Cardano & Yoroi with Nano X — Wallet Setup

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Table of contents

Overview

This guide shows how to use a Nano X hardware wallet with Yoroi as a Cardano (ADA) wallet. I'll cover the full setup flow, signing transactions, and how to stake ADA from a hardware-backed account. The focus is practical: step-by-step screens, security trade-offs, and real issues I ran into during testing.

If you searched for cardano ledger nano x or yoroi ledger nano x, this page explains the common steps people follow to add an ada wallet ledger nano x setup into Yoroi and start delegating safely.

What you need before you start

I recommend checking firmware and app versions first. In my experience, the most common hiccups are outdated firmware or missing the Cardano app on the device.

Step-by-step: Connect Nano X to Yoroi (How to)

Below are the practical steps I use when adding a Nano X to Yoroi. Screens will vary slightly between the desktop extension and mobile app, but the flow is the same.

Step 1: Prepare the device

  1. Unlock the Nano X with your PIN.
  2. Open the Cardano app on the device (you should see the Cardano logo on the device screen).
  3. If the Cardano app isn’t installed, use your manager/companion app to install it first (see /nano-x-setup and /how-to-update-firmware-steps).

(Placeholder image: Device screen showing Cardano app open)

Step 2: Install the Cardano app

If you hit an error here, try reconnecting the device and re-opening the manager. I noticed a stuck install once and a quick reboot fixed it.

Step 3: Create a Yoroi hardware wallet and connect

  1. Open Yoroi (extension or mobile).
  2. Choose Add Wallet → Hardware Wallet.
  3. Select the hardware vendor option shown (choose the Nano X/ledger option in Yoroi UI) and follow the prompts.
  4. Connect via USB or (for mobile) Bluetooth. Approve the connection on the device.
  5. Yoroi will display a list of accounts derived from your device — pick one or create a new account.
  6. Name the wallet and confirm addresses.

Yoroi will not expose your seed phrase; every transaction must be confirmed on the Nano X. That’s how non-custodial signing stays intact.

Staking ADA on Nano X via Yoroi (how to stake cardano on ledger)

Staking with Yoroi keeps your ADA on-chain and non-custodial. You delegate control of stake (not funds) to a pool.

Step-by-step delegation (short):

  1. Open your ADA wallet in Yoroi (the Ledger-backed wallet).
  2. Go to the Delegation or Staking tab.
  3. Choose a stake pool (use Yoroi’s search/filter or paste a pool ID).
  4. Click Delegate and follow on-screen prompts.
  5. Confirm the delegation transaction on the Nano X device.

Rewards are distributed on Cardano’s epoch schedule (check /staking for details). Want to change pools? Repeat the delegation flow — each change is an on-chain transaction that you sign on-device.

Security architecture & best practices

Why use a hardware wallet with Yoroi? The Nano X holds private keys inside a secure element and only exposes public addresses to the host. Transactions are signed on-device (an air-gapped-like operation when using USB or Bluetooth). I believe this balance gives strong protection with reasonable convenience.

Security checklist:

For supply chain safety and secure-element details, refer to /secure-architecture and /supply-chain-tamper.

Seed phrase and passphrase management

Most Nano X setups use a 24-word recovery phrase generated during initialization. This follows the BIP-39 standard. You can add an optional passphrase (often called the 25th word) to create a hidden wallet; this is powerful but also dangerous if the passphrase is forgotten.

Options to protect the seed phrase:

But remember: a passphrase is not a backup. If you lose it, recovery can be impossible.

Common mistakes & troubleshooting

If Yoroi doesn’t detect the device, try the troubleshooting steps at /troubleshooting-not-detected and refer to /restore-recovery if you need to recover from a backup.

Small comparison: how this setup stacks up

Feature Nano X + Yoroi (hardware) Yoroi (software-only) Exchange Custody
Non-custodial control Yes Yes No
On-device signing Yes No No
Delegation support Yes Yes Varies
Requires physical device Yes No No

Who this setup is for (and who should look elsewhere)

Who this is good for:

Who might look elsewhere:

FAQ

Q: Can I recover my crypto if the device breaks? A: Yes — recover by restoring your 24-word seed phrase (and passphrase, if used) on a compatible hardware wallet or recovery tool. See /recover-if-broken and /restore-recovery.

Q: What happens if the company behind the device goes bankrupt? A: Your crypto sits on the blockchain. As long as you have your seed phrase and keys, you can restore to a compatible wallet. See /company-bankrupt for scenarios and planning.

Q: Is Bluetooth safe for a hardware wallet? A: Bluetooth adds complexity. It can be safe if firmware and companion apps are up to date and you follow recommended OPSEC. See /connectivity-bluetooth-usb for specifics.

Conclusion & next steps

Using Yoroi with a Nano X gives a clear upgrade in signing security while keeping everyday staking and transfers straightforward. In my testing the flow is reliable once firmware and the Cardano app are current. Want to continue? Follow the step-by-step setup above, then read the related guides: /how-to-update-firmware-steps, /seed-phrase-management, and /staking to complete your setup and start delegating ADA.

If you prefer step-focused walkthroughs, check the detailed device setup at /nano-x-setup and the broader Cardano guide at /cardano-guide — they include screenshots and troubleshooting tips.

Ready to set up your Yoroi + Nano X wallet? Start with the firmware and Cardano app, then follow the connect flow in Yoroi. Good luck, and keep your seed phrase offline and secure.

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