Restoring a Ledger Nano X from a seed phrase (recovery phrase) recreates the private keys that control your cryptocurrency accounts. In plain terms: the seed phrase is the master key. Enter it correctly and your wallet will regenerate the same addresses and private keys so you can access funds held in self-custody.
Restore operations are one of the most-sensitive tasks you can perform. I believe treating them like handling physical cash helps: count carefully, keep it private, and never expose it to unknown systems.
If you want a full product background first, see the nano-x-review and nano-x-setup pages.
And bring patience. Restoring can take 10–20 minutes depending on how familiar you are with the on-device input method.
This is a general step-by-step for restoring the device from a recovery phrase. Follow on-screen prompts carefully. What I've written below matches the flow I saw in testing, but screens can change with firmware updates.
Tip: When entering words, the device interface favors on-device entry to keep your seed phrase off computers. This preserves the benefit of the device's secure element and air-gapped protections.
See seed-phrase-management for backup best practices and firmware-updates-verification for update safety.
BIP-39 is a widely-used standard for generating seed phrases. If your seed phrase follows BIP-39, a BIP-39-compatible wallet can usually restore the same private keys. This is why people ask: "can i use seed phrase on another wallet?"
Short answer: yes — provided the other wallet supports the same standards (BIP-39) and the same derivation paths (how addresses are derived). But there are caveats:
For more on passphrase pros/cons and inheritance planning, read passphrase-usage.
If the device is not recognized by your computer or the restore hangs, see troubleshooting-not-detected and restore-errors-issues.
Who this guide is for:
Who should look elsewhere:
But remember: every situation is personal. If your funds are large, consider getting hands-on help from a trusted, independent security professional (not a random online chat).
Q: Can I recover my crypto if the device breaks? A: Yes — if you have your recovery phrase and optionally the passphrase. Restore to another compatible hardware wallet or a trusted software wallet that supports your seed standard. For more, see recover-if-broken.
Q: Can I use my seed phrase on another wallet? A: Often yes, if both wallets use the same standards (BIP-39) and derivation paths. However, differences in derivation or passphrase usage can hide assets. See the BIP-39 section above.
Q: Is Bluetooth safe for a hardware wallet during restore? A: Restoring should be done on-device. Bluetooth is primarily for account synchronization and remote signing in some flows (see connectivity-bluetooth-usb). Avoid sending your seed phrase over any wireless link.
Q: What happens if the company goes bankrupt? A: Your recovery is tied to standards and the math behind private keys, not the company. But check company-bankrupt for details on firmware and support implications.
Restoring a Ledger Nano X from a recovery phrase is straightforward if you prepare and follow on-device prompts carefully. Enter words in the correct order, protect any passphrase (25th word), and avoid typing your seed into a computer whenever possible. In my testing the on-device restore preserved the strongest security guarantees because the seed never left the device's secure element.
If you want a step-by-step visual walkthrough, check the nano-x-unboxing and nano-x-setup pages. For deeper recovery scenarios and inheritance planning, see seed-phrase-management and inheritance-planning.
Ready to continue? Return to the full Nano X review or visit the firmware-update guide before you restore. Stay cautious, and protect your seed like cash in a safe.