.
How should I store my recovery phrase?
Keep it offline, never paste it into websites, and verify the backup before storing real funds in the wallet.
Are download signatures important?
Yes. For a wallet, users should verify the source and build signature before installing software that can access private keys.
Can I import an existing wallet?
The product direction supports recovery and import flows, but the final app should make every import step explicit and auditable.
Will the wallet show transaction status?
Yes. Transfer monitoring is planned around pending, confirmed, and failed states, with the selected network visible.
Network sources worth keeping close
Direct links to official ecosystem pages, channels, and GitHub organizations for the networks used by USDT transfers.